Church May Become City’s First Mosque

“A Toronto church may become the city’s first mosque.

Reginald Assim, president of The Muslim Society of Toronto, said yesterday the group has looked at several churches among other buildings, with a view to conversion.

In two months the society has pledged $10,000 toward the $100,000 estimated necessary to provide a mosque for the city’s 400 Moslems.

If a former church is used, the complete interior will have to be ripped out, as a mosque has no altar, pictures or statues, and Moslems worship on mats on the Floor.

Yesterday’s announcement was made as 200 Moslems met in a Dundas St. W. dance hall to celebrated the end of the month-long fast of Ramadan Canadian style — with coffee and cakes, sandwiches and tea.

Moslems from India, Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, United Arab Republic, Burma, Russia and Yugoslavia heard recitations from the Koran, watched a playlet performed by society members, and sang folk songs of 10 countries.

Only other concessions to Eastern tradition were a sprinkling of saris and two or three turbans.

Most of the men wore lounge suits and the women smart spring dresses.

Their numbers underlined the growth of the city’s Moslem community.

Before the war, estimated Albanian-born Mr. Assim, 72, a retired confectionery manufacturer who has lived here nearly 50 years, fewer than 40 Moslems lived in Toronto.

The society was formed mainly to foster the teaching of Islam among the community’s children.

Many members are political refugees.

The society helped 50 of them here by providing sponsorship, finding jobs and guaranteeing support.”

The Globe and Mail, April 4 1960

Toronto’s first mosque to open

By WILLIAM JOHNSON

“Toronto’s Moslems will open the city’s first mosque next week.

The beginning will be modest, in a former Presbyterian church being renovated as a house of Allah.

Wednesday evening, prayers will be said there for the first time, with the faithful facing southeast in the direction of Mecca.

A mosque, once established, must by Islamic law never be torn down or put to other use.

The new mosque is on Boustead Avenue in the Roncesvalles Avenue and Dundas Street area.

It is the responsibility of the Muslim Society of Toronto Inc., whose president is Mirza Qadder Baig, a Pakistani.

He is professor of Islamic Studies at the University of Toronto.

The society includes members from more than a dozen countries, including several Canadian converts.

Toronto’s Moslem population has always been small because Canada’s immigration laws, until recently, restricted the admission of non-Europeans.

Now, with the influx of immigrants from India, Pakistan, the West Indies and North Africa, the number is growing and might be close to 5,000.

Moslems, until recently, tended to keep themselves inconspicuous, sensing that Canadians knew litter about Islam and cared even less for it.

“Not one person in 10,000 knows anything about Islam,” says Rajab Assim, who migrated to Toronto from Albania in 1911.

He remembers the anti-Islam propaganda during the First World War when Turkey was fighting on the side of Germany.

Then Moslems were portrayed as “savages who would kill anybody,” he says.

The word Islam connotates vague images of harems, of eunuchs armed with scimitars and flying carpets.

In schools, histories presented the Crusades as holy wars to liverate the Holy Land from the “infidels.”

The first great Western epic, the Song of Raland, showed Charlemagne’s armies slaughtering Saracens by the thousands.

Yet Islam is one of the great world religions, with more than 479 million adherents, or more than twice the number of Protestants. Islam was the foundation of a cosmopolitan culture in North Africa and Spain a thousand years ago, at a time when Christendom was struggling through its Dark Ages.

In fact, it was Islamic scholarship that helped revive learning in the West.

Islam, like Judaism and Christianity, is monotheistic.

Moslems are permitted by Islamic law to marry outside their religion with Jews and Christians, both called the People of the Book.

Moslems accept the Torah and the Gospels as genuine revelations, and Abraham, Moses, David and Jesus as genuine prophets of Allah.

Mohammed, they believe, was the last prophet to speak to men, and the Koran the last prophetic book, the word of Allah brought by the Archangel Gabriel to Mohammed.

It is the Islamic rituals of worship, probably, that strike the non-Moslem as most distinctive.

The Moslem is enjoined by the Koran to pray to Allah five times a day: before the sun rises, when the sun is at the meridian, in the afternoon, just after sunset, and when going to bed.

In Moslem countries,

the call to prayer is sounded at the appointed time by a muezzin (crier) from the height of the mosque’s minaret.

