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KAA'BAH:
THE HOUSE OF ALLAH.
Kaa'bah:
It's Size and History!
The small, cubed building known as the Kaa'bah
may not rival skyscrapers in height or mansions
in width, but its impact on history and human
beings is unmatched. The Kaa'bah is the building
towards which Muslims face five times a day, everyday,
in prayer. This has been the case since the time
of Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon
him) over 1400 years ago.
The
Size of the Kaba:
1.
The current height of the Kaa'bah is 39 feet,
6 inches and total size comes to 627 square
feet.
2.
The inside room of the Kaa'bah is 13X9 meters.
3.
The Kaa'bah’s walls are one meter wide. The floor
inside is 2.2 meters higher than the place where
people perform Tawaaf.
4.
The ceiling and roof are two levels made out of
wood. They were reconstructed with teak which
is capped with stainless
steel.
5.
The walls are all made of stone. The stones inside
are unpolished, while the ones outside are polished.

This
small building has been constructed and reconstructed
by Prophets Adam, Ibrahim, Ismail and Muhammad
(peace be upon them all). No other building has
had this honor. Yet, not very much is known about
the details of this small but significant building.
Did
you know the Kaa'bah was reconstructed as recently
as close to four years ago?
Did
you know that the Kaa'bah has been subjected to
danger by natural disasters like flooding, as
well as human attacks?
If
you didn’t keep reading. You’ll find some rarely
heard of information discussed below and discover
facts about the Kaa'bah many are unaware of.
The
other names of the Kaa'bah Literally, Kaa'bah
in Arabic means a high place with respect and
prestige. The word Kaa'bah may also be derivative
of a word meaning a cube. Some of these
other names include:
Bait
ul Ateeq-which means, according to one meaning,
the earliest and ancient. According to the second
meaning, it means independent and liberating.
Both meanings could be taken
Bayt
ul Haram-the
honorable house
The
Kaba has been reconstructed up to 12 times Scholars
and historians say that the Kaba has been reconstructed
between five to 12 times. The very first construction
of the Kaba was done by Prophet Adam. Allah says
in the Qur'ân that this was the first house that
was built for humanity to worship Allah. After
this, Prophet Ibrahim and Ismail rebuilt the Kaba.
The measurements of the Kaa'bah's Ibrahimic foundation
are as follows:
-
-the
eastern wall was 48 feet and 6 inches
-
-the
Hateem side wall was 33 feet
-
-the
side between the black stone and the Yemeni
corner was 30 feet
-
-the
Western side was 46.5 feet
Following
this, there were several constructions before
the Prophet Muhammad’s time. Reconstruction of
Kaa'bah by Quraish Prophet Muhammad participated
in one of its reconstructions before he became
a Prophet. After a flash flood, the Kaba was damaged
and its walls cracked. It needed rebuilding. This
responsibility was divided among the Quraish’s
four tribes. Prophet Muhammad helped with this
reconstruction. Once the walls were erected, it
was time to place the Black Stone, (theHajar
ul Aswad) on the eastern wall of the Kaba.
Arguments erupted about who would have the honor
of putting the Black Stone in its place. A fight
was about to break out over the issue, when Abu
Umayyah, Makkah’s oldest man, proposed that the
first man to enter the gate of the mosque the
following morning would decide the matter. That
man was the Prophet. The Makkans were ecstatic.
"This is the trustworthy one (Al-Ameen),"
they shouted in a chorus. "This is Muhammad".
He came to them and they asked him to decide on
the matter. He agreed. Prophet Muhammad proposed
a solution that all agreed to-putting the Black
Stone on a cloak, the elders of each of the clans
held on to one edge of the cloak and carried the
stone to its place. The Prophet then picked up
the stone and placed it on the wall of the Kaa'bah.
Since the tribe of Quraish did not have sufficient
funds, this reconstruction did not include the
entire foundation of the Kaba as built by Prophet
Ibrahim. This is the first time the Kaba acquired
the cubical shape it has now unlike the rectangle
shape which it had earlier.
The
portion of the Kaa'bah left out is called Hateem
now. Construction After the Prophet’s Time-Abdullah
ibn az-Zubayr The Syrian army destroyed the Kaa'bah
in Muharram 64 (Hijri date) and before the next
Hajj Abdullah ibn az-Zubayr, may Allah be pleased
with him, reconstructed the Kaa'bah from the ground
up.
Ibn
az-Zubayr wanted to make the Kaba how the Prophet
Muhammad wanted it, on the foundation of the Prophet
Ibrahim. Ibn az-Zubayr said, "I heard Aa'ishah
(may Allah be pleased with her) say, 'The Prophet
said: "If your people had not quite recently abandoned
the Ignorance (Unbelief), and if I had sufficient
provisions to rebuild it [the Kaba], I would have
added five cubits to it from the Hijr. Also, I
would make two doors; one for people to enter
therein and the other to exit." (Bukhaaree).
