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Showing posts with label Religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Religion. Show all posts

Tuesday, 26 September 2017

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in Adelaide Part II - How to Talk to the Dead



Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in Adelaide Part II - 

How to Talk to the Dead 


Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was a tenacious champion of the spiritualist movement, after first discovering it in 1886. He devoured as many texts about the subject as he could, and became involved in seances and table tipping, as well as frequently visiting psychics.
Conan Doyle lost his first wife, Norma in 1906, and it is believed that the depression he felt after her death, may have triggered him to bury himself further in the occult and spiritualism.
He truly believed that his own son, Kingsley, who died in 1918, had contacted him from beyond the grave, talking through a medium. He stated that Kingsley had also touched him on his head during the séance.

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle arrived in Australia at Fremantle on board the R.M.S. Naldera on the 17th of September 1920. He then, on the same ship, arrived in, Outer Harbour, Adelaide on Tuesday the 21st of September, before making his way to Gibson’s Grand Central Hotel, where he based himself for the duration of his time in Adelaide.

Conan Doyle’s tour of Australia, titles “Death and the Hereafter” began in Adelaide: 

On Saturday the 25th of September, Conan Doyle delivered his first lecture in the Adelaide Town Hall, titled “The Human Argument”, to an estimated audience of 2000 people. It was noted by journalists of the time that many in the audience were well educated business people of Adelaide.
 During this talk, Conan Doyle outlined what led him to his belief in spiritualism, and what he called “the hard facts” about the movement. He also detailed the history of spiritualism around the world up until that point.

On Monday the 27th of September 1920, Conan Doyle delivered his second speech, this time titled “The Religious Argument”. During this lecture Conan Doyle explained that spiritualism was not separate from the Churches beliefs, but that they were intertwined, and that one proves the other.[1]

On Tuesday the 28th, Conan Doyle delivered the final lecture to Adelaide audiences, titled “Pictures of Psychic Phenomena”. During this lecture, Conan Doyle had many of his photos that were taking during seances, projected onto a screen for the audience. Within the photos were alleged apparition photos of his son Kingsley, and of mediums producing “ecto-plasm”.[2]

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle then took his tour around Australia and New Zealand to sold out venues. 

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle went on to write twenty books about spiritualism, they are:
The New Revelation (1918),
Life After Death (1918),
The Vital Message (1919),
Spiritualism and Rationalism (1920),
The Wanderings of a Spiritualist (1921),
The Coming of the Fairies (1922),
The Case for Spirit Photography (1922),
Our American Adventure (1923),
Our Second American Adventure (1924),
Spiritualist's Reader (1924),
Memories and Adventures (1924),
The Early Christian Church and Modern Spiritualism (1925),
The Land of Mist (1926, fiction),
The History of Spiritualism, in two volumes (1926),
Pheneas Speaks. Direct Spirit Communication in the Family Circle (1927),
Our African Winter (1929), The Edge of the Unknown (1930).

A small plaque on the Corner of Rundle Street and Pulteney Street (near Hungry Jacks), Adelaide, Australia unveiled in 1995 marks his stay in the City of Churches.
 
 
© 2017 - Allen Tiller = The Haunts of Adelaide: History, Mystery and the Paranormal
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[1] 1920 'THE RELIGIOUS ARGUMENT', The Northern Champion (Taree, NSW : 1913 - 1954), 27 November, p. 8. , viewed 15 Jul 2017, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article158367509

[2] 1920 'THE CONAN DOYLE LECTURES', The Register (Adelaide, SA : 1901 - 1929), 24 September, p. 8. , viewed 15 Jul 2017, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article57921970

Tuesday, 14 March 2017

Adelaide Mosque




Adelaide Mosque


In the quiet backstreets of Adelaide’s south west, not far from Whitmore Square you will find Little Gilbert Street, upon which you will find Australia’s oldest surviving mosque.
 Erected in 188-89, it was the first mosque to be built within an Australian City, and is still used to this day by local Muslim as a place of worship and socialising.


