A minaret located north of the Rabah Al-Hassani Palace (currently the American colony), on Nablus Street, was established in the year (583 Ah / 1187 ad), attributed to Prince Husam al-Din al-Hussein bin Isa Al-Jarahi, one of the commanders of the army of Sultan Saladin (d. (1201 ad), and has a mausoleum. It is also called the soil or the corner of Sheikh Jarrah. It included several rooms and a waterway.

Several properties have been put on hold for maintenance . It was reconstructed after an earthquake occurred in (954 Ah / 1547 ad), and a small mosque was added to it with an area not exceeding (50 m2), with a modest one on the western side in (1313 Ah / 1895 ad), and it was expanded from the south and east sides and a new mihrab and a light were added to it in (1999 ad), and the Sharia court records indicate that the AL-Deisi family took over the supervision of the corner since the seventeenth century. Construction spread around it at the end of the Ottoman era, so the area was called the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood. The Zawiya buildings were shelled by Israeli artillery during the two wars (1948 and 1967), which led to the martyrdom of some members of the AL-Deisi family.