Jami Ul-Alfar Mosque
Jami-Ul-Alfar Mosque is a
historic mosque in Colombo, Sri Lanka. It is located on Second Cross Street in
Pettah. The mosque is one of the oldest mosques in Colombo and a popular
tourist site in the city. Construction of the
Jami-Ul-Alfar Mosque commenced in 1908 and the building was completed in 1909.
The mosque was commissioned by the local Indian Muslim community, based in
Pettah, to fulfill their required five-times-daily prayer and Jummah on Fridays. The mosque's designer and builder was Habibu
Lebbe Saibu Lebbe (an unlettered architect), and was based on details/images
of Indo-Saracenic structures
provided by South Indian traders, who commissioned him. It is a hybrid style of
architecture, that draws elements from native Indo-Islamic and Indian
architecture, and combines it with the Gothic
revival and Neo-classical styles.
Originally it had the capacity for 1,500 worshippers although at the time only
around 500 were attending prayers.
It is a distinctive red and white candy-striped two-storey
building, with a clock tower, and is reminiscent of the Jamek Mosque in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (constructed in
1910). Before other landmarks were built, some claim that the Jami Ul-Alfar
Mosque was recognized as the landmark of Colombo by sailors approaching the
port.
In 1975 the mosque, with the assistance of the Haji Omar
Trust, purchased a number of the adjoining properties and commenced
building an expansion to the mosque to increase its capacity to 10,000.

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