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  • Pride in up-and-coming Islamic Center shows

    DetNews.com, MI
    May 25 2004

    Pride in up-and-coming Islamic Center shows

    Dearborn mosque's debut will coincide with Arab-American museum
    opening

    By Shanteé Woodards / The Detroit News
    Steve Perez / The Detroit News

    DEARBORN -- Metro Detroit's significant Muslim population will soon
    have a mosque befitting its size.

    Once completed this fall, the Islamic Center of America -- which will
    be among the largest in the country -- will have a 120,000-square-foot
    complex that includes the mosque, the Muslim American Youth Academy,
    an auditorium and library. Currently, the school is open, and the
    other phases of the project will begin after the mosque is
    operational.

    But the mosque is one of the highlights of the $12 million project
    because it will provide the Islamic Center's 3,000 members with more
    room to worship and have community activities. Its current facility
    in Detroit - which the group has occupied for about 40 years - is too
    cramped to meet all their needs.

    Zana Macki said she feels as if she has watched the mosque being
    built from the ground up, from the pillars up to the dome that was
    added earlier this year. Macki, an Arab-American activist, said she
    found it significant that the mosque is going to be near Armenian and
    other Christian churches.

    "(The new mosque) is very much needed. This is a steppingstone," said
    Macki, a Dearborn Heights resident. "Where else but in America can
    you have the freedom to have different religions right next to each
    other and practicing their religions freely ... and not having any
    fear of government?"

    There are about 500,000 Arab-Americans living in Metro Detroit. About
    30,000 Dearborn residents -- about one-third of the city's population
    -- are of Arab descent. Arab immigrants have brought the cultures of
    more than 20 nations to the Detroit area.

    The opening of the mosque will be coupled with that of the Arab
    American National Museum, scheduled for October in Dearborn. The
    36,000-square-foot museum is being modeled after the
    Japanese-American National Museum in Los Angeles and will be the
    first of its kind.

    The Islamic Center's existing mosque in Detroit began as the Islamic
    Center of Detroit in 1963. Imam Mohammad Jawad Chirri founded the
    17,000-square-foot facility after rallying the local Arab community
    and his contacts throughout the Middle East.

    The opening of the mosque will represent phase two of a construction
    project that began in 1997 with the opening of the Muslim American
    Youth Academy. The school, which is on the old YMCA site in Dearborn,
    opened in time for the 1997-98 school year with 35 students. Now
    about 170 students attend the school, which goes from kindergarten to
    sixth grade.

    When the decision was made to build the new mosque, members of the
    group's construction committee talked to many people in the community
    and visited mosques in Cleveland, Toronto and Toledo to see what type
    of facility would best fit their needs in Dearborn. They decided a
    large-scale community center would be best because of the growing
    membership at its existing mosque.

    The mosque will feature a prayer area for more than 700 men and a
    separate area upstairs for about 300 women. There will also be a
    seating area for 1,000 people. It will have separate spaces where
    members can drop off their children when they are attending events.

    "We can't profess to say how large the largest (facility) is," said
    Kassim Allie, the mosque's administrator. "We don't aim to be the
    biggest. We are one of the oldest, and we believe our program is a
    high-quality program, and I think we will improve them as we go
    along."

    Because Metro Detroit has such a large Muslim population, mosques
    often run out of room for religious and cultural events. It doesn't
    help that many of the facilities are buildings like storefronts and
    stores that are later transformed into mosques.

    Dearborn resident Suehaila Amen saw the inside of the mosque when it
    was in its infancy. She is eager to see it complete.

    "I know it's going to be a beautiful thing," said Amen, who is also
    on the executive board of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination
    Committee. "This one is set up so more visitors and people will be
    able to come to a more central location. We have such a large
    community here that hopefully we'll be able to do more things, like
    carnivals and festivals, the way other churches do."


    You can reach Shantee' Woodards at (734)462-2204 or
    [email protected].
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