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🕌 Mosque Sunni

Masjid Taqwa Al-Azhar

Qibla finder
مسجد Taqwa Al Azhar

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About

In the northern reaches of Sumatra, within the busy city of Medan, Masjid Taqwa Al Azhar stands as one of many neighbourhood mosques that keep the rhythm of worship alive for a community long shaped by trade, tobacco plantations and the old Deli Sultanate. The name pairs two ideas in a very deliberate way. Taqwa, a word that means God conscious awareness, is considered the finest garment a believer can wear according to the Quran, while Al Azhar honours the venerable institution in Cairo that has sent its scholars across the Muslim world for more than a thousand years. Read together, the name suggests a place where inner devotion meets outward learning. Medan is a city of remarkable diversity, where Malay, Batak, Javanese, Minangkabau, Arab and Chinese families share the same streets, and the mosque reflects this layered society. Its design combines the sloping roofs common to Sumatran architecture with touches of Middle Eastern elegance, including a green dome, slim minarets and calligraphy panels quoting verses of the Quran around the main entrance. Inside, the carpet is ruled into long rows oriented on the qibla line towards Makkah, while rattan fans stir the humid air as worshippers gather shoulder to shoulder. Daily life at the mosque runs in steady cycles. Before dawn the caretakers sweep the courtyard and switch on the loudspeakers for the Fajr call. By mid morning, small children arrive for Quran recitation classes, learning to read Arabic letters from patient teachers who often volunteer their time. Friday sermons draw office workers from the nearby commercial blocks, and the sound of the khutbah mixes with the distant horns of becak drivers waiting at the kerb. During Ramadan the building truly comes alive, with iftar tables set out under the covered veranda, tarawih prayers stretching late into the evening, and the example of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, recalled in every gentle reminder. Out of town guests who wish to pray alongside the regulars will find a simple welcome, and the courtyard always offers shade and a cool tiled floor for a moment of rest.

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