Longgang Mosque
The Longgang Mosque, also known as the Lungkang Mosque, is a mosque in Zhongli District, Taoyuan City, Taiwan.
, the imam was Abdullah Liu.
History
In 1953, the UN General Assembly resolved to condemn the Taipei government for its actions and Islamic Insurgency in China (1950–1958)|guerilla warfare inside Burma]. Finally, an agreement was reached between Taipei, Rangoon, and Bangkok for evacuation of all Kuomintang Irregular forces under command of General Li Mi to Taiwan. Civil Air Transport transported 5,583 Kuomintang soldiers and 1,040 dependents to Taiwan. The majority of these guerrilla forces were Muslim and had no place to worship in their new Taiwan home and so they started to raise funds in 1964 to construct a mosque.1967 structure
The original mosque was built in 1967 by a group of 30 Muslims. After joining the Chinese Muslim Association in the early 1980s, the community raised money, including funds from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, to build a larger mosque.1989, current structure
To make a bigger mosque, the community purchased land on Longdong Road in Zhongli. At the 312,000 initial development stage, only the main prayer hall and basement area of the mosque were built. The mosque building occupies an area of and the mosque's main worship area can hold 150 worshippers.At the 400,000 second development stage, the mosque's minarets, a kitchen, dormitory and shower room were added to the main building.
Due to the poor materials used to construct the building because of lack of funds, the mosque quickly deteriorated. After some discussion, a plan to reconstruct the mosque was finally put in place. With financial assistance from inside and outside Taiwan, the first reconstruction project for the mosque began in March 1988 and was completed in January 1989. The second reconstruction was completed in 1995; and on 15 November 2021, the opening ceremony of the new extension building of the Islamic-style mosque was held. The event was attended by Taoyuan Mayor Cheng Wen-tsan.