Sidna Ali Mosque (Al-Haram, Jaffa) [Canvas]
Sidna Ali Mosque (Al-Haram, Jaffa)
The Sidna Ali Mosque (Masjid Sidna Ali), dedicated to Sheikh Ali ibn Alim - a 12th-century descendant of Caliph Umar ibn al-Khattab and revered saint - stands as the last remnant of the depopulated Palestinian village of Al-Haram in what is now Herzliya, Israel, about 10 miles north of Jaffa along the Mediterranean coast. Originally a shrine possibly dating to the Mamluk era in the 13th-15th centuries, with the current structure built in 1481, it features a modest sand-colored brick enclosure with a low blue dome, a slender minaret, and palm-shaded courtyards overlooking the sea, blending Islamic and Crusader-era architectural influences. Abandoned after the 1948 war, it was repurposed as a caravanserai in the early 20th century before restorations in 1992 revived it as an active mosque and madrasa, drawing Friday pilgrimages from Arab in Jaffa and the Galilee to honor the saint's tomb amid the surrounding Islamic cemetery.
Product features
- Materials: cotton and polyester composite (canvas), pine wood (frame)
- Comes in various sizes
- Soft rubber dots on bottom back corners for support
- Back hanging included
- Inner frame made with radiata pine sourced from renewable forests
- Please note: Due to the production process of the canvases, please allow for slight size deviations with a tolerance +/- 1/8" (3.2mm)
| 12" x 9" (Horizontal) | 14″ x 11″ (Horizontal) | 20″ x 16″ (Horizontal) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Width, in | 12.00 | 14.00 | 20.00 |
| Height, in | 9.00 | 11.00 | 16.00 |
| Depth, in | 1.25 | 1.25 | 1.25 |