Then people flock to the mosque, removing their shoes before entering, or they unroll their prayer rug where they are and prostrate themselves on it to pray.

In Toronto,

as is the case everywhere else, the Moslem is bound by the same daily obligation to pray, but most try to find a private spot to carry out their obligation so as not to provoke the stares or the jibes of Canadians not used to the sight of a Moslem at prayer.

The removal of shoes when entering a mosque and the use of a prayer rug are rooted in a concept of reverence which demands that a person addressing Allah should be clean.

Before praying,

the Moslem washes his face, his hands and arms to the elbow, and his feet.

He must pray in a clean place,

and so the mosque is kept scrupulous one of the reasons for the removal of shoes.

The prayer rug is simply a clean piece of cloth which the Moslem can have with him so that he can pray anywhere.

On Fridays, the holy day of the week, the Moslem attends noon prayers in the mosque, but first he must take a bath and put on his best clothes and some scent “to make the atmosphere of the mosque more pleasant,” Prof. Baig explained.

The Moslem’s life is interwoven with his religion.

When a child is born, parents whisper in its ear the Arabic words “Allah-U Akbar” (God is great) so the first word heard by the child will be the name of Allah.

When the child is about three and has memorized the first chapter of the Koran, the parents throw a party with relatives and friends coming to the feast and bringing presents to the child.

Every year, during the month of Ramadan, the Moslem must abstain from food, drink or intercourse between sunrise and sundown each day. at the end of the year, he must give 2½ per cent of all his savings in charity to the poor.

At least once in a lifetime,

each Moslem physically and financially able to do so must make the Hajj—the pilgrimage to Mecca which expresses the spiritual unity of all Moslems throughout the world, regardless of race, language or nationality.

“It was a very moving experience,” Dr. Baig said of his pilgrimage to Mecca last year.

“You find yourself in a different world altogether. Thousands of people all reciting the Koran, day or night, and all looking happy. There was not a single miserable face.”

After death, Moslems bury the body as soon as possible, without embalming.

The Islamic Society of Toronto has purchased a 1,000 grave lot in a the Glendale Memorial Gardens as a Moslem cemetery.

One of the functions of the new mosque will be to provide a forum for classes on Islam so that Canadians might become familiar with the religion.”

The Globe and Mail, February 22 1969

During Ramadan 2016,

when I was doing 30 Masjids in 30 Days Canada, I wasn’t able to visit any of our three northern Territories.

Breaking a Ramadan Fast in Nunavut, The Yukon, and/or the Northwest Territories, then blogging about it, remains something outstanding in these 10 years of blogging Ramadan on 30Masjids.ca

InshAllah, I may yet do that.

On this Eid Al Fitr 2020,

Here are quotes and photos from others about Drive-Thru Eid Al Fitr Celebrations hosted by Islamic Centre of Yellowknife . . .

Boxes of chocolate and goodie bags for children were handed out to celebrate Eid in Yellowknife on Sunday. (Danielle d'Entremont/CBC)

Boxes of chocolate and goodie bags for children were handed out to celebrate Eid in Yellowknife on Sunday. (Danielle d’Entremont/CBC)

Monzur Choudhury hands out goodie bags to a local family on Sunday. Within the first hour of the Eid event, over 40 cars had driven by to pass along holiday greetings and collect the treats. (Danielle d'Entremont/CBC)

Monzur Choudhury hands out goodie bags to a local family on Sunday. Within the first hour of the Eid event, over 40 cars had driven by to pass along holiday greetings and collect the treats. (Danielle d’Entremont/CBC)

Zaka Ullah (right) says the drive-thru Eid celebrations allowed people to feel connected despite the territorial government's restrictions on gatherings. (Danielle d'Entremont/CBC)

Zaka Ullah (right) says the drive-thru Eid celebrations allowed people to feel connected despite the territorial government’s restrictions on gatherings. (Danielle d’Entremont/CBC)

“People have morning prayers where they meet each other, greet each other … and after, people normally have parties.

But this year with COVID[-19] going on we thought this was a nice way to get them out and get them connected,”

said Zaka Ullah, as he handed out chocolates.

Within the first hour of the event about 40 different cars had driven by.

