🕌 Msikiti
Grand Mosque Bdalmhsn Al Bdalmhsn Alswylm
جامع عبدالمحسن آل عبدالمحسن السويلم
🅿️
Maegesho
💧
Udhu
🚺
Sehemu ya wanawake
♿
Kiti cha magurudumu
🕌 unknown
📖
Kuhusu
Set among the broad new quarters of Riyadh, the capital of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Jami Abdul Muhsin Al Abdul Muhsin al Suwailem carries the name of a departed patron whose family continues a long tradition of charitable mosque building across the Najd. Saudi charitable endowments have raised countless mosques from Tabuk to Najran, and naming a building after a loved one is considered a lasting sadaqa jariya, a continuing charity whose reward flows to the soul of the remembered with every prayer offered inside its walls. The Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, promised that whoever builds a mosque for God, even the size of a bird's nest, will receive a house in paradise from the Most Merciful.
Riyadh itself grew from a small oasis town into a vast modern capital within a single century, following the unification of the kingdom by Abdul Aziz ibn Abdul Rahman Al Saud in 1932. The old city's Masmak fort recalls the pivotal battle of 1902, while the newer districts stretch across the desert with broad boulevards, residential compounds, and a skyline of bright towers. Throughout every expansion, the patient building of mosques has kept the adhan within earshot of every home, day after day.
Architecturally the building follows the refined contemporary Najdi style. Walls of pale local stone, a modest central dome clad in glazed tile, a single slender pencil minaret, carved wooden doors, and wide marble courtyards shaded by date palms welcome worshippers against the searing desert heat. Inside, soft red carpets cover the floor, crystal chandeliers hang from the dome, and Thuluth calligraphy circles the prayer hall citing verses on divine mercy and guidance.
Accurate daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at Jami Abdul Muhsin Al Abdul Muhsin al Suwailem appear on this page along with the Riyadh address, a map pin, and hospitable notes for visitors arriving from the Kingdom Centre, the Masmak fort, or the edge of the red sand desert at Thumama. During Ramadan the courtyard fills with generous tables of dates, laban, harees, lamb kabsa, and sweet kunafa shared freely with every guest, and tarawih evenings resound with the elevated recitations cherished across the kingdom. Any traveller passing through the Najdi capital between the oasis of al Hasa and the mountain town of Taif is warmly invited to step within these cool walls, to kneel upon the crimson carpets among the generous Saudi worshippers, and to whisper a soft supplication for the benefactor whose family's quiet hospitality continues, prayer after prayer, to accompany a long journey that only the recording angels may ever fully follow to its bright and final destination.
Riyadh itself grew from a small oasis town into a vast modern capital within a single century, following the unification of the kingdom by Abdul Aziz ibn Abdul Rahman Al Saud in 1932. The old city's Masmak fort recalls the pivotal battle of 1902, while the newer districts stretch across the desert with broad boulevards, residential compounds, and a skyline of bright towers. Throughout every expansion, the patient building of mosques has kept the adhan within earshot of every home, day after day.
Architecturally the building follows the refined contemporary Najdi style. Walls of pale local stone, a modest central dome clad in glazed tile, a single slender pencil minaret, carved wooden doors, and wide marble courtyards shaded by date palms welcome worshippers against the searing desert heat. Inside, soft red carpets cover the floor, crystal chandeliers hang from the dome, and Thuluth calligraphy circles the prayer hall citing verses on divine mercy and guidance.
Accurate daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at Jami Abdul Muhsin Al Abdul Muhsin al Suwailem appear on this page along with the Riyadh address, a map pin, and hospitable notes for visitors arriving from the Kingdom Centre, the Masmak fort, or the edge of the red sand desert at Thumama. During Ramadan the courtyard fills with generous tables of dates, laban, harees, lamb kabsa, and sweet kunafa shared freely with every guest, and tarawih evenings resound with the elevated recitations cherished across the kingdom. Any traveller passing through the Najdi capital between the oasis of al Hasa and the mountain town of Taif is warmly invited to step within these cool walls, to kneel upon the crimson carpets among the generous Saudi worshippers, and to whisper a soft supplication for the benefactor whose family's quiet hospitality continues, prayer after prayer, to accompany a long journey that only the recording angels may ever fully follow to its bright and final destination.
💬
Hisia
🕌
Nyakati za Sala
Saa za Mahali
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Fajr
Sunrise
Dhuhr
Asr
Maghrib
Isha