Historic al-Nuri Mosque Minaret Restored Following Islamic State Destruction

BBC News
Mosul's historic al-Nuri mosque and al-Hadba minaret rise again

Historic buildings in Mosul, including churches and mosques, are being reopened following years of devastation resulting from the Iraqi city's takeover by the extremist Islamic State (IS) group. The project, organised and funded by Unesco, began a year after IS was defeated and driven out of the city, in northern Iraq, in 2017. Unesco's director-general Audrey Azoulay attended a ceremony on Wednesday to mark the reopening. Local artisans, residents and representatives of all of Mosul's religious communities were also there. In 2014, IS occupied Mosul, which for centuries was seen as a symbol of tolerance and co-existence between different religious and ethnic communities in Iraq. The group imposed its extreme ideology on the city, targeting minorities and killing opponents.

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BBC News
Reuters
Mosul’s renowned minaret restored from ravages of Islamic State

Mosul’s Grand al-Nuri Mosque, known for its eight-century-old leaning minaret, destroyed by Islamic State militants in 2017, has been renovated in a boost for Iraq's second city as it rebuilds after long years of war. From the pulpit of this medieval mosque on July 4, 2014, Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi declared a self-styled ‘caliphate’ spanning parts of Syria and Iraq. Three years later, the ultra hardline group demolished the mosque in the final weeks of a U.S.-backed Iraqi campaign that ousted the jihadists from Mosul, their de facto capital in Iraq. Protracted and fierce urban warfare largely reduced the historic landmarks of Iraq's second city to rubble.

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Reuters
The Nation
Mosul’s landmarks rise again after IS destruction

MOSUL - Historic buildings in Mosul, including churches and mosques, are being reopened following years of devastation resulting from the Iraqi city’s takeover by the extremist Islamic State (IS) group. The project, organised and funded by Unesco, began a year after IS was defeated and driven out of the city, in northern Iraq, in 2017. Unesco’s director-general Audrey Azoulay is attended a ceremony on Wednesday to mark the reopening. Local artisans, residents and representatives of all of Mosul’s religious communities will also be there. In 2014, IS occupied Mosul, which for centuries was seen as a symbol of tolerance and co-existence between different religious and ethnic communities in Iraq. The group imposed its extreme ideology on the city, targeting minorities and killing opponents. Three years later, a US-backed coalition in alliance with the Iraqi army and state-linked militias mounted an intense ground and air offensive to wrest the city back from IS control.

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The Nation

News Results

UNESCO Restores Mosul Heritage Sites Damaged by Islamic State
UNESCO has completed its reconstruction of the Great Mosque of Al‑Nouri, Al-Tahera Church, and Al-Saa'a Convent in Iraq. The $115 million initiative, called Revive the Spirit of Mosul, was launched in 2018 in response to the widespread destruction inflicted on cultural heritage by the Islamic State. The Al-Nouri mosque was known for its famous leaning 131-foot-tall minaret.
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Mosul’s renowned minaret restored from ravages of Islamic State
Mosul’s Grand al-Nuri Mosque, known for its eight-century-old leaning minaret, destroyed by Islamic State militants in 2017. Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi declared a self-styled ‘caliphate’ spanning parts of Syria and Iraq.
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Revival of Mosul’s Iconic Al-Nuri Mosque: A Symbol of Resilience
The Grand al-Nuri Mosque in Mosul, Iraq, famous for its leaning minaret, is fully renovated after being destroyed by ISIS in 2017. The restoration, led by UNESCO, marks a pivotal moment in the city's recovery and includes other historical landmarks. The mosque's destruction came during the latter phase of a decisive U.S.-backed Iraqi effort that expelled ISIS from Mosul.
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Who will rebuild Gaza? What we can learn from Mosul’s restoration
Mosul’s rebirth offers a glimmer of hope and possible blueprint for Gaza as the US and UN warn it could take 15 years to rebuild
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Mosul's Resilient Heritage: The Revival of Al-Nuri Mosque
Mosul's iconic Grand al-Nuri Mosque, destroyed in 2017 by Islamic State militants, has been reconstructed. The mosque, known for its leaning minaret, is a symbol of resilience as Mosul emerges from years of conflict. The reconstruction, a collaborative effort with UNESCO, the EU, and Iraq's antiquity authorities, cost over $115 million.
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Mosul's Al-Nuri Mosque: Iraq's historical site which has risen from the rubbles with its minaret
The Al-Nuri Mosque in Mosul, Iraq, was destroyed by ISIS in 2017. A collaborative effort funded by UNESCO, the UAE, and the EU, has successfully rebuilt the mosque. The mosque has risen like a phoenix, showcasing that it is never easy to wipe off history, no matter how hard one might try.
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