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🕌 Masjid unknown

Bdalrhmn Bn Abzy Alkhzay Rdy Allh Nh

Qibla finder
عبدالرحمن بن أبزي الخزاعي رضي الله عنه

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Tentang

Carrying the honoured name of Abdulrahman ibn Abza al Khuza'i, may God be pleased with him, this Kuwaiti masjid rises among the farms and family compounds of al Wafra in the Ahmadi governorate. Al Wafra lies in the far south of Kuwait near the Saudi frontier, a region known for its agricultural estates where dates, vegetables, and dairy cattle are raised in the sandy soil under gentle green irrigation. The Kuwaiti farming community that settled here during the second half of the twentieth century built modest family homes, livestock sheds, and neighbourhood mosques that anchor the daily rhythm of rural life.

Abdulrahman ibn Abza, may God be pleased with him, was a companion who met the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, as a youth and was appointed by Umar ibn al Khattab, may God be pleased with him, to lead the people of Khurasan in prayer because of the depth of his Qur'anic knowledge. He belonged to the noble Khuza tribe, whose heritage stretched back to pre Islamic Arabia and whose members had long guarded routes through the western Hijaz. The Prophet himself praised the companions who had memorised the Qur'an well, and Abdulrahman was counted among the reciters of his generation.

Naming a Kuwaiti farmland masjid after such a companion binds the quiet agricultural life of al Wafra to the great memory of the first generation of believers. Kuwaiti families remember al Faruq's sharp judgement in entrusting the prayer of an entire province to a young reciter rather than to a more politically prominent figure, a lesson in the priority of Qur'anic knowledge over worldly rank.

Architecturally the building follows the restrained Gulf style favoured for modern Kuwaiti mosques. Cream stone cladding, a slim single minaret tipped with a brass crescent, a gentle central dome above the mihrab, and wide arched windows welcome worshippers. Inside, air conditioning tempers the desert heat, patterned carpets stretch across the hall, and chandeliers of brass and crystal hang from the painted dome. A separate women's section provides dignified space for mothers and daughters visiting with their families.

Accurate daily timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at the masjid appear on this page alongside the al Wafra address, a clear map pin, and considerate notes for visitors approaching from Ahmadi, Fahaheel, or the southern road toward the Saudi border at al Nuwaiseeb. Ramadan evenings bring long iftar tables of dates, laban, harees, and kabsa shared freely with every farming family in the district. Travellers venturing into Kuwait's agricultural south are welcomed with the famed Bedouin hospitality, invited to pray inside the cool hall, and gently encouraged to offer a quiet supplication asking Almighty God to raise the station of the youthful reciter whose Qur'anic voice once guided an entire province into every single one of their five daily prayers.

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