The Golden
Dome Mosque

Malabar Mosque, situated at the junction of Victoria Street and Jalan Sultan, is recognised for being a gathering place for Malabar Muslims for Friday prayers and for religious festivals and events including Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha. The mosque is steeped in history and is well-known for its distinctive golden dome and signature blue tiles.

The Land on Which Malabar Mosque Stands
In 1822, Singapore's British colonialists granted Sultan Hussein Shah 56 acres of land at Kampong Glam. In 1848, his eldest son, Tengku Ali, who later became Sultan Ali Iskandah Shah, granted some of this land to be used for the burial of Indian Muslim residents of Kampong Glam and other parts of Singapore.....
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The Early Mosque and the Indian Muslim Community
In 1901, Almeida and Kassim, an architectural firm, submitted a plan to construct a mosque within the Indian Muslim burying ground at Kampong Glam. Tengku Ali had previously granted the cemetery to the Indian Muslims for their use. This mosque, under the informal management of appointed individuals, continued to cater to the spiritual needs of the Indian Muslim community.....
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The Changing Faces of Malabar Mosque
In 1937, with the deregistration of the Singapore India Muslim Society and inactive trustees, an abandoned mosque was about to get a new lease of life. Before World War II, the Malabar Muslim Jama’ath stepped in to manage the mosque at the Kampong Glam Muslim Cemetery, appointing an imam to lead prayers.....
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Malabar Mosque’s Rituals and Traditions
Every Thursday night, the serene atmosphere of Malabar Mosque comes alive as its religious leaders lead a diverse congregation of about 150 men and women in heartfelt recitations invoking God’s greatness, Prophet Muhammad’s holiness and the piety of Islamic saints......
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