Liberation Mosque

Liberation Mosque (Turkish: Kurtuluş Camii), formerly the St. Mary's Cathedral or Holy Mother of God Church (Armenian: Սուրբ Աստուածածին Եկեղեցի, romanized: Surp Asdvazdadzin Egeghetsʿi), is located in the Tepebaşı district of Şahinbey, Gaziantep in Turkey. Initially built as an Armenian Apostolic church, it was converted into a stable after the Armenian genocide; and later, into a jail. Sarkis Balyan—the Ottoman-Armenian architect serving Sultan Abdul Hamid II—designed the church. The building was constructed between 1892 and 1893, undertaken by the stonemason Sarkis Taşçıyan. The church was part of a complex which also contained a school and the administrative buildings of the dioceses of the kaza of Antep.

Liberation Mosque
Kurtuluş Camii
Liberation Mosque in May 2009
Religion
AffiliationIslam, originally Christianity
Location
LocationŞahinbey, Gaziantep Province, Turkey
Architecture
Architect(s)Sarkis Balyan
Typemosque
Date established1986 (as mosque)
Groundbreaking1892
Completed1893

In 1915, almost all of the Gaziantep Armenians were deported to Syrian desert during the genocide. The church was sealed on 22 August 1915; and its sacramentals and furnishings were put in a large stable, then they were bought and sold at an auction. For over three years the cathedral was used by government for military purposes. Next, it was turned into a prison in the early 1920s; and served as this facility until 1970s.

The building was converted into a mosque in 1986. The top half of the bell tower was demolished, the remainder converted into a single-balcony minaret. The bell, which was cast in the 19th century in South America, was taken to Gaziantep Museum.

After renovation, the mosque reopened on 17 June 2017.

During the 2023 Turkey–Syria earthquakes, its dome and minarets collapsed.

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