The Express and Telegraph newspaper described a visit to the mosque on June 30th 1890 (page 3), describing the building as the following:



 “On reaching the court shoes and boots were deposited on the ground, a small covered cloister was crossed, and the place of prayer was entered by a doorway looking to the east. It is an exceedingly plain, small roofed building whose whitewashed walls might recall those of a ''kirk" in some remote country district of Scotland.
 Immediately opposite the entrance is a niche about 9 feet high, near the top of which is a bullseye window looking due west. This niche is the mihrab or kibla, and is supposed to show the direction of Mecca, as Christian churches do that of Jerusalem.
 In the walls of the sanctuary are smaller niches, which do not reach to the ground, and where lamps and printed copies of the Koran are kept. On the floor are strips of matting, very necessary to prevent the feet of the faithful from feeling the cold while engaged in their devotions…”

…  “Leaving the place of prayer, we resumed our shoes, and the mulla pointed to a large excavation which is being bricked up just in front of the cloister. This is the tank for the ablutions requisite before prayer. It will form the centre of the little court in front of the sanctuary, and the covered cloister, or liwan, will be extended so as to surround it on all sides.
The effect of the pillars, the mosaic pavement, and the water in the Centre, should then be very pretty, especially on a bright day, when the play of light and shadow will come in.”



It estimated that the building cost around $450 pounds (in 1888/89)
Little Gilbert Street view of Adelaide Mosque - photo: ®2017 Allen Tiller
1to build, with large subscriptions tendered by active Muslims in Melbourne.
The initial interest in building the Mosque was headed by local man, Hadji Mullah, an Afghani man who had worked with the Overland Telegraph Line construction, moving material via camel through the outback.

View through arches of Adelaide Mosque to garden and pool in 1937.
The Adelaide City council approved plans for the building of the Mosque in 1887. It took two years to construct a caretaker’s cottage, and the Mosque. Following that, small cottages were built nearby to house unemployed cameleers, hawkers and the retired cameleers who were now moving south after their work had finished in the outback.
In 1903, the impressive minarets were added to the building, marking its place in Adelaide’s quiet, leafy back streets, and making the Mosque stand out, above the buildings around it.
 The Mosque’s minarets underwent some repair work in the 1990’s after they began to flake and crumble.


Unfortunately, the Mosque has seen tragedy in its time, the first occurring in 1896 when four-year-old William Mahomed was found drowned in water tank in the mosque yard. It is possible he was murdered by a local man who sought revenge against the child’s mother for an earlier perceived indiscretion.
 A near tragedy was averted between two old male worshipers in 1942. Two old cameleers One aged 70 (Izze Khan), assaulted another aged 87 (Sultan Mahomet) with a knife and an axe handle.
 The fight began after an incident the day before, when a woman climb into the mosque from the window of an adjoining building, Mr Khan followed her into the kitchen and said to her "Lady, you go out and go home through the door."
The lady then climbed out a window, and down a drain pipe, breaking the pipe on her exit.

The following morning the two men were in the Mosque, and began arguing over the incident. Khan then punched the older man in the face, went out to the shed, and came back brandishing an axe handle and knife, with which he beat Sultan mercilessly.
The older man spent three days in hospital with his injuries, and never fully recovered from the beating.

Today the building is still used for worship by local Muslims, and is often a feature in local history tours of the area. You can find it situated at:
22–28 Little Gilbert Street
Adelaide, SA


© Allen Tiller “The Haunts of Adelaide”, 2017
1890 'A Mosque in Adelaide.', The Express and Telegraph (Adelaide, SA : 1867 - 1922), 1 July, p. 3. , viewed 25 Feb 2017, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article208386804

1890 'SCRATCHINGS IN THE CITY.', Kapunda Herald (SA : 1878 - 1951), 17 June, p. 3. , viewed 25 Feb 2017, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article108353211

Elton J,2017. Adelaide Mosque | Adelaidia. History SA, Viewed 25 February 2017, http://adelaidia.sa.gov.au/places/adelaide-mosque.

InDaily. 2017. Time and place: The Adelaide Mosque - InDaily. [ONLINE] Available at: http://indaily.com.au/news/local/2016/11/25/time-and-place-the-adelaide-mosque/. [Accessed 25 February 2017].
Williamson B, 2013, The oldest mosque in Australia, ABC Adelaide, Viewed 25/2/2017, http://www.abc.net.au/local/stories/2013/07/02/3794324.htm

1942 'AFGHAN CHARGED OVER INCIDENT AT MOSQUE', News (Adelaide, SA : 1923 - 1954), 17 December, p. 6. , viewed 26 Feb 2017, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article128309456

1896 'FATALITY AT THE MOSQUE.', The Express and Telegraph (Adelaide, SA : 1867 - 1922), 30 November, p. 2. (ONE O'CLOCK EDITION), viewed 26 Feb 2017, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article209078872

SA Memory. 2017. SA Memory Adelaide Mosque.  Viewed 25/2/2017,http://www.samemory.sa.gov.au/site/page.cfm?u=1454&c=880

1890 'GENERAL NEWS.', Adelaide Observer (SA : 1843 - 1904), 2 August, p. 28. , viewed 25 Feb 2017, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article159550468