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Mosque Muhammad Bdallh Alrwyh Wtybt Bdalrhmn Alrwyh

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مسجد محمد عبدالله الرويح وطيبة عبدالرحمن الرويح

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Tucked into the densely populated streets of Al Farwaniyah governorate, one of the most diverse administrative divisions of the State of Kuwait, the Masjid Muhammad Abdullah al Ruwaih and Tayba Abdulrahman al Ruwaih carries in its double name a touching testimony to family waqf. Such paired dedications are common across the Gulf, where wealthy families endow mosques in the names of deceased parents or spouses so that the ongoing prayers of worshippers and the recitation of the Quran within the walls may serve as perpetual charity and sadaqah jariyah for the departed, a practice encouraged by the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family. Al Farwaniyah lies west of Kuwait City and is home to a remarkable mixture of Kuwaiti nationals and expatriates from across the Arab world, the Indian subcontinent, and Southeast Asia, making its mosques among the most multilingual prayer houses in the country. Khutbahs are often followed by translations or summaries in Urdu, Bengali, or English to serve the varied congregation. The architecture of this mosque reflects the clean modern idiom favoured by the Kuwaiti Ministry of Awqaf and Islamic Affairs, with a square prayer hall beneath a central dome, a single tall minaret whose muezzin's call reaches several surrounding blocks, and an exterior finished in warm coloured stone that resists the fierce summer heat of the Arabian peninsula. Inside, the mihrab is usually lined with geometric tile work and the qiblah wall bears calligraphic renderings of the divine names and Quranic verses. The five daily prayers draw steady attendance, while Jumu'ah fills the carpeted hall and spills onto the shaded terrace outside. Throughout Ramadan the mosque offers iftar meals provided by local benefactors, and the two Eid mornings bring festive congregations followed by embraces and sweets shared among worshippers. The building remains a quiet anchor in a busy residential quarter very close to commercial streets and services of the governorate. Kuwaiti devotees often remind newcomers that building a mosque remains among the most beloved forms of charity praised explicitly within authentic prophetic narrations and the collective communal memory passed gently across generations in Farwaniyah homes.

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