Kyle 🚄 Profile picture
Sep 1, 2022 33 tweets 20 min read Read on X
Over the past few years, much was made of what may be happening to China's mosques, and the question of what makes a mosque a mosque. Do all mosques have a domed roof? or minarets (towers)?

A repost of a 🧵 of famous or notable mosques outside China that lack this architecture:
The Gulshan Society Mosque in Dhaka, Bangladesh, built in 2017, has neither domes nor minarets: ImageImage
Neither does the Baitur Rauf Mosque, also constructed recently in Dhaka. It's especially notable for being one of only two mosques in Bangladesh designed by a female architect (and it won an international architecture award). ImageImageImage
This is the Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca, completed in 1993. Its hall can fit 25,000 worshipers, and the grounds several times that. ImageImageImage
The roof of the mosque hall is tiered, rather than domed, and in fact retracts. ImageImage
There is one tiny dome on the top of the minaret, as well as a laser that points toward Mecca. It's the second-tallest minaret in the world. Image
(Incidentally, the TALLEST minaret is in the Great Mosque of Algiers, which DOES have a domed roof, and was built by China State Construction Engineering. It was arguably the tallest building in Africa until the Iconic Tower in Egypt, also built by China, overtopped it last year) ImageImage
Here's the Great Mosque of Djenné in Mali, the world's largest mud-brick structure: ImageImageImageImage
More mud-brick mosques. The Agadez Mosque in Niger and the Larabanga Mosque in Ghana. ImageImageImage
Mauritania's ancient Friday Mosque of Chinguetti, and modern Saudi Mosque in Nouakchott, both domeless: ImageImageImage
This is the Grand Mosque of West Sumatra. The roof shape represents how Muhammed resolved a dispute over who would have the honor of carrying the Black Stone to the Ka'Bah in Mecca. (His solution was to have one guy from each clan hold a corner of a cloth supporting the stone.) ImageImageImage
Some more Indonesian mosques. This is the Al-Markaz Al-Islami Mosque, the largest in Sulawesi. It was built in the 1990s. ImageImage
It has a pointed roof, which is taller than the minarets (which look a little more like turrets) Image
Here's a small floating mosque in Indonesia with some very tiny domes, and a few more mosques with pointed roofs ImageImageImage
A lot of mosques in Indonesia are centuries old, some even 500 years old or more, and have been renovated or rebuilt multiple times. ImageImageImageImage
Plenty of domed mosques exist in Indonesia too, but weren't common until the colonial period in the 19th Century. The Baiturrahman Grand Mosque, in Banda Aceh, Sumatra, for example: ImageImageImage
China played an important role in spreading Islam to Indonesia. The famous Chinese explorer Zheng He (himself a Muslim) established Muslim communities and mosques in Java and Sumatra. I don't know if any still stand, but in 2005 this mosque in Palembang was built in his honor. ImageImageImage
The Great Mosque of Palembang, built almost 300 years ago, has domes, but they're relatively quite small, just over the main entrance. They were only recently added in the 1970s. ImageImage
A few more cool mosques in Indonesia. The last was an office building constructed under Dutch colonial occupation and converted into a mosque in 1987. ImageImageImage
You can see the unusual, very rectangular minaret from above the Sancaklar Mosque in suburban Istanbul, but that's about it. The hall of the mosque is underground. ImageImageImage
The Mosque of the Grand National Assembly in Ankara lacks even a minaret: ImageImage
The Great Mosque of Diyarbakır in the Kurdish region of Turkey is almost a thousand years old and is considered one of the holiest sites in the Islamic world. It has conical, rather than domed features. ImageImageImage
The world's "highest" mosque, on the 77th floor of the Kingdom Centre in Riyadh, doesn't have domes or minarets, unless you count the skyscraper itself. Image
The King Abdullah Financial District Grand Mosque, also in Riyadh. The design is inspired by the sand rose, a crystal formation that sometimes appears in the desert. ImageImageImage
The Faisal Mosque in Islamabad, one of the largest mosques in the world. Instead of using a dome, the hall was designed to resemble a Bedouin tent. ImageImageImage
Dungan Mosque in Karakol, Kyrgyzstan. It was built by Chinese Muslim immigrants in the 19th Century. ImageImageImage
The Ismaili Centre in Dushanbe, Tajikistan: ImageImageImage
The Canberra Islamic Centre in Australia doesn't seem to have a dome over its roof, but more of a half-cylinder. Image
The Jamia Mosque in Srinigar is one of the most important mosques in Kashmir. It was originally built in 1402 and has been reconstructed several times. Rather than domes or minaret towers, it has spires, a little bit like some Christian churches. ImageImageImage
Al-Irsyad Mosque in Padalarang, Indonesia (someone else showed me this, I think @ComradeLin2) ImageImageImage
Education City Mosque in Qatar, part of a larger university complex. No dome, and very unusual minarets, they look angled at 15 degrees or so ImageImageImage
Another cool addition to this thread, in Nepal👇

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More from @KyleTrainEmoji

Nov 29, 2024
The last time Mexico privatized its state-run industries it was at the behest of IMF structural adjustment which drained $26 billion from Mexico to Western banks in *interest payments* alone by the end the 1980s. I don’t think they need your “economic evidence” “Table 6 shows the evolution of Mexico's total external debt. It multiplied by 3 from 1978 to 1987. During this period the amounts that were paid back were 3.5 times the amount owed in 1978. Total negative net transfer accounts for over 26 billion dollars.  Since 1982 the Mexican people have been bled dry to assuage their various creditors. Indeed the IMF and the World Bank have exacted the last cent back from what they loaned to the country so that it could pay private banks. Mexico has been forcefully subjected to the logic of structural adjustment.”
They think we should just accept as some kind of natural law that everything should be privatized no matter how many lives it destroys or nations it impoverishes, and that to do anything else would be bad for The Economy Image
Image
If these establishment types ever acknowledge the harm that structural adjustments have done to countries in the periphery it’s always by blaming the victim. But it was the World Bank that urged Mexico to take out the loans and the U.S. Federal Reserve that raised interest rates.
Read 5 tweets
Oct 29, 2024
Figures they would spin this—what the headline invites you to overlook is that China’s billionaires have been declining for three full years of economic growth.