Ibn
az-Zubayr said, "Today, I can afford to do it
and I do not fear the people. Ibn az-Zubayr built
the Kaba on Prophet Ibrahim’s foundation. He put
the roof on three pillars with the wood of Aoud
(a perfumed wood with aroma which is traditionally
burned to get a good smell out of it in Arabia).In
his construction he put two doors, one facing
the east the other facing the west, as the Prophet
wanted but did not do in his lifetime. He rebuilt
the Kaa'bah on the Prophet Ibrahim’s foundation,
which meant that the Hateem area was included.
The Hateem is the area adjacent to the Kaa'bah
enclosed by a low semi-circular wall.
Abdullah
ibn az-Zubayr also made the following additions
and modifications:
-
-put
a small window close to the roof of the Kaba
to allow for light.
-
-moved
the door of the Kaba to ground level and added
a second door to the Kaa'bah.
-
-added
nine cubits to the height of the Kaa'bah,
making it twenty cubits high.
-
-its
walls were two cubits wide.
-
-reduced
the pillars inside the House to three instead
of six as were earlier built by Quraish.
-
For
reconstruction, ibn az-Zubayr put up four
pillars around Kaba and hung cloth over them
until the building was completed. People began
to do Tawaf around these pillars at all times,
so Tawaf of the Kaa'bah was never abandoned,even
during reconstruction.
During
Abdul Malik bin Marwan’s time
In 74 Hijri (or 693 according to the Gregorian
calendar), Al-Hajjaj bin Yusuf al-Thaqafi, the
known tyrant of that time, with the approval of
Umayyad KHALIFAH Abdul Malik bin Marwan, demolished
what Ibn az-Zubayr had added to it from the older
foundation of Prophet Ibrahim, restore its old
structure as the Quraish had it. Some of the changes
he made were the following:
-
-he
rebuilt it in the smaller shape which is found
today
-
-took
out the Hateem
-
-walled
up the western door (whose signs are still
visible today) and left the rest as it was
pulled down the wall in the Hateem area.
-
-removed
the wooden ladder Ibn az-Zubayr had put inside
the Kaba.
-
-reduced
the door's height by five cubits
When
Abdul Malik bin Marwan came for Umra and heard
the Hadith that it was wish of Prophet for the
Kaa'bah to be constructed the way Abdullah ibn
az-Zubayr had built it, he regretted his actions.
Imam
Malik's advice to the KHALIFAH Harun al Rasheed
Abbasi Khalifa Harun al Rasheed wanted to rebuild
the Kaa'bah the way the Prophet Muhammad wanted
and the way Abdullah ibn az-Zubayr built it. But
when he consulted Imam Malik, the Imam asked the
KHALIFAH to change his mind because constant demolition
and rebuilding is not respectful and would become
a toy in the hands of kings. Each one would want
to demolish and rebuild the Kaa'bah.Based on this
advice, Harun al Rasheed did not reconstruct the
Kaba. The structure remained in the same construction
for 966 years, with minor repairs here and there.
Reconstruction
during Sultan Murad Khan’s time
In the year 1039 Hijri, because of heavy rain,
flood and hail, two of the Kaabah’s walls fell
down. The flood during which this occurred took
place on the 19th of Shaban 1039 Hijri which continued
constantly, so the water in the Kaba became almost
close to half of its walls, about 10 feet from
the ground level. On Thursday the 20th of Shaban
1039 Hijri, the eastern and western walls fell
down. When flood receded on Friday the 21st of
Shaban, the cleanup started. Again, a curtain,
the way Abdullah ibn az-Zubayr established on
4 pillars, was put up, and the reconstruction
started on the 26th of Ramadan. The rest of the
walls except for the one near the Black Stone,
were demolished. By the 2nd of Zul-Hijjah 1040
the construction was taking place under the guidance
of Sultan Murad Khan, the Ottoman Khalifa. From
the point of the Black stone and below, the current
construction is the same as that done by Abdullah
ibn az-Zubayr. The construction which was done
under the auspices of Murad Khan was exactly the
one done at the time of Abdul Malik ibn Marwan
which is the way the Quraysh had built it before
Prophethood.On Rajab 28-1377, One historian counted
the total stones of the Kaba and they were 1,614.
These stones are of different shapes. But the
stones which are inside the outer wall which is
visible are not counted in there.
Reconstruction
of the Kaba In 1996
A major reconstruction of the Kaba took place
between May 1996 and October 1996. This was after
a period of about 400 years (since Sultan Murad
Khan’s time). During this reconstruction the only
original thing left from the Kaa'bah are the stones.
All other material has been replaced including
the ceiling and the roof and its wood.
What
is inside the Kaba?
-
-there
are two pillars inside (others report 3 pillars)
-
-there
is a table on the side to put items like perfume
-
-there
are two lantern-type lamps hanging from the
ceiling
-
-the
space can accommodate about 50 people
-
-there
are no electric lights inside
-
-the
walls and floors are of marble
-
-there
are no windows inside
-
-there
is only one door
-
-the
upper inside walls of the Kaba were covered
with some kind of curtain with the Kalimah
written on it.
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