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Muslim artists' tile work graces Buenos Aires metro station

On one section of wall at the Independencia metro station under the banner "Views from Spain", notable monuments of Andalusia are displayed, including the Great Mosque of Cordoba -- one of the oldest structures still standing from the time when Muslims ruled the region.

The metro station also sports another unique feature: the Arabic calligraphy "Wa La Ghalib Illa Allah", which translates into "there is no victor but Allah". According to Ricardo Elia, director at the Islamic Center of Argentina, the metro station is the only place where that exact inscription can be found in Arabic calligraphy on tiles.

The Independencia station is home to work by Muslim calligraphers at the time when the Andalusia region of Spain was under Islamic rule from 711 to 1492.

Spanish engineer Don Rafael Benjumea Burin, who was born in the Sevilla province of the autonomous Andalusia region and reportedly quite inspired by the tile work, authorized the decoration of the metro station in 1935. He took the original copies of tiles to Buenos Aires from the Alhambra Palace located in Spain's Granada province. The calligraphy was inscribed on the walls of the Alhambra Palace, and served as a motto for the region’s Muslims.

"The tile work on the walls brings a characteristic feature to the station," says 22-year-old student Leonardo Musso, who frequents the Independencia station.

Information boards about the decorative tile work exist at the Independencia metro station for passengers wishing to learn more about the works.

Muslim artists' tile work graces Buenos Aires metro station Muslim artists' tile work graces Buenos Aires metro station

Source: www.worldbulletin.net

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