One person died but there is some debate as to whether he was already dead before being struck by the van. It has been established that he was already lying on the ground and being helped with a possible heart attack.
Mayhem
Muslim people use the mosque
Shah Jahan built this mosque as a gesture of gratitude to the people of Thatta for sheltering him during his youth after his father, Emperor Jahangir banished him from Delhi.
Well, since there people attacked ours, Americans are probably going to attack there's. Somebody already peed in one of there mosque to show hatred for what they are building there near ground zero (a 13 story high mosque) I'm not sure what people are going to do but there have been protest and I don't think it's gonna be there long, if they even build it. Sorry 13 story high mosque.
People use Mosque wirg worship and respect.
as many as 300,000 people can fit into the haram mosque.
Many people sheltered in the London Underground (commonly known as "The Tube").
Since skunks are nocturnal animals, they rarely attack during the day.But yes the will attack if they feel threatened
People who follow Islam called Muslims worship in a mosque, but their worship is not limited to the mosques.
People attend mosques to pray
A mosque is the building that people of the Muslim religion use to worship in as Christians do in a church.
The Blue Mosque, known as the Sultanahmet Camii in Turkish, or Sultan Ahmed Mosque, is an historical and dramatically beautiful mosque, located in Istanbul Turkey. Its title, 'The mosque,' is because of the lapis-lazuli blue tiles surrounding the walls of interior design. The Mosque was built between 1609 and 1616 years, during the rule of Ahmed I. just as with most other mosques, it also comprises a tomb of the founder, a madrasa (school), and a hospice. Besides still being used as a mosque, the Sultan Ahmed Mosque has also become a popular tourist attraction in Istanbul. The Mosque can accommodate up to 10,000 people and maintains facilities for all cycles of daily prayer. The first call to prayer begins at sunrise and the last at nightfall. The Mosque is closed for ninety minutes during prayer time. Daily visitor numbers average in the thousands. Anyone visiting not for prayer should avoid arriving during prayer times, especially mid-day, on Fridays, and within a half-hour after the ezan (call to prayer) is chanted from the Mosque's minarets.