Some were decorated with balloons; many cars were filled with smiling faces as passengers called out to organizers with the holiday greeting,

“Eid Mubarak!”

Eid is a day of happiness so we wanted to celebrate, we wanted to meet with people, and we wanted people to get out of their homes.

Awan said although it is difficult not being able to get together,

Sunday’s celebrations allow for people to focus their energy on supporting one another, rather than on material things, such as gifts.

“Islam is a very simple religion,” he said.

“Fasting is not just keeping hungry, it is all about having a better character, how beneficial you are to other people in the community, how caring you are — for your family and your friends and humanity.”

“We were just hoping to create some Eid festivities,”

said Nazim Awan, chair of the Islamic Centre of Yellowknife.

“We decided that we’ll offer something that at least people can feel it’s Eid.”

Awan said Eid celebrations are usually held at large public spaces involving a reception and meal.

There is usually a community barbecue and gift exchanges to follow.

Awan said it was disappointing for the community to be unable to gather, but he understood the situation and felt they made the best of it.

“We put some smiles on the children’s faces and family’s faces,” he said.

The event brought over 65 cars to the drive-thru, held off Franklin Ave, where the new mosque is being built;

although construction of the mosque has been delayed as a result of COVID-19, Awan said.”

“Mashallah!!

Our Islamic Centre of Yellowknife had a good showing for Eid day as well.

About 75 families came through.

They also held a special Dawah🙏program delivering Eid gifts 🎁🎁🎁to children of mixed religious upbringing who don’t normally come to the mosque.

Kudos to our Yellowknife team that is over 4,700 KM away from here !!”

View this post on Instagram

Aid mobarak said for all

A post shared by Aziz Farssi (@azizfarssi) on

Sayeda Khadija Centre has been hosting Drive-Thru Iftars for the faithful.

We thrice drove-thru those Iftar Pickups on Day 3, Day 10, and Day 24.

Today we experience Sayeda Khadija Centre’s Eid ul Fitr Drive-Thru Sweet Pickup.

They had a scheduled pickup start time of  7.a.m. early this Eid Al Fitr morning.

We were here around

We reached here around 11:30 a.m.

The driving-thru was pretty quick. We received one sweet for each of the three of us in the car.

“Sayeda Khadija Centre. A place to Pray, Learn & Play!”

We exchange Eid Mubarak greetings plus hand waves, not handshakes, and we were done!

 

“Eid,

a holiday that marks the end of 30 days of fasting during Ramadan,

was marked with a drive-thru barbecue instead of a large gathering to pray, celebrate and share food.

“It’s really an opportunity for people to see each other, at least from a distance,”

said Esseghaier.

He estimates that the Muslim community on Prince Edward Island totals almost 1,000 people,

many living in the Charlottetown area.

He said during a time that’s usually focused on togetherness,

it’s not easy to be apart.

But the global health pandemic has also made this Ramadan special in terms of supporting more time to reflect and to connect with family.

“It could be seen as a humbling experience, and also a reminder that there are a lot of things that are more important than what our worldly life is all about,” said Esseghaier.

One example, he said, is the way declining pollution levels during the pandemic have made clear the way daily routines impact the environment.

“So there might be some lessons that could be also learned from a pandemic.

And I hope that we will heed those lessons as well.”

He said it’s also been an opportunity to witness the strength and resilience of individuals and communities.

“I’m always amazed at the type of solidarity that develops among people in difficult times,” said Esseghaier.

“And I think in Canada we have shown very clearly that when things get tough,

people come together and support and help each other,

which is which is another silver lining as well.”

“The Muslim Society of PEI was in the process of arranging Eid prayer venue and Charlottetown Police provided assistance in securing the venue,

but Eid prayer plans were called off at the last moment to provide more safety and compliance with public health guidance.

The President of the Muslim Society of the PEI presented a gift to Charlottetown Police in appreciation and gratitude for their efforts.”

Alhumdulillah,

That was quick and fun!

A very nice experience visiting Al Huda Institute on this Eid Al Fitr 2020.

I was previously here on Night 2 of Ramadan 2019 for Isha and Taraweeh.

The line up of cars was orderly and everybody advanced easily in only a few moments.

This was a nice touch!

Balloons along the fence must have brought some smiles to children today.

