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Mosque Wdryh Alshykh Muhammad Bn Bdalamam Alrfy
مسجد وضريح الشيخ محمد بن عبدالإمام الرفيع
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On the outskirts of Madinat Hamad in the Central Governorate of the Kingdom of Bahrain, the mosque and shrine of Sheikh Muhammad bin Abd al Imam al Rafi receives pilgrims and local worshippers in a quiet compound ringed by date palms. Bahrain, an ancient archipelago called Dilmun in cuneiform texts, welcomed Islam peacefully during the lifetime of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family. He sent the companion al Ala ibn al Hadrami, may God be pleased with him, as an envoy to al Mundhir ibn Sawa, ruler of Bahrain, and the islands accepted the faith early, earning the distinction recorded in the hadith literature of being among the earliest Arab lands of Islam.
Bahraini scholarly families have produced celebrated figures across the centuries, among them Sheikh Yusuf al Bahrani, author of al Hadaiq al Nadhirah, and Sheikh Ahmad bin Muhammad al Asfur, whose teachings shaped generations of students from the eastern Arabian coast. Honouring a learned sheikh with a shrine beside a mosque reflects the long tradition of marking the resting places of teachers so that their students and the wider community may continue to benefit from their memory through du'a and recitation.
Architecturally the compound follows a simple Gulf style. Whitewashed walls, a single modest dome above the shrine chamber, arched windows, a shaded wudu court with low stools, and a small courtyard planted with date palms and sidr trees welcome worshippers and visiting pilgrims. The mosque itself has a quiet prayer hall with soft green carpets, a carved mihrab facing the Ka'bah, calligraphic panels citing verses on the special status of the righteous, and a small library of fiqh and hadith manuals.
Accurate daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at Masjid wa Darih al Sheikh Muhammad bin Abd al Imam al Rafi appear on this page along with the Madinat Hamad address, a map pin, and hospitable notes for any visitor arriving from Manama, the Bahrain Fort at Qal'at al Bahrain, or the Tree of Life in the southern desert. During Ramadan the congregation shares iftars of machboos, harees, luqaymat, warm khubz tanoor, and sweet sahlab prepared by Bahraini neighbours, and the nights of the sacred month fill the compound with soft recitation. Any traveller crossing the King Fahd Causeway between the Saudi eastern province and the Bahraini capital is warmly welcomed to step within these peaceful walls, to kneel upon the patterned carpets beside the kind congregation, and to whisper a soft supplication for the beloved sheikh whose resting place now shelters every gentle arrival, every grieving widow, and every thoughtful young student pausing briefly in search of a quiet and consoling blessing upon a patient island heart.
Bahraini scholarly families have produced celebrated figures across the centuries, among them Sheikh Yusuf al Bahrani, author of al Hadaiq al Nadhirah, and Sheikh Ahmad bin Muhammad al Asfur, whose teachings shaped generations of students from the eastern Arabian coast. Honouring a learned sheikh with a shrine beside a mosque reflects the long tradition of marking the resting places of teachers so that their students and the wider community may continue to benefit from their memory through du'a and recitation.
Architecturally the compound follows a simple Gulf style. Whitewashed walls, a single modest dome above the shrine chamber, arched windows, a shaded wudu court with low stools, and a small courtyard planted with date palms and sidr trees welcome worshippers and visiting pilgrims. The mosque itself has a quiet prayer hall with soft green carpets, a carved mihrab facing the Ka'bah, calligraphic panels citing verses on the special status of the righteous, and a small library of fiqh and hadith manuals.
Accurate daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at Masjid wa Darih al Sheikh Muhammad bin Abd al Imam al Rafi appear on this page along with the Madinat Hamad address, a map pin, and hospitable notes for any visitor arriving from Manama, the Bahrain Fort at Qal'at al Bahrain, or the Tree of Life in the southern desert. During Ramadan the congregation shares iftars of machboos, harees, luqaymat, warm khubz tanoor, and sweet sahlab prepared by Bahraini neighbours, and the nights of the sacred month fill the compound with soft recitation. Any traveller crossing the King Fahd Causeway between the Saudi eastern province and the Bahraini capital is warmly welcomed to step within these peaceful walls, to kneel upon the patterned carpets beside the kind congregation, and to whisper a soft supplication for the beloved sheikh whose resting place now shelters every gentle arrival, every grieving widow, and every thoughtful young student pausing briefly in search of a quiet and consoling blessing upon a patient island heart.
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Mosque Wdryh Alshykh Muhammad Bn Bdalamam Alrfy