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Mosque Alhyyt Alamt Llzrat Walthrwt Alsmkyt

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مسجد الهيئة العامة للزراعة والثروة السمكية

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Within the leafy residential suburb of Al Rabiya on the northern edge of Kuwait City, the Mosque of the Public Authority for Agriculture Affairs and Fish Resources carries an unusually specific name that reveals its origin. Built as part of the official compound of this government body, the mosque was endowed for employees, visitors, and the surrounding neighbourhood, continuing the long Kuwaiti tradition of pairing public institutions with small, purpose built prayer houses so that work, study, and worship flow into one another without strain. Kuwait itself has long prided itself on this integration, with mosques attached to ministries, hospitals, universities, and markets from the earliest days of the emirate.

The building stands within landscaped grounds planted with date palms, neem trees, and ornamental bougainvillea that soften the harsh desert sunlight. Pale limestone cladding faces the outer walls, punctuated by tall pointed arched windows framed in pale wood, and a single modest dome rises in cream above the square prayer hall. A slender square plan minaret, capped by a small lantern in the Najdi revival style common across the Gulf, carries the call to prayer across the compound. A shaded portico paved in warm sandstone tiles welcomes worshippers at the entrance.

Inside, the hall is bright, cool, and deliberately restrained. Long rows of deep red Turkish carpet guide the congregation towards a mihrab of polished cream marble, above which a slender band of Quranic calligraphy in Thuluth script has been carved. A carved wooden mimbar of dark walnut stands beside the mihrab, and modern pendant lamps in brass finish hang above the columns. A curtained gallery, accessible from a separate side entrance, provides a quiet prayer area for sisters among the staff and neighbourhood visitors.

The mosque's calendar follows the simple administrative rhythm of Kuwaiti public life. The midday Zuhr and Asr prayers draw employees from the surrounding offices and laboratories, while Friday brings a fuller congregation from the residential streets of Al Rabiya. During Ramadan the compound hosts shared iftars of margouga and jereesh, and the modest library beside the entrance lends Quran copies and reference works to staff and students who pass through each day.

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