Volunteers offered to tattoo Eid Mubarak greetings onto cars with washable inks.

There, see, Eid Mubarak !

Everything moved very smoothly, and with so few volunteers.

Paper Bags and not plastic bags. This was appreciated.

And just like that, we were receiving our Eid Al Fitr Drive-Thru Sweets.

Thank you Al Huda Institute Canada & Eid Mubarak !

 

 

View this post on Instagram

 

⭐️UPDATE⭐️ Eid is Saturday, May 23! Our Eid Drive Thru will happen on Sunday, May 24! ⁣ Asalamu alaikum everyone! ⁣ ⁣ We pray everyone had a blessed Ramadan and may Allah (SWT) accept our efforts and ibadah. Ameen!⁣ ⁣ 💝We definitely missed seeing you all and having the Masjid full during Ramadan nights but we can’t imagine seeing an empty masjid on Eid morning! Sooo…. We want to invite everyone to our Eid Drive Thru! ⁣ ⁣ ⭐️Join Al Huda Institute on Eid Morning (10am-12pm) for an Eid Drive Thru! Get your Eid goody bags, let us tattoo your cars with Eid Mubarak messages (with washable markers of course)! Most importantly let us share Eid Morning Salams and smiles like always!⁣ ⁣ ***Date of Drive Thru will be determined after the moon sighting. 🌙👀⁣

A post shared by Al Huda Institute Canada (@alhudainstitute) on

“⭐️UPDATE⭐️

Eid is Saturday, May 23!

Our Eid Drive Thru will happen on Sunday, May 24! ⁣

Asalamu alaikum everyone! ⁣

We pray everyone had a blessed Ramadan and may Allah (SWT) accept our efforts and ibadah. Ameen!⁣

💝We definitely missed seeing you all and having the Masjid full during Ramadan nights but we can’t imagine seeing an empty masjid on Eid morning!

Sooo….

We want to invite everyone to our Eid Drive Thru! ⁣

⭐️Join Al Huda Institute on Eid Morning (10am-12pm) for an Eid Drive Thru!

Get your Eid goody bags,

let us tattoo your cars with Eid Mubarak messages (with washable markers of course)!

Most importantly let us share Eid Morning Salams and smiles like always!⁣

***Date of Drive Thru will be determined after the moon sighting. 🌙👀⁣”

 

https://www.facebook.com/isna.canada/videos/239575014136251/

 

https://www.facebook.com/isna.canada/videos/717624845642139/

 

https://www.facebook.com/isna.canada/videos/3207738935943847/

 

“Are you Eid ready?

This may be a socially distant Eid but there is still a ton we can do to get in the spirit,

starting with…

*decorating our cars for the Eid drive-thrus*!

Deck out your car with ALL things Eid and join us at our drive thru where you can get boxes of sweets and goody bags!

Also don’t forget to tune into our Eid Takbeerat and Eid Show virtually on social media!”

Ajyal Islamic Centre in Vancouver delayed their regular Fajr Prayer time,

shown in this first image,

until 4:45 a.m. on the morning of Eid Al Fitr 2020.

This was done to bring it closer to the time for Eid Al Fitr Prayer, which is in the next image . . .

Eid Al Fitr Prayer, that you see above, was performed shortly after 6:05 a.m.

Ajyal Islamic Centre had previously closed completely as of March 20 2020 :

“Under the guidance of the Office of the Provincial Health Officer of British Columbia and City of Vancouver,

we have temporarily closed the center until further notice.

During this time:

  • There will be NO scheduled Daily Prayers
  • There will be NO Jummah Prayers
  • There will be no in-center educational or social programs
  • All Ramadan activities remain suspended
  • All educational programs have switched to Online format.”

 

During the complete closure, on March 30 2020 there was break-in.

“…Around 4:20 pm two individuals broke the backdoor lock (sister’s entrance) and robbed the Masjid.

They caused a fair amount of damage to the center and stole a number of items.

We are still trying to conduct an full inventory but rough estimates put the damages and loss at around $5000.

We have reported the break-in to the Police and handed all relevant video footage.

Please continue to remember the Center in your Dua.”

If you want to help,

You can donate to Ajyal on their Donate Now webpage.

