Al Dissi Mosque
The Al Dissi Mosque, also spelled as the Al Disi Mosque, is a medieval mosque located within the walls of the Old City of Jerusalem, on the edge between the Armenian Quarter and the Jewish Quarter.
History
The mosque dates from the Ayyubid era of Al-Mu'azzam Isa, and was later restored in the Mamluk era. In 1487 it was endowed by Al-Kameli ibn Abu-Sharif, and mention the mosque as "Masjid al-Omar". It was subsequently named the Al Dissi Mosque after a member of the Jerusalemite Al Dissi family.1967–1976 demolition works carried out by the Company for the Reconstruction and Development of the Jewish Quarter adjacent to the site damaged the structure of the mosque; it was subsequently renovated by the Islamic Waqf.
In 2018 the King of Morocco, Mohammed VI, funded the renovation of the mosque. In 2011, Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth reported that the local Jewish community and the Waqf "came to an agreement" that there would be no muezzin calling from the minaret. Sheikh Mazen Ahram, a Jerusalem Imam, stated that the mosque's muezzin loudspeakers were confiscated by Israeli authorities in 1993, who subsequently prevented any announcements from the minaret. He also stated that the land in front of the mosque, owned by the Islamic Waqf, was confiscated by Israel and converted into a car park, and that due to its location near the Jewish Quarter, users of the mosque have faced racist insults and harassment.