10 Postcards to Send. Want One?

I have exactly 10 postcards of this fab blue door I photographed at Eleven and a Half Fournier Street.

Want one?

I’ll send one out to the first 10 people who help me promote the blog either by sharing a link on Twitter or Facebook.

Tell me where you’ve shared it and send me a link along with your address to stephanie.sadler@hotmail.com and I’ll post one out to you so you get something better than bills in the post.

Cheers for reading LLO.

59 Brick Lane

I finally got down to Brick Lane to see the new widely discussed, and controversial 90ft “minaret”  or “structure” or “minaret-shaped tower” that now sits at 59 Brick Lane.

This building used to be the site of a French Protestant church, funny enough, which then transformed into a Methodist Chapel and later into a synagogue before it became the Jamme Masjid Mosque that it is today with the men’s entrance on Brick Lane and the women’s entrance around the corner on Fournier Street. Sermons are delivered in Sylheti Bengali as the majority of worshipers are Bangladeshi immigrants. 

Erected mid-December, the controversy falls around the fact that it was built with public money and the whole complicated debate of the place of religion vs secularism in communities. Original plans for Tower Hamlets Council regeneration scheme included a set of hijab-shaped gates as part of a “cultural trail” around Brick Lane.

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