 

On May 2 2020, Day 9 of Ramadan 1441,

Ajyal Islamic Centre announced Limited Opening – Fajr and Isha . . .

“…As we navigate our way through the Covid-19 pandemic,

the Board has decided to open the Masjid for two prayers.

Starting today,

we will start praying Fajr and Isha prayers in congregation.

The social distances rules will be enforced and everyone is asked to bring in their own praying mats.

Currently we can accommodate a maximum of 30 people for each of the prayers.

Timings:

Fajr and Isha iqama times will be 10+ after the Athan times published on the Ajyal Ramadan Timetable.

 

Ajyal Islamic Centre is my Home Masjid in Vancouver.

AIC has been tagged at least 32 times on this blog, so far.

If I was in the Lower Mainland today instead of being in Ontario,

I would have joined them for Fajr and Eid Al Fitr Prayers.

 

 

 

Eid Mubarak Vancouver !

https://www.facebook.com/isna.canada/videos/347113132923009/

 

Prayer will start at 7AM.

Please pray at home with your family and do not follow the imam virtually.

The reminder will take place immediately after, please join us with your family then insha Allah.

UPDATE : Night 29 Ramadan 2021 :

…um… OOPS!

Laylat al-Jaiza or Night of Rewards is the night preceding both the Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha.

It has particular significance with the month of Ramadan and is to earn rewards for all the fasts and good deeds in this month.

It is considered as a blessed night for Muslims and a night to offer prayers and supplications.

Prophet Muhammad (upon who be peace) is reported to have said in a hadith in Sunan ibn Maja.

“Whoever stands up (in worship) in the nights preceding the two Eids expecting rewards from his Lord,

his heart will not die when the other hearts will die.”

I recorded this video on Laylatul Jaiza Night 30 of Ramadan 2018 in Vancouver’s Al Jamia Masjid.

Before the Imam began leading the prayer, he reminded us about Laylatul Jaiza and encouraged us not to let it pass by us . . .

Tonight after praying Maghrib at Home,

because that’s where you pray during a Pandemic Lockdown,

I went looking for the new crescent moon for the Month of Shawwal 1441.

I spent about 10 minutes searching, yet did not see the moon.

There is haze on the horizon, and you can the cloud covering in the photo.

For some reason, the planet Venus was extremely bright.

I can understand how someone could be mistaken and think they saw a very thin crescent when if fact what they were looking at was Venus.

This is a negative moonsighting report from Brampton, Ontario, Canada for Saturday May 23 2020.

For me and my household,

We are completing 30 Days of Fasting of Ramadan 1441 / 2020.

Eid Mubarak from me,

HiMY !

I could not let Ramadan 2020 expire without blogging about Steve Rockwell.

The following was posted May 2 2020 on Iqra.ca :

Muslim TV Host Steve Rockwell passes away

The host of a weekly Muslim TV show,

Mohamed Twahir,

also known as Steve Rockwell,

passed away on Saturday May, 2, 2020 in Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada at the age of 74

He was the founder of Sheik Deedat Centre in Toronto,

host of The Call of the Minaret show on television and owner of Worlds Biggest Jean Store and Rockwell Resort.

Born in Guyana,

he was the grandson of the late Imaam Moulvie Alabaksh,

son of the late Imaam Moulvie Yusuf and Naseeran Yusuf,

spouse of Sharon,

loving father of Riyad (Ameera), Refena (Noureddine),

grandfather of Abdul Rahman, Fatima and Ayah,

cherished brother of the late Hajii Imaam Zaakir, Habiban Nesha (brother-in-law of the late Imaam Sahadat Ali), Sherifun Nesha (brother-in-law of the late Imaam Shamir Khan, Isha, (brother-in-law of Mohamed Kalamadeen) and Azra (brother-in-law of Abdool Satar).

 

For some reason, web traffic on my previous blog stories mentioning Steve Rockwell suddenly had new page views . . .

Yet, I did not understand that Steve died until later on, perhaps around Middle of Ramadan 2020 when I visited Iqra.ca.

His TV Show, Call of The Minaret, was kinda weird to me.

I never watched it, beyond a minute or so.

People were watching, Muslims and non-Muslims alike.

How do I know ?

His show kept coming up in passing conversations every now and then.

