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Al Rahbi Park

Park in Baghdad, Iraq From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Al Rahbi Park (Arabic: حديقة الرحبي) is a park located in the Adhamiyah district of Baghdad, Iraq.[1][2] The park is known for containing the tomb of the famous Muslim scholar, Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari (839–923 CE), the author of the Tarikh al-Tabari historical chronicle and the famed Tafsir al-Tabari exegesis of the Qur'an.[3][4][5]

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Tomb of Al-Tabari

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The tomb of the famous Muslim jurist and scholar, Al-Tabari, is located at a far corner of Al Rahbi Park.[6][7][8] The tomb, which had been forgotten for years, was rediscovered in 2002 when several old houses were demolished to expand the area of the park.[9][7][8] Archaeologists and historians including Imad Abd al-Salam Rauf[10] subsequently identified the tomb as belonging to Al-Tabari, and the place was made into a heritage site.[9][7][8]

In late 2017, locals reported that the tomb was in a state of neglect and filthy, with rubbish being dumped on it.[11] Subsequent pictures showed the grave in a dilapidated and filthy condition, with litter strewn everywhere.[11] Locals were unsatisfied with the condition of the tomb, and went online to voice the matter of the government's lack of interest in preserving the tomb.[11]

In 2018, the Sunni Endowment Office announced that a new mausoleum structure, or shrine, would be built around the pre-existing grave of Al-Tabari, headed by Abdul Latif Hamim under the supervision of Saad Mahmoud Al Qaisi, the current Director General of the Department of Religious Shrines.[12]

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