What’s remarkable is that it’s happening *despite* GDP growth (~5% in 2024) and rising real wages for everyone else 🧵 “China loses third of billionaires as economy falters”
They won’t dare to make this comparison, so I will: despite the United States’ much more modest economic growth, the wealth of U.S. billionaires has grown tremendously—by 26% during the same time period.
Again a very amusing contrast:

4.8% growth in China? Uh-oh. Bad, faltering, “missing target” 😢

2.8% growth in the U.S.? Ahhh, the very engine of global economic growth! 😌 “China's economy set to grow 4.8% in 2024, missing target: Reuters poll”
“US remains engine of global growth in latest IMF forecasts”
“The IMF revised its 2024 U.S. growth forecast upward by two-tenths of a percentage point to 2.8% due largely to stronger-than-expected consumption fueled by rising wages and asset prices. The global lender also upgraded its 2025 U.S. growth outlook by three-tenths of a percentage point to 2.2%, slightly delaying a return to trend growth.”
Read 6 tweets
Sep 19, 2024
People had feelings about this tweet. Many reactionaries, but some left-wingers too.

In the West, the left has been in retreat since 1980 and especially since the USSR fell. Protest movements of the 2010s were crushed, and many if not most are worse off.

How to start again? 🧵
It took over half a century after the Communist Manifesto was published to create the first proletarian state.

It may be even harder today—after 1991, the capitalist class became more centralized and united than ever, and now has many more technological terrors at its disposal.
Building an actual alternative to neoliberalism is the work of *generations* and must involve large organizations. Whatever your feelings, the Communist Party of China is the most ideologically friendly such organization that wields real power in the world today.
Read 4 tweets
Sep 10, 2024
The biggest story about Haiti is that the U.S. has invaded, occupied, and overthrown Haiti’s government multiple times, and in 2009, on behalf of U.S. corporations that super-exploit Haitian labor, the U.S. embassy and USAID prevented Haiti from raising its minimum wage to $5/day “WikiLeaks Haiti: Let Them Live on $3 a Day  The US Embassy aided Levi's, Hanes contractors in their fight against an increase in Haiti's minimum wage.”
Before that, after Haiti finally won independence from a century of the most brutal slave system in the Western hemisphere, it was forced to pay a $20 billion indemnity to France for their “lost property”
According to Foreign Policy magazine, the U.S. military and its proxies have been in Haiti for 41 of the last 108 years. The occupation from 2004 to 2017 was notorious for sexually assaulting Haitians and starting a cholera epidemic that killed thousands
foreignpolicy.com/2023/11/07/hai…

“The U.S. Is Preparing an Outsourced Invasion of Haiti”
“Minustah is best known for killing civilians, crushing political protests, fathering and abandoning children with Haitian women, and starting and trying to cover up its role in a deadly cholera epidemic that is still killing Haitians to this day.”
Read 4 tweets
Aug 14, 2024
Often one of the most interesting things about a theorist is their errors.

In 1991, Wang Huning thought the U.S./Japan imperial alliance would fracture, and Japan would be a main rival.

Today, that alliance is more solid than ever.

China has surely learned from this mistake 🧵

“The power of the solar empire has grown like nuclear fusion: in 1985, one dollar was worth 240 yen, today it is worth 130 yen. Susan Chira, writing in the New York Times (1988. 11.28), said. Japanese companies can easily outperform their competitors and purchase American property or companies. Japanese investors have lent huge amounts of money to the United States, mostly buying Treasury securities, and they can shake up the market. Japan became the ruler of the local economy and the currencies of other countries and regions did not appreciate as fast as the yen. Japan has significant inve...
“The question is why did it end up this way? In addition to various reasons such as the management system, the difference between the two cultures is an important reason. A certain system is bound to have an effect that does not depend on human will, but a certain culture will have an effect that does not depend on human will. The end of the economic competition between the United States and Japan is the product of the different genes of the two cultures. To a large extent, this is more of a cultural constraint rather than an institutional constraint. Some people say that the United States ...
The Soviet Union also made a similar error, and in their case it was fatal.

It’s somewhat understandable, since exploiting the contradictions within the imperialist world was key to the Soviet victory in the Second World War.

Stalin, in 1951:
marxists.org/reference/arch…
“Consequently, the struggle of the capitalist countries for markets and their desire to crush their competitors proved in practice to be stronger than the contradictions between the capitalist camp and the socialist camp. What guarantee is there, then, that Germany and Japan will not rise to their feet again, will not attempt to break out of American bondage and live their own independent lives? I think there is no such guarantee. But it follows from this that the inevitability of wars between capitalist countries remains in force.”
The USSR waited for another inter-imperialist war. And waited, and waited—into its own grave.

The case of Japan illustrates that political and cultural considerations are always second to military force. Japan is still occupied by 50,000 U.S. troops. It lacks true sovereignty.
Read 7 tweets
Jul 29, 2024
Thread 🧵 of Amazing Graphs 📈 and Maps 🗺️ Relating to the People’s Republic of China 🇨🇳

1. The rate of solar energy capacity increase worldwide, overlaid with past predictions: Image
2. The growth of per capita rural household income in Chinese autonomous regions in the 21st century: Image
3. Comparative sizes of electric bus fleets around the world: Image
Read 4 tweets

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