It wasn’t Reflections on Islam, but it was one more Islamic TV Show on the air, at a time when there weren’t that many.

Ramadan 2020 has seen an explosion in online video content from so many masjids the world over, be it livestream Qhutbahs on Twitter or Zoom Iftars later uploaded to youtube.

Before all that, there was Steve Rockwell.

Steve had a youtube channel, and only a few Call of The Minaret episodes were ever uploaded to it.

I’m embedding this one episode as it relates to Ramadan and Fasting . . .

 

 

Last Ramadan, 2019, I spent part of Day 19 and had Iftar on Night 20 at Sheikh Deedat Centre.

While this Pandemic Lockdown Ramadan 2020 has seen Massive Public Weekend Iftars at Toronto Area Masjids replaced with Drive-Thru Iftar Pickup,

Steve Rockwell had been handing out Take-Out Iftars to anyone who wanted or needed one, no questions asked, each previous Ramadan.

Many Ryerson University Students who needed to break their fast, pray Maghrib, then dash off to evening classes, would rely on these Take-Away Iftar trays.

Likewise for Muslim Professionals in Downtown Toronto who needed to catch their once-an-hour scheduled GO Train taking them home in the outer suburbs.

Last time I was there, this sign was posted on the wall . . .

” Last Ramadan on Bond Street “

Upon seeing this sign,

I immediately felt an overwhelming sense of purpose in needing to write down all the appreciation I had for Steve making a Muslim Prayer Space in Downtown Toronto.

He did a lot with so little.

But I never wrote that story, and got busy with the last ten nights and days of Ramadan 2019.

And now it’s the final few hours before the end of Ramadan 2020.

Maybe I don’t have to write anything more about Brother Steve Rockwell.

My previous blog entries remain readable, my previous photo blog entries are there to show the inside of the 100 Bond Street Masjid no longer there.

I can only think of this one thing I want, or need, to say to complete this Remembering Steve Rockwell blog post…

I can’t recall exactly when this happened, but the 100 Bond Street masjid was there.

At the time it was the only masjid in Downtown Toronto.

There was no way it could service the many hundreds and hundreds of Friday Prayer Muslim Worshippers for Jumah, but it did its best with multiple Qhutbahs through the afternoon.

Other Jumahs were taking place in rented locations around downtown Toronto, and those locations were only rented once a week on Fridays.

One location was The Cathedral Church of St. James.

A number of Muslims had made arrangements with the Church to use one of their multi-use rooms for Friday Prayer.

Those prayers were quick, maybe 15 minutes tops.

No wudu facilities, we had to have it before we arrived.

I attended a number of St James’ Jumahs when I could not make it out of downtown in time to a real masjid for Jumah Prayer.

( That Friday-only Congregation would eventually become one justification for today’s Masjid Toronto at Adelaide, immediately opposite the Church where these earlier Jumahs were held.

Before that, another nomadic Jumah Congregation would stop renting empty Downtown Toronto office spaces.

Pooling money and negotiation savvy together, Masjid Toronto at 168 Dundas Street West was the result.

They in turn would set up the Satellite Masjid Toronto at Adelaide Street. )

Well, at some point, the magazine Christianity Today published a story about how there were NO places for Muslims to pray in Toronto other than this one church.

On the face of it, the magazine article was completely incorrect.

I wrote a letter to the editor, and cited Steve Rockwell’s Masjid at 100 Bond Street, as evidence that yes, in addition to so many other masjids around Toronto, there was indeed a Masjid in Downtown Toronto.

The magazine never acknowledged my letter nor retracted the article.

Later on though, once Christianity Today had an online presence, they asked if they could post a image from my then very active photoblog.

I agreed, and for a week, this Muslim had a photo on the front webpage of Christianity Today.

It went unsaid, but in-between the lines of our email exchanges, I felt this was their way of making good.

Fine. Good enough.

Without Steve Rockwell and his second floor Masjid at 100 Bond Street, in Downtown Toronto, I could not have written that Letter to The Editor in earnest.

The next closest Masjids were Jami Mosque near Dundas and Bloor in the city’s west end, or Rhodes Avenue Masjid in the east end.

So that’s the way I remember Steve Rockwell.

A businessman who made a Masjid, two masjids in fact.

