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Mosque Am Almwmnyn Khdyjt Bnt Khwyld (jabr Alahmd)
مسجد أم المؤمنين خديجة بنت خويلد (جابر الأحمد)
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Sheltering the community of Jaber al Ahmad residential area in the Kuwaiti governorate of al Jahra, Masjid Umm al Mu'minin Khadija bint Khuwaylid honours the beloved first wife of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, mother of his children and the first believer in his blessed mission. Al Jahra lies west of Kuwait City and carries memory of the 1920 battle in which Kuwaiti fighters defended the town from a much larger raiding force, a day still marked in national memory. The newer Jaber al Ahmad neighbourhood, named after a late Emir of Kuwait, is a modern planned area of broad boulevards, lawn fronted villas, and well equipped community mosques.
Khadija bint Khuwaylid, may God be pleased with her, was among the noblest women of Quraysh, a successful merchant who hired the young Muhammad to lead her caravans to Syria. Impressed by his honesty and character, she proposed marriage, and their blessed union lasted twenty five years until her death in Mecca during the Year of Sorrow. She was the first human being to accept the Messenger as a prophet, supporting him through the earliest, hardest years of persecution, spending her wealth freely in the cause of the faith, and bearing his beloved daughter Fatima al Zahra, may God be pleased with her.
Dedicating a masjid to her in Kuwait honours not only her person but the entire role of righteous women in the founding of the Muslim community. The Prophet himself never ceased remembering her with love after her passing, saying that he had been blessed with her love and that she had believed in him when others disbelieved, giving him her wealth when others withheld and bearing his children when none other could.
Architecturally the building embraces the modern Kuwaiti style. A pale stone façade, a slender minaret tipped with a brass crescent, a gentle central dome above the mihrab, arched windows with geometric lattice screens, and a paved forecourt with young palm trees welcome worshippers. Inside, air conditioning tempers the fierce summer heat, patterned carpets stretch across the prayer hall, chandeliers hang above rows of qibla lines, and the women's section reached by a separate entrance is spacious and well appointed.
Current prayer times for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at the masjid appear on this page alongside the Jaber al Ahmad address, a clear map pin, and considerate notes for travellers approaching from Kuwait City, al Jahra, or the al Salmi Road toward the Saudi border. Ramadan evenings bring long iftar tables of dates, laban, harees, and kabsa generously shared with every neighbour. Visitors passing through this quiet part of Kuwait are welcomed warmly, invited to pray inside the cool interior, and affectionately encouraged to whisper a sincere du'a asking the Almighty to grant the first of the mothers of the believers the highest gardens beside her beloved husband and her devoted daughter for ever.
Khadija bint Khuwaylid, may God be pleased with her, was among the noblest women of Quraysh, a successful merchant who hired the young Muhammad to lead her caravans to Syria. Impressed by his honesty and character, she proposed marriage, and their blessed union lasted twenty five years until her death in Mecca during the Year of Sorrow. She was the first human being to accept the Messenger as a prophet, supporting him through the earliest, hardest years of persecution, spending her wealth freely in the cause of the faith, and bearing his beloved daughter Fatima al Zahra, may God be pleased with her.
Dedicating a masjid to her in Kuwait honours not only her person but the entire role of righteous women in the founding of the Muslim community. The Prophet himself never ceased remembering her with love after her passing, saying that he had been blessed with her love and that she had believed in him when others disbelieved, giving him her wealth when others withheld and bearing his children when none other could.
Architecturally the building embraces the modern Kuwaiti style. A pale stone façade, a slender minaret tipped with a brass crescent, a gentle central dome above the mihrab, arched windows with geometric lattice screens, and a paved forecourt with young palm trees welcome worshippers. Inside, air conditioning tempers the fierce summer heat, patterned carpets stretch across the prayer hall, chandeliers hang above rows of qibla lines, and the women's section reached by a separate entrance is spacious and well appointed.
Current prayer times for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at the masjid appear on this page alongside the Jaber al Ahmad address, a clear map pin, and considerate notes for travellers approaching from Kuwait City, al Jahra, or the al Salmi Road toward the Saudi border. Ramadan evenings bring long iftar tables of dates, laban, harees, and kabsa generously shared with every neighbour. Visitors passing through this quiet part of Kuwait are welcomed warmly, invited to pray inside the cool interior, and affectionately encouraged to whisper a sincere du'a asking the Almighty to grant the first of the mothers of the believers the highest gardens beside her beloved husband and her devoted daughter for ever.
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Mosque Am Almwmnyn Khdyjt Bnt Khwyld (jabr Alahmd)