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  • 21 Aug, 2019

  • By, Wikipedia

Gemmiskiy

Gen Miskit (Dhivehi: ގެން މިސްކިތް; alternatively spelled as Gemmiskiy) is one of the oldest mosque in the Maldives built c. 1300 (before 1378). It is made of coral stone and was built straight after the conversion to Islam. It's noted that this mosque isn't facing towards the Qibla.

Gen Miskit is located in the district of Dhadimagu at the northern end of Fuvahmulah. It's now a revered site for its historical significance to the island. It's the first mosque that the residents of the island did their Friday prayer and Eid prayers.

There are disputes whether Gemmiskiy is the oldest mosque in the Maldives and in Fuvahmulah, media reports and residents say that it is the oldest but in a Monograph written by H.C.P. Bell, Fuvahmulah has had four mosques prior to Gen Miskit. It is really uncertain.

There has been some concern about the extinction of the mosque due to lack of maintenance by the Fuvahmulah City Council.

Features

The mosque has a communal well, a rectangular ancient circular bath known as ‘Genmiskiy Veyo’ and a cemetery with enclosed shrines “ziyaarat” of revered religious figures.

Gemmiskiy Shrine

A place constructed with sandstone and protected by bricks. It is also said that the person who built the mosque, Addu's Meedhoo Abu Bakr Naib Kaleygefaanu, is buried at and Ah Naib Al-Hafiz Abubakr, potentially the first proselytizer of Islam in the island.

Gemmiskiy Veu

Gemmiskiy Veu or Veyo is a rectangulat bath that is adjacent to the Southeastern wall of the mosque that has waters going down into the waters. It shares similarities with the baths in monasteries in Pokna and Anuradhapura in Sri Lanka.

Gemmiskiy Well

The well is crafted from sandstones and has unique stories about it. It is said by the residents of the island that the water tastes really sweet and each corner of the well has a unique taste.

References

  1. ^ Sholeh, Muhammad (9 April 2021). "Mengenal Gen Miskit, Masjid Karang Pertama di Maldives" [Get to Know Gen Miskit, Maldives' First Coral Mosque]. Faktual News (in Indonesian). Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  2. ^ Solih, Aishath Shuba (2 April 2024). "Fuvahmulah City – The Days of the Past and Reigning Ramadan Rituals". The Edition. Retrieved 19 June 2024.
  3. ^ "ާއާސާރީ މިސްކިތް ތަކުގެ ލިސްޓް" [List of ancient mosques] (PDF). Ministry of Islamic Affairs (in Divehi). p. 26. Retrieved 20 June 2024.
  4. ^ Mauroof, Mohamed Jameel; Ahmad, Yahaya. Coral Stone Mosques of Maldives: The Vanishing Legacy of the Indian Ocean. ORO Editions. ISBN 9780986281846.
  5. ^ "Gemmiskiy". Visit Fuvahmulah. Retrieved 19 June 2024.
  6. ^ "ފުވައްމުލަކު ގެން މިސްކިތާއި ހަތަރުކަނުގައި ހަތަރު ރަހަލާކަމަށް ބުނާ ވަޅު" [The well in Fuvahmulah's Gen Miskit has four different unique tastes]. ThePress (in Divehi). 10 April 2023. Retrieved 20 June 2024.
  7. ^ Hassan, Muneeru (3 September 2015). "ގެންމިސްކިތް: ފުވައްމުލަކުގެ އެންމެ ފުރަތަމަ މިސްކިތް" [Gen Miskit: Fuvahmulah's first mosque]. Sun (in Divehi). Retrieved 20 June 2024.
  8. ^ Hassan, Nimaa (12 March 2023). "ފުވައްމުލަކުގެ އާސާރުތައް ނުބެލެހެއްޓި ނެތިދަނީ". Adhadhu (in Divehi). Retrieved 20 June 2024.
  9. ^ "FUVAHMULAH HISTORY". Fuvahmulah City. 2 May 2024. Retrieved 19 June 2024.