Somebody has to say the following publicly, so why not me?

Growing up in Toronto, there were MANY successful Muslim business people who had the connections, know-how, and money to establish masjids.

My dad could have, my family could have, but we never did. We donated when someone else started masjids, but what was stopping us from starting ?

Somehow, almost nobody put their money to seed masjids.

That’s why so many, many, many, Jumah-only rental locations persisted from the 1970s into the early 2000s.

While many others were renting, Steve was establishing.

Before 100 Bond Street, Steve had a rental space as a musallah on the second floor of the building at the north-west corner of Yonge and Dundas Streets.

Before the Public Adhans of Ramadan 2020,

Steve Rockwell would use his loudspeakers from those second story windows at his previous Yonge & Dundas masjid to broadcast the Call to Prayer.

Several times a day.

Yeah, Steve did that too.

Sometimes you could hear those Adhans five blocks away at Toronto City Hall.

Maybe as a reminder from the Man who once owned The World’s Biggest Jean Store whose building on the South East Corner of Yonge And Dundas was expropriated against his wishes to make way for Yonge-Dundas Square.

 


The World’s Biggest Jean Store Nov. 1998. Photo: Bessie Ng

“At the intersection of Yonge and Dundas,

dance music blares onto the streets from the World’s Biggest Jean Store.

The two-storey flea market is draped on the outside and inside with women’s clothing.

Steve Rockwell,

owner and building tenant,

has been at this intersection for the past 17 years.

He calls me into his small office on the second floor at the back to be interviewed.

He’s not too worried about his future,

as he has already staked out a new location in Toronto — he won’t reveal where.

Downtown needs development,

says Rockwell,

who is not disappointed with the progress the city is making.

“I’m not married to this building,” he says.

“I have more beef than anybody else,

but you can’t stand against progress.

But when you throw me out,

compensate me fairly.”

Rockwell can’t reveal how much he is being compensated.

No one will.

They are in negotiations with the city right now and all they can look forward to is a fair share.

The city has offered all owners and some tenants more than $30 million.

But lawyers for the owners say the land is worth between $75 million to $100 million,

much more than the price the city is willing to pay.”

The Eyeopener, November 11 1998

 

Embed from Getty Images

Steve Rockwell; right; manager of World’s Biggest Jeans Store on Yonge Street, December 29 1991.

“…The World’s Biggest Jean Store, whose “tired” facade was located on the southeast corner of Yonge and Dundas and which has now reopened on Victoria Street Lane,

just behind its old location.

The store was a major tourist attraction that provided the same kind of gritty Times Square atmosphere council now seeks to mimic.

Ditto the Licks Restaurant,

forced out of its downtown location.

Steve Rockwell,

owner of Rockwell Jeans,

provides the same discounted clothes favoured by inner-city kids,

although his new store’s traffic isn’t what it used to be.

And 30 staff members were laid off.

Rockwell agrees the city plan was a good one and thinks the public square is beautiful.

But he says the city botched the plan when it failed to open up the “best piece of real estate in the country to bidding.’

Originally, he was angered by expropriation and only got “peanuts” for his property,

but according to Rockwell it turned out to be the best thing that could have happened to him.

He bought a building on Bond Street and contends it is now worth three times what he paid.

The city tried to take that building as well,

but according to Rockwell,

“God stopped them.”

Upstairs there’s a mosque with a congregation of 2,000.

Apparently,

no politician wants to be known for expropriating a house of worship to build a commercial development.”

NOW Magazine, April 24 2003

STEVE ROCKWELL (Muslim Preacher) passes away

“Br. Steve Rockwell (Mohamed Twahir), one of the pioneers of da’wah in Canada, passed away at the age of 74 years old on May 2/2020, during the holy month of Ramadan.

He was the founder of the Sheikh Deedat Center at 100 Bond Street in downtown Toronto, as well as the landmark store “World’s Biggest Jean Store” (later renamed “Rockwell Jeans”) which was originally situated on the southeast corner of Dundas Square on Yonge Street.

He also hosted the t.v. show “Call of the Minaret” on Vision TV.

Please remember to pray for his soul and to donate to a da’wah organization of your choice in his memory.

JazaakumAllah khairan.”

Sadat Anwar