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Jamaat E Durood O Salam. Jmat Drwd W Slam
Jamaat E Durood O Salam۔ جماعت درود و سلام
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Gathering in a devoted circle of loving remembrance of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, Jamaat e Durood o Salam of Karachi brings together Pakistani families who cherish the weekly ritual of reciting salawat and sending abundant blessings upon the beloved Messenger. Karachi, largest city of Pakistan and capital of Sindh province, has grown from a small fishing harbour at the mouth of the Indus into a sprawling metropolis of more than twenty million residents whose religious life is kept warm by countless neighbourhood mosques, shrines, khanqahs, and durood gatherings spread across every district of the city.
The practice of reciting durood and salam upon the Messenger finds its warrant in the Qur'anic verse of Surah al Ahzab, thirty three, in which Almighty God commands the believers to send blessings upon the Prophet. The Messenger himself taught that whoever sends one prayer upon him, Almighty God sends ten upon the reciter, and he promised that the closest of people to him on the day of judgement would be those who had sent the most blessings upon him during their worldly lives. Durood gatherings have flourished across the Muslim world wherever poets, singers, and devoted reciters have composed litanies of praise.
Sindh in particular has produced generations of beloved poets of durood, from the great Shah Abdul Latif Bhittai of Bhit Shah whose Sindhi Risalo pours out verses of longing for the Messenger, to countless urs festivals at the shrines of Sehwan Sharif, Bhit Shah, and Thatta where qawwals sing through the night in Sindhi, Urdu, Punjabi, and Arabic. Karachi inherits that whole heritage and preserves it in small jamaats where professionals, labourers, grandparents, and small children gather to raise their voices together.
Architecturally the jamaat centre carries the modest style of a Karachi neighbourhood prayer hall. Whitewashed walls, a slender minaret with a crescent, a simple central dome, arched windows, and a central ablution area welcome worshippers. Inside, patterned carpets cover the floor, ceiling fans hum softly above the sitting circles, and calligraphic panels in green and gold line the walls with verses of durood and salam.
Accurate daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at the jamaat are posted on this page alongside its Karachi address, a clear map pin, and considerate notes for visitors approaching from Saddar, Clifton, or the port districts of Kemari. Ramadan nights bring salawat gatherings extending past the tarawih prayer, accompanied by rose sherbet, pakoras, and sweet milky firni. Travellers finding their way to this Sindhi quarter are welcomed warmly, invited to sit in the circle of remembrance, and lovingly encouraged to raise their own voices in salawat, confident that every blessing sent upon the Messenger returns to the servant tenfold through the mercy of the Almighty Lord of the worlds.
The practice of reciting durood and salam upon the Messenger finds its warrant in the Qur'anic verse of Surah al Ahzab, thirty three, in which Almighty God commands the believers to send blessings upon the Prophet. The Messenger himself taught that whoever sends one prayer upon him, Almighty God sends ten upon the reciter, and he promised that the closest of people to him on the day of judgement would be those who had sent the most blessings upon him during their worldly lives. Durood gatherings have flourished across the Muslim world wherever poets, singers, and devoted reciters have composed litanies of praise.
Sindh in particular has produced generations of beloved poets of durood, from the great Shah Abdul Latif Bhittai of Bhit Shah whose Sindhi Risalo pours out verses of longing for the Messenger, to countless urs festivals at the shrines of Sehwan Sharif, Bhit Shah, and Thatta where qawwals sing through the night in Sindhi, Urdu, Punjabi, and Arabic. Karachi inherits that whole heritage and preserves it in small jamaats where professionals, labourers, grandparents, and small children gather to raise their voices together.
Architecturally the jamaat centre carries the modest style of a Karachi neighbourhood prayer hall. Whitewashed walls, a slender minaret with a crescent, a simple central dome, arched windows, and a central ablution area welcome worshippers. Inside, patterned carpets cover the floor, ceiling fans hum softly above the sitting circles, and calligraphic panels in green and gold line the walls with verses of durood and salam.
Accurate daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at the jamaat are posted on this page alongside its Karachi address, a clear map pin, and considerate notes for visitors approaching from Saddar, Clifton, or the port districts of Kemari. Ramadan nights bring salawat gatherings extending past the tarawih prayer, accompanied by rose sherbet, pakoras, and sweet milky firni. Travellers finding their way to this Sindhi quarter are welcomed warmly, invited to sit in the circle of remembrance, and lovingly encouraged to raise their own voices in salawat, confident that every blessing sent upon the Messenger returns to the servant tenfold through the mercy of the Almighty Lord of the worlds.
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