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Among the bustling streets of Karachi, the great commercial and cultural capital of Sindh in southern Pakistan, Masjid e Qasim welcomes worshippers for the Jumu'ah congregational prayer at one forty five in the afternoon, a timing often noted on the signboard outside to assist neighbours and passing drivers. The name Qasim, meaning the distributor, is beloved among Muslims, carried by the eldest son of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, who passed away in infancy in Mecca, and also by countless later generations of scholars and benefactors.
Karachi itself grew from the small fishing settlement of Kalachi into a vast modern port city during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. After partition in 1947 it became the first capital of Pakistan, and waves of migration from every province of the subcontinent filled its neighbourhoods with diverse families from Delhi, Lucknow, Hyderabad Deccan, Gujarat, Punjab, Bihar, and Balochistan, each raising their own mosques and cultural associations. Sindh's older Islamic heritage reaches back to the year 711 when the young commander Muhammad bin Qasim al Thaqafi reached Debal near the Indus mouth, and the province has since produced celebrated scholars, saints, and poets.
Architecturally the masjid follows the practical Pakistani urban style. Pale rendered walls trimmed with calligraphic bands, a central dome flanked by smaller domes, slim corner minarets from which loudspeakers carry the adhan across narrow lanes, tall arched windows, and a wide tiled courtyard for Jumu'ah overflow welcome the large midday crowds. Inside, soft green carpets cover the floor, a simple wooden mimbar stands beside the mihrab, and ceiling fans hum above the rows of worshippers during the fierce coastal summer.
Accurate daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at Masjid e Qasim appear on this page along with the Karachi address, a map pin, and hospitable notes for any visitor arriving from Saddar, Clifton, or the shrine of Abdullah Shah Ghazi above the Arabian Sea. During Ramadan the courtyard fills with shared iftars of samosas, pakoras, fruit chat, sweet rooh afza, and steaming Sindhi biryani prepared by neighbouring households, and tarawih evenings resound with the clear voices of hafizes trained in Karachi's madrasas. Any traveller passing through the city between the mausoleum of Quaid i Azam and the fishing harbour at Keamari is warmly welcomed to step within these friendly walls, to kneel upon the green carpets among the lively congregation, and to whisper a soft Fatiha upon the young son of the final messenger whose sweet and barely remembered name still blesses every one forty five Jumu'ah afternoon in a patient, crowded, and endlessly open Sindhi capital.
Karachi itself grew from the small fishing settlement of Kalachi into a vast modern port city during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. After partition in 1947 it became the first capital of Pakistan, and waves of migration from every province of the subcontinent filled its neighbourhoods with diverse families from Delhi, Lucknow, Hyderabad Deccan, Gujarat, Punjab, Bihar, and Balochistan, each raising their own mosques and cultural associations. Sindh's older Islamic heritage reaches back to the year 711 when the young commander Muhammad bin Qasim al Thaqafi reached Debal near the Indus mouth, and the province has since produced celebrated scholars, saints, and poets.
Architecturally the masjid follows the practical Pakistani urban style. Pale rendered walls trimmed with calligraphic bands, a central dome flanked by smaller domes, slim corner minarets from which loudspeakers carry the adhan across narrow lanes, tall arched windows, and a wide tiled courtyard for Jumu'ah overflow welcome the large midday crowds. Inside, soft green carpets cover the floor, a simple wooden mimbar stands beside the mihrab, and ceiling fans hum above the rows of worshippers during the fierce coastal summer.
Accurate daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at Masjid e Qasim appear on this page along with the Karachi address, a map pin, and hospitable notes for any visitor arriving from Saddar, Clifton, or the shrine of Abdullah Shah Ghazi above the Arabian Sea. During Ramadan the courtyard fills with shared iftars of samosas, pakoras, fruit chat, sweet rooh afza, and steaming Sindhi biryani prepared by neighbouring households, and tarawih evenings resound with the clear voices of hafizes trained in Karachi's madrasas. Any traveller passing through the city between the mausoleum of Quaid i Azam and the fishing harbour at Keamari is warmly welcomed to step within these friendly walls, to kneel upon the green carpets among the lively congregation, and to whisper a soft Fatiha upon the young son of the final messenger whose sweet and barely remembered name still blesses every one forty five Jumu'ah afternoon in a patient, crowded, and endlessly open Sindhi capital.
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Masjid E Qasim 1:45 Qasm Mosque Jmh