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Mosque Alhaj Jmh Alfhd Wsalm Bdalhmyd Bdalqadr
مسجد الحاج جمعه الفهد وسالم عبدالحميد عبدالقادر
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Built through the joint endowment of al Hajj Jumuah al Fahd and Salim Abd al Hamid Abd al Qadir, this mosque in the Farwaniyah governorate of Kuwait carries the names of two generous families whose charity provided a lasting house of prayer for their neighbours. Farwaniyah is one of the most populous governorates of Kuwait, a dense urban landscape of housing blocks, markets, and mosques whose call to prayer reaches across busy roads and quieter residential lanes. The neighbourhood's mixed Kuwaiti, Arab, and South Asian population has made Farwaniyah a crossroads of cultures, united by the common rhythm of the five daily prayers and the weekly Jumu'ah.
The inclusion of the title al Hajj before a donor's name reflects the Kuwaiti and wider Gulf custom of honouring those who have completed the pilgrimage to Makkah, a journey every Muslim of means hopes to undertake at least once in life. Naming a mosque after its benefactors is a practice rooted in the earliest centuries of Islam, when the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, praised the act of building a house of prayer as equivalent to receiving a house in paradise, and the Companions, may God be pleased with them, competed in endowing mosques, wells, and fortifications across the lands they reached.
Architecturally, the mosque follows contemporary Kuwaiti style. A pale stone facade, a slender minaret, a dome capped with a crescent, and arched entrances frame a cool air conditioned interior. Carpets of deep red and gold cover the prayer hall, a tiled mihrab faces the qiblah, a carved wooden minbar stands beside it, and chandeliers of Arabic geometric design illuminate the rows of worshippers. Separate ablution facilities and a women's prayer area serve the mixed congregation.
Kuwaiti families, Arab expatriates from Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and the Maghreb, and South Asian workers from Farwaniyah gather here for the five daily prayers, for Jumu'ah, and for taraweeh during Ramadan, when long cloths of iftar are spread across the prayer hall. On this page visitors travelling across Kuwait will find the current prayer times, the Farwaniyah address, and practical notes to support every pilgrim, expatriate, student, or relative of the founding families in locating this generous neighbourhood masjid and sharing quietly in its welcoming, steadily devoted, and characteristically Kuwaiti Gulf congregational life throughout every season without fail.
The inclusion of the title al Hajj before a donor's name reflects the Kuwaiti and wider Gulf custom of honouring those who have completed the pilgrimage to Makkah, a journey every Muslim of means hopes to undertake at least once in life. Naming a mosque after its benefactors is a practice rooted in the earliest centuries of Islam, when the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, praised the act of building a house of prayer as equivalent to receiving a house in paradise, and the Companions, may God be pleased with them, competed in endowing mosques, wells, and fortifications across the lands they reached.
Architecturally, the mosque follows contemporary Kuwaiti style. A pale stone facade, a slender minaret, a dome capped with a crescent, and arched entrances frame a cool air conditioned interior. Carpets of deep red and gold cover the prayer hall, a tiled mihrab faces the qiblah, a carved wooden minbar stands beside it, and chandeliers of Arabic geometric design illuminate the rows of worshippers. Separate ablution facilities and a women's prayer area serve the mixed congregation.
Kuwaiti families, Arab expatriates from Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and the Maghreb, and South Asian workers from Farwaniyah gather here for the five daily prayers, for Jumu'ah, and for taraweeh during Ramadan, when long cloths of iftar are spread across the prayer hall. On this page visitors travelling across Kuwait will find the current prayer times, the Farwaniyah address, and practical notes to support every pilgrim, expatriate, student, or relative of the founding families in locating this generous neighbourhood masjid and sharing quietly in its welcoming, steadily devoted, and characteristically Kuwaiti Gulf congregational life throughout every season without fail.
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Mosque Alhaj Jmh Alfhd Wsalm Bdalhmyd Bdalqadr