🕌 مسجد
مسجد الحاج Aidy
Haji Aidy Mosque
🅿️
مواقف سيارات
💧
مكان وضوء
🚺
قسم نساء
♿
إمكانية وصول
🕌 unknown
📖
عن المكان
Between the workshops and family compounds of Saymayl in Iraq, a simple signboard guides travellers toward Haji Aidy Mosque. Its name, as repeated by familiar voices of the district, carries echoes of a founder, a companion of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, a beloved teacher, or a simple descriptive term chosen by the first families who raised its walls. Such naming customs serve as a gentle reminder that a mosque grows in meaning through sincere intention and humble service as much as through stone and mortar, and the building ripens in significance with every sajdah placed upon its floors.
The architectural atmosphere inside speaks the Mesopotamian dialect of Islamic craftsmanship. Drawing on the inheritance of Baghdad and Kufa, the Abbasid and late Ottoman legacy has handed down a repertoire of golden domes, glazed brick patterns and twin minarets, and local builders have quietly adapted those motifs to suit the materials and climate of Saymayl. Ceiling fans or heating coils, sturdy ablution basins fed by running water, carpets laid in careful parallel rows, a mihrab niche pointing toward the Ka\'bah in Makkah, and a modest minbar from which the khutbah is delivered together round out the practical interior of the prayer hall.
Around Saymayl, the Islamic presence has been nourished over many generations, producing deep roots in the earliest centres of Islamic scholarship and devotional pilgrimage. Elders recall the teachers, reciters, and patrons whose names are still spoken with affection, and children are taught to honour the companions of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, saying may God be pleased with them whenever such names are mentioned. Female companions such as our mother Aisha, may God be pleased with her, and Khadijah, may God be pleased with her, are likewise held up as luminous examples for the women and girls of the congregation.
The daily life of the mosque unfolds according to the fixed pattern of Fajr, Zuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha. On Friday the congregation swells for the Jumu\'ah khutbah and the two units of obligatory prayer, with the khatib reminding worshippers of their duties toward God, family, and neighbour. During Ramadan the hall is transformed: lanterns are strung, iftar is served from long trays, tarawih prayers extend into the cool of the night, and families linger together in a way rarely seen during the remainder of the year. Both Eid al Fitr and Eid al Adha bring overflowing rows, children in new clothes, and embraces exchanged across generations of neighbours.
Travellers and curious neighbours are welcome to observe quietly, provided they dress modestly and keep silence while the congregation is in prayer. A dedicated section is reserved for women, usually with a separate entrance and its own ablution facilities, and the mosque keepers are accustomed to guiding newcomers through the simple etiquette of ablution, shoe removal, and joining a row. Outside in the surrounding Dahuk streets one finds bakeries, small grocers, and tea stalls where worshippers pause after prayers, and the lamps remain lit for whichever latecomer still seeks a row in which to stand.
The architectural atmosphere inside speaks the Mesopotamian dialect of Islamic craftsmanship. Drawing on the inheritance of Baghdad and Kufa, the Abbasid and late Ottoman legacy has handed down a repertoire of golden domes, glazed brick patterns and twin minarets, and local builders have quietly adapted those motifs to suit the materials and climate of Saymayl. Ceiling fans or heating coils, sturdy ablution basins fed by running water, carpets laid in careful parallel rows, a mihrab niche pointing toward the Ka\'bah in Makkah, and a modest minbar from which the khutbah is delivered together round out the practical interior of the prayer hall.
Around Saymayl, the Islamic presence has been nourished over many generations, producing deep roots in the earliest centres of Islamic scholarship and devotional pilgrimage. Elders recall the teachers, reciters, and patrons whose names are still spoken with affection, and children are taught to honour the companions of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, saying may God be pleased with them whenever such names are mentioned. Female companions such as our mother Aisha, may God be pleased with her, and Khadijah, may God be pleased with her, are likewise held up as luminous examples for the women and girls of the congregation.
The daily life of the mosque unfolds according to the fixed pattern of Fajr, Zuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha. On Friday the congregation swells for the Jumu\'ah khutbah and the two units of obligatory prayer, with the khatib reminding worshippers of their duties toward God, family, and neighbour. During Ramadan the hall is transformed: lanterns are strung, iftar is served from long trays, tarawih prayers extend into the cool of the night, and families linger together in a way rarely seen during the remainder of the year. Both Eid al Fitr and Eid al Adha bring overflowing rows, children in new clothes, and embraces exchanged across generations of neighbours.
Travellers and curious neighbours are welcome to observe quietly, provided they dress modestly and keep silence while the congregation is in prayer. A dedicated section is reserved for women, usually with a separate entrance and its own ablution facilities, and the mosque keepers are accustomed to guiding newcomers through the simple etiquette of ablution, shoe removal, and joining a row. Outside in the surrounding Dahuk streets one finds bakeries, small grocers, and tea stalls where worshippers pause after prayers, and the lamps remain lit for whichever latecomer still seeks a row in which to stand.
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التفاعلات
🕌
أوقات الصلاة
التوقيت المحلي
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