La Grande Mosquée de Paris

The fifth arrondissement serves a wide range of people. It is home to the Sorbonne, the original buildings of the University of Paris, and to the city’s greatest concentration of universities and private grandes écoles, with a corresponding array of bookshops and stationery boutiques. It is a tourist magnet, the site of the Latin Quarter, Shakespeare and Co and (less charmingly) a stretch of restaurants between the boulevard Saint-Michel and the rue Saint-Jacques that should be avoided at all costs. It is home to major national monuments such as the Panthéon, to underappreciated museum treasures like the Musée de Cluny du Moyen Age, and to tiny specialised museums like the Musée Curie.

8DC52C27-222C-46DF-8585-CCF93D41CB6C

The fifth arrondissement, at once so quiet and so rowdy, so commercial and so residential, is many things to many people. But you may not know that the fifth is a special place in particular to the city’s Muslim population.

IMG_1845

On the museum front, the Institut du monde arabe, situated on the southern banks of the Seine, is the most obvious place to learn about Islam and Arab cultures- though, of course, the two are far from one and the same. However, the cultural heart of Muslim Paris is located a couple of blocks from the IMA, opposite the Jardin des Plantes, at la Grande Mosquée de Paris.

A7F1AC23-402E-47B3-AE5E-B98C2847409B

Both the oldest and largest mosque in metropolitan France, the Mosquée was built in the 1920s, near the Place Monge metro. The building has a rich history, including as a place of refuge for Arab Jews during the Nazi Occupation of 1940-44. As in any active place of worship, you should not ogle, however visitors are welcomed. Beyond the prayer space itself, the building also includes a hammam (Turkish-style baths) where you can while away the day in mosaic-tiled rooms, a high-ceilinged central salon and tiny chambers filled with steamy air and icy baths.

IMG_3296

But what draws most visitors to la Grande Mosquée de Paris is the sweet courtyard filled with olive trees, where you can sip on very hot, very strong, very sweet mint tea from little lace-patterned glasses. For a moment, you could be far from the French capital, at a terrace café in Marrakech. It may not sound terribly Parisian, but it actually is. For the Grande Mosquée de Paris, much like the fifth arrondissement in general and the city at large, is a place of cultural richness, beauty and diversity.

Xx la Muséophile
The Musées de Paris museum map of Paris
La Grande Mosquée de Paris2bis Place du Puits de l’Ermite 75005, métro: Place Monge (line 7)
Full rate 3 euros, reduced rate 2 euros
Wheelchair accessible
Opening hours: Saturday to Thursday visits at 9am, 12pm, 2pm and 6pm, closed Friday

4 thoughts on “La Grande Mosquée de Paris

Comment

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s