Syrian Observatory: Army Shelling Destroys Historic Homs Shrine
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةSyrian army shelling destroyed the historic mausoleum of a companion of the Prophet Mohammed in the central city of Homs on Monday, a monitoring group and activists said.
Reports of the destruction of the Muslim pilgrimage site emerged as an intense army campaign to reclaim rebel-held areas of Homs, a strategic junction city, entered its fourth week.
"Activists from the Khaldiyeh neighborhood in the city of Homs have reported the destruction by army shelling of the mausoleum of the prophet's companion Khaled bin Walid," said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Housed in the rebel area of Khaldiyeh, the Khaled bin Walid mosque had already suffered significant damage during earlier fighting for control of the city.
Amateur video distributed by activists showed the Ottoman-era mosque, renowned for its two towering minarets, and images of what was identified as the destroyed mausoleum.
"The Khalid bin Walid mosque was shelled, and the shrine was completely destroyed," said the unnamed activist filming the footage.
The images show mounds of rubble, stone and metal at the site identified as the mausoleum.
The video also shows an unidentified man lashing out at the world over the destruction of the shrine.
"I want to tell Arabs and Muslims, how will you face God after Khalid bin Walid's shrine has been destroyed? Why have you abandoned besieged Homs?" says the man.
Khaldiyeh and the Old City neighborhoods of Homs, still under rebel control, have been under suffocating army siege and near-daily bomb attacks for more than a year.
For more than three weeks, the army has intensified its campaign to take back the rebel-held areas, but despite temporary advances the neighborhoods remain out of regime control, activists say.
Khalid bin Walid's shrine, an important pilgrimage site for Muslims, is the latest of a series of Syrian religious and cultural sites damaged or destroyed in the course of the country's 28-month war.
In the war-torn northern city of Aleppo, the minaret of the landmark Umayyad mosque was destroyed in April, while parts of the ancient souks were burnt down in September last year.
How can this mosque be described as an important pilgrimage mosque for muslims when there are only three pilgrimage mosques in islam and they are located in makka, madina and alquds? Most muslims didnt even know this mosque existed and the prophet specifically said that one should only travel for the purpose of visiting mosques in three cases and that is when visiting the three mosques with a status in islam and they are al kaba, masjid al nabi and al aqsa. Not that it makes it ok to destroy it. It pains me what is going on in syria. Massacres of human beings are worse than destroying mosques and churches all though, that too is horrible. We need to get our priorities straight. A mosque can be rebuilt after all. Unless the area it was built on has some special meaning in islam then those places are not "holy" other than being a house of God of course. Just because something was built during the ottoman period, it doeant mean it has a special status in islam.
i wouldnt know about that, but you sound like you know what you're talking about.
what i know however, is that in many cases the takfiris have destroyed religious places either because they belong to shias, or to blame the regime for it.
the regime is not waging a religious war they have no interest in destroying religious sites, unless some rebels are hiding in it/firing from it
كلاب حزب اللات بدؤوا معركتهم بتنجيس مساجدنا اولهم كان مسجد عمر بن الخطاب في القصير والآن يستمروا بتنجيس مساجد حمص، بغية قلب هذه المساجد إلى مساجد شيعية.
http://postimg.org/image/6esbs8h5t