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🕌 Masjid unknown

( Mosque Mjm Alfth Alaslamy ( Mosque Ansar Alsnt

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( مسجد مجمع الفتح الاسلامي ( مسجد انصار السنة

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Standing near the old bridge over the Blue Nile in Khartoum, the Masjid Majma' al Fath al Islami, also known as Masjid Ansar al Sunnah, serves the capital of Sudan with a lively congregation that draws students, merchants, and travellers from across the country. Khartoum itself was founded in 1821 as an Ottoman Egyptian garrison at the junction of the Blue and White Nile rivers, and within a century had become the administrative capital of a vast territory stretching from the Red Sea into the African interior. The city's Muslim identity has been shaped by centuries of scholarship, by the religious movements of the nineteenth century, and by the deep tradition of Qur'an memorisation that still fills the riverside neighbourhoods every evening.

The name Majma' al Fath al Islami, the Islamic Complex of Conquest, evokes the opening of hearts to the faith that characterised the earliest years of Islam under the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, and under his rightly guided successors, may God be pleased with them. The alternate name, Ansar al Sunnah, refers to those who adhere to the noble prophetic way of life, and a masjid carrying these two names gathers a congregation with a clear love of hadith study, devotional recitation, and careful adherence to the traditions preserved by the early generations.

Architecturally the prayer hall follows the restrained vernacular of Sudanese urban mosques, with a high ceiling, whitewashed plaster walls, a plain domed mihrab, and a wide shaded courtyard fringed by neem and palm trees. The adhan is delivered in the distinct Sudanese cadence, which blends classical tajwid with a gentle melodic lilt, and carries easily across the nearby riverbank. Bookshelves along the side corridors hold copies of the Qur'an, tafsir, and classical hadith collections such as Bukhari and Muslim.

Jumu'ah congregations fill not only the interior but also the courtyard and the paving outside, with overflow lines extending along the street. Travellers to Khartoum visiting the Sudan National Museum, the confluence of the Niles at al Mogran, or the Omdurman souq will find accurate daily prayer times and a warm welcome here, and will likely leave with memories of a cup of hot karkade or sweet mint tea offered freely in the courtyard after Maghrib.

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