🕌 Msikiti
Bdalmhsn Brak Alzbn Wjdth Lwlwt Jasm Aljbr
عبدالمحسن براك الزبن وجدته لؤلؤة جاسم الجبر
🅿️
Maegesho
💧
Udhu
🚺
Sehemu ya wanawake
♿
Kiti cha magurudumu
🕌 unknown
📖
Kuhusu
On the sandy southern fringe of Kuwait City, in the neighbourhood of Al Funaytis overlooking the turquoise waters of the Persian Gulf, the mosque endowed in the names of Abd al Muhsin Barrak al Zabin and his grandmother Lu'lu'a Jasim al Jabr reflects the quietly generous Kuwaiti tradition of family waqf. The Al Zabin and Al Jabr are among the older merchant families of Kuwait, rooted in the pearl trade and the long distance dhow commerce that once linked the Gulf to East Africa and the Malabar coast. Naming a mosque after a grandmother alongside her grandson honours the Islamic principle that charitable endowments by women carry the same reward as those by men, and it preserves the memory of beloved elders for the prayers of future worshippers.
Al Funaytis itself is a newer residential district of Mubarak al Kabir governorate, laid out along wide landscaped avenues between the coastal highway and the older suburbs inland. Its homes belong largely to young Kuwaiti families, and its mosques, schools, and parks have grown in parallel with the neighbourhood over the last two decades.
The building follows the confident contemporary Kuwaiti idiom. Pale sand toned stone cladding faces the outer walls, a single dome in cream rises above the square prayer hall, and a slender minaret in square plan carries a stepped crown at its summit. Triangular Najdi crenellations ornament the parapets, and a shaded portico paved in warm granite welcomes worshippers through carved wooden doors. Landscaped beds of bougainvillea and date palms soften the harshness of the Gulf sunlight.
Inside, the hall is bright and cool. Long rows of deep green Turkish carpet, a ribbed dome painted in soft gypsum tones, and a mihrab of polished cream marble carry the eye forwards. A carved walnut mimbar stands beside the mihrab, its panels bearing calligraphic medallions in Thuluth. A screened women's prayer area provides quiet access for sisters. The mosque's daily five prayers, its Friday gathering, and its long Ramadan nights of tarawih and qiyam bind Al Funaytis families into a living, grateful community that remembers its benefactors.
Al Funaytis itself is a newer residential district of Mubarak al Kabir governorate, laid out along wide landscaped avenues between the coastal highway and the older suburbs inland. Its homes belong largely to young Kuwaiti families, and its mosques, schools, and parks have grown in parallel with the neighbourhood over the last two decades.
The building follows the confident contemporary Kuwaiti idiom. Pale sand toned stone cladding faces the outer walls, a single dome in cream rises above the square prayer hall, and a slender minaret in square plan carries a stepped crown at its summit. Triangular Najdi crenellations ornament the parapets, and a shaded portico paved in warm granite welcomes worshippers through carved wooden doors. Landscaped beds of bougainvillea and date palms soften the harshness of the Gulf sunlight.
Inside, the hall is bright and cool. Long rows of deep green Turkish carpet, a ribbed dome painted in soft gypsum tones, and a mihrab of polished cream marble carry the eye forwards. A carved walnut mimbar stands beside the mihrab, its panels bearing calligraphic medallions in Thuluth. A screened women's prayer area provides quiet access for sisters. The mosque's daily five prayers, its Friday gathering, and its long Ramadan nights of tarawih and qiyam bind Al Funaytis families into a living, grateful community that remembers its benefactors.
💬
Hisia
🕌
Nyakati za Sala
Saa za Mahali
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Fajr
Sunrise
Dhuhr
Asr
Maghrib
Isha