. Al-Mansour is home to many notable activities and significant landmarks. The work of Iraqi sculptor,
Khaled al-Rahal, the statue base was bombed by unidentified armed men on October 18, 2005, the day former president
Saddam Hussein was put on trial. The base was later rebuilt, and the statue was reattached in May 2008. The Statue is a bronze sculpture of the face of the Abbasid Caliph, mounted on a brick body that forms a small building decorated with Islamic decoration. The statue and its complex is located on a small rounded square decorated with trees and herbs. The statue also gained infamy due to
Shi'i extremists calling for the removal and demolishing of the statue and used
Social Medias such as
Twitter in order to spread the message. This forced the government to take a security measure and deploy law enforcement forces in order to protect the statue from vandalism.
Al-Ma'mun Tower '''Al-Ma'mun Tower
(), also known as the Baghdad Tower''' (), is located in the
Yarmouk Neighborhood and it was built as a communication center as well as a revolving restaurant on top of it in 1991. The tower was damaged during the
US invasion of Iraq in 2003 but it had been renovated a few times. It was formerly called as International Saddam Tower. The name was changed after the 2003 invasion of Iraq and adopted its current name.
Places of worship •
Al-Rahman Mosque () is the biggest mosque in Iraq although construction on the mosque has stopped since 2003. The mosque contains very large domes, a number of which are eight domes, in the middle of which is a very huge one, and it was hoped that after the completion of construction, it would be one of the largest mosques in the world. Al-Rahman Mosque was supposed to rival the Taj Mahal of India and represented a hypothetical philosophical idea based on the establishment of a living edifice that has the ability to generate sustainable positive energies that represent the Islamic faith and
monotheism. Since 2003, construction on the Mosque stopped and the
Shi'a Endowment Council took over the mosque and opposed the construction of the Mosque due to its costs of 200 million dollars. The fate of the Mosque remains unknown. •
Umm al-Tabul Mosque () is the most famous and largest among the mosques in Baghdad inspired by
Cairo Citadel in
Cairo. It is located at the entrance to the main road leading to Baghdad International Airport. Its area is about 15,000 square meters and accommodates about 1,500 worshipers. Its construction was completed in 1968 and was named after the neighborhood it was built on with the same name. The mosque contains calligraphy made by the Iraqi calligrapher
Hashem Muhammad al-Baghdadi. •
Al-Qubanchi Mosque () is a mosque located in al-Harithiya area on the
Damascus Street which connects to al-Karkh. The mosque was built by Iraqi artist
Muhammad al-Qubanchi. Al-Qubanchi originally wanted to build a house on the land which he bought and even commissioned architects to design the house. But after a dream he had in his sleep, he decided to scrap the idea for a house and instead built a mosque in 1977 which became al-Qubanchi Mosque. He worked in the mosque and requested to be buried in the mosque, and he was so after his death in 1989. Poet Walid al-Azzami helped to write the calligraphy on the mosque. •
Umm al-Qura Mosque () is the largest Sunni Mosque located in al-Ghazaliya and was built during the reign of Saddam Hussein. Work began on the Mosque on April 28, 1998, and the mosque was finished on April 28, 2001 and includes architecture that was common at the time of Saddam Hussein's rule and a large dome. The Mosque is opened for both Sunni and Shi'i Muslims. During Ramadan of 2011, 28 worshippers were killed in a suicide bombing. File:Saadia al-Omari dome night.jpg|Dome of
Saadia al-Omari Mosque File:جامع أم الطبول 2.jpg|
Umm al-Tabul Mosque File:Al-Rahman Mosque.png|
Al-Rahman Mosque File:Umm al-Maarik Mosque.jpg|
Umm al-Qura Mosque Shopping malls •
Al-Mansour Mall () is one of the largest commercial malls in Baghdad, built to reduce unemployment in the area and attract foreign capital. Opened in 2013, the mall has four floors including within them are over 170 shops and a sophisticated cinema. •
Babylon Mall () is a commercial and investment mall opened by the Baghdad Investment Commission and the
Baghdad Municipality and was built on land owned by the Municipality. The mall's goal is to expand the field of commercial and marketing services and shops as part of a plan to increase investment projects and activate the private sector as well as reduce unemployment. The mall has multiple floors. Including the basement, a floor with a
bazaar, the first floor which includes commercial stores, the second floor which includes shops and restaurants, the third floor which includes a coffee shop, the fourth floor which contains games and restaurants, the fifth floor which contains more restaurants and shops and a sixth floor. ==Neighborhoods==