🕌 Msikiti
Mosquee Omar Ibn Abdoulaziz Mosque Mr Bn Bd Alzyz
Mosquée Omar Ibn Abdoulaziz مسجد عمر بن عبد العزيز
🅿️
Maegesho
💧
Udhu
🚺
Sehemu ya wanawake
♿
Kiti cha magurudumu
🕌 unknown
📖
Kuhusu
Raised in honour of Umar ibn Abd al Aziz, may God be pleased with him, the beloved Umayyad caliph remembered as the fifth of the rightly guided rulers, Mosquée Omar ibn Abd al Aziz gathers Moroccan worshippers in the town of Berrechid within the Chaouia Ouardigha region on the fertile plains south of Casablanca. Berrechid sits within the Chaouia plain, one of Morocco's great agricultural regions whose wheat, barley, and grapes have fed the kingdom for centuries, and whose market towns have hosted trade caravans crossing between the Atlantic coast and the high Atlas mountains.
Umar ibn Abd al Aziz, born in Medina around 681 and passing near Aleppo in 720, ruled the Umayyad caliphate for only two and a half years, yet his memory outshines far longer reigns. He returned unjustly seized lands to their rightful owners, lived in a small house with his wife Fatima bint Abd al Malik, rode his own donkey through the streets of Damascus, and so thoroughly reformed the taxation and administration of the empire that the historians record no one in his realm remained eligible for charitable zakat because the general prosperity had lifted every household to sufficiency. His noble example has inspired generations of Moroccan ulama, and naming a Berrechid mosque after him honours that long tradition of just governance.
Moroccan Islamic architecture blends Andalusian refinement, Amazigh craftsmanship, and the broader Maghrebi style. The mosque features a square minaret in the characteristic Moroccan fashion, tiled in geometric patterns of green and white, a courtyard paved with zellige mosaics, a fountain for wudu, horseshoe arches opening onto a carpeted prayer hall, and a finely carved mihrab flanked by calligraphic cedar wood panels. Verses of the Qur'an in the beautiful Maghrebi script encircle the walls.
The present page lists accurate prayer times for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at Mosquée Omar ibn Abd al Aziz, along with the Berrechid address and practical notes for visitors arriving from Casablanca along the southern motorway, from the market town of Settat further south, or from the Atlantic beach resort of El Jadida to the west. Friday khutbahs are delivered in classical Arabic with a Maghrebi accent, drawing large gatherings from the surrounding agricultural villages. During Ramadan the congregation shares tables of harira soup, fresh msemen flatbread, and sweet chebakia pastries soaked in honey and rose water. Any traveller touring the plains between Casablanca and Marrakech is warmly invited to step inside, pray with the kind Moroccan congregation, and remember in their supplications the just caliph whose brief rule continues to shine as a model of merciful government across every Muslim generation walking towards the gentle promised dawn.
Umar ibn Abd al Aziz, born in Medina around 681 and passing near Aleppo in 720, ruled the Umayyad caliphate for only two and a half years, yet his memory outshines far longer reigns. He returned unjustly seized lands to their rightful owners, lived in a small house with his wife Fatima bint Abd al Malik, rode his own donkey through the streets of Damascus, and so thoroughly reformed the taxation and administration of the empire that the historians record no one in his realm remained eligible for charitable zakat because the general prosperity had lifted every household to sufficiency. His noble example has inspired generations of Moroccan ulama, and naming a Berrechid mosque after him honours that long tradition of just governance.
Moroccan Islamic architecture blends Andalusian refinement, Amazigh craftsmanship, and the broader Maghrebi style. The mosque features a square minaret in the characteristic Moroccan fashion, tiled in geometric patterns of green and white, a courtyard paved with zellige mosaics, a fountain for wudu, horseshoe arches opening onto a carpeted prayer hall, and a finely carved mihrab flanked by calligraphic cedar wood panels. Verses of the Qur'an in the beautiful Maghrebi script encircle the walls.
The present page lists accurate prayer times for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at Mosquée Omar ibn Abd al Aziz, along with the Berrechid address and practical notes for visitors arriving from Casablanca along the southern motorway, from the market town of Settat further south, or from the Atlantic beach resort of El Jadida to the west. Friday khutbahs are delivered in classical Arabic with a Maghrebi accent, drawing large gatherings from the surrounding agricultural villages. During Ramadan the congregation shares tables of harira soup, fresh msemen flatbread, and sweet chebakia pastries soaked in honey and rose water. Any traveller touring the plains between Casablanca and Marrakech is warmly invited to step inside, pray with the kind Moroccan congregation, and remember in their supplications the just caliph whose brief rule continues to shine as a model of merciful government across every Muslim generation walking towards the gentle promised dawn.
💬
Hisia
🕌
Nyakati za Sala
Saa za Mahali
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Fajr
Sunrise
Dhuhr
Asr
Maghrib
Isha