Aljunied - Etymology

Etymology

Aljunied Road was officially named in 1926 after Syed Omar bin Ali Al Junied (died 1852).

Syed Omar was a wealthy Arab merchant from Palembang, where he had set up business after migrating from his hometown in Tarim, Hadramaut (Yemen). He was also a highly respected man, looked upon by the Malays as a prince. Syed Omar came from the well-respected Arab family who were descendants of Islamic prophet Muhammad. He was a nephew of Syed Mohammed bin Harun Al Junied, who also came from Palembang to Singapore in the early days before the founding of Singapore in 1819.

Syed Omar was a philanthropist and his charitable acts included donating a large plot of land in Victoria Street for the purposes of a Muslim burial ground and the construction of a mosque in Bencoolen Street. The land where St Andrews Church (see St Andrew's Cathedral, Singapore) stands was also donated by him. He and his family contributed largely to the setting up of the Tan Tock Seng Hospital.

In 1927, one of his descendants, Syed Abdul Rahman Aljunied, built the Madrasah Aljunied Al-Islamiah on a vacant ground next to the Victoria Road cemetery in commemoration of his grandfather, Syed Omar. Madrsah Aljunied was a leading Islamic religious school which produced many religious leaders of Southeast Asian countries.

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