Geneva Mosque

Geneva Mosque
Basic information
Location Geneva
  Switzerland
Geographic coordinates 46°13′25″N 6°7′19″E / 46.22361°N 6.12194°E / 46.22361; 6.12194
Affiliation Islam
Architectural description
Architectural type Mosque
Completed 1978
Specifications
Minaret(s) 1
Minaret height 22 m

The Geneva Mosque, also known as the Petit-Saconnex Mosque (French: Mosquée de Genève, Mosquée de Petit-Sacconex) is the largest mosque in Geneva, Switzerland. It was financed by the Saudi-based Muslim World League and constructed in 1978 in the neighborhood of Le Petit-Saconnex.[1]

The mosque was inaugurated by the Saudi Arabian King Khalid ibn Abd al-Aziz and President of the Swiss Confederation Willi Ritschard, and is the largest mosque in the city and Switzerland as a whole. The building has space for 1,500 worshippers. It is managed by the Islamic Cultural Foundation of Geneva and the imam of the mosque is Yahya Basalamah.

In 2015, the Tribune de Genève newspaper reported that 20 young Islamic extremists had attended the mosque for several months, two of whom allegedly travelled to Syria to fight in the war there.

In November 2017, the secretary general of the Muslim World League Muhammad bin Abdul Karim Issa said that he will constitute a new board of the Islamic Cultural Foundation of Geneva and that two mosque employees, who have been placed by French officials on an anti-terrorism backlist known as “Fiche S” since at least 2012, will be removed from their posts. He said he had ambitions for the Geneva mosque to become a model of dialogue and integration otherwise the MWL would consider withdrawing all support to the mosque.[2]

See also

References

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