🕌 Masjid
unknown
Central Mosque, MEC কেন্দ্রীয় জামে মসজিদ, ময়মনসিংহ ইঞ্জিনিয়ারিং কলেজ
مسجد المركزي MEC কেন্দ্রীয় জামে মসজিদ ময়মনসিংহ ইঞ্জিনিয়ারিং কলেজ
Waktu Solat
Waktu Tempatan
--:--
Fajr
Sunrise
Dhuhr
Asr
Maghrib
Isha
Prayer Timetable
Tentang
Within the academic campus of Mymensingh Engineering College in northern Bangladesh, the Central Mosque offers a calm religious refuge for students, faculty and staff immersed in the demanding schedule of technical study. Mymensingh is one of the oldest educational towns of Bengal, known for its colonial era botanical gardens, the Brahmaputra river bend that defines its geography and its famous Bangladesh Agricultural University just across the town. The engineering college is a younger institution that has quickly become a focal point for Bangladeshi students pursuing civil, electrical and mechanical engineering, and its campus mosque reflects the devotional rhythm that still underpins student life in this deeply Muslim country.
The building is a modest but dignified modern structure in pale yellow brick with white trim, a single dome painted forest green and a slim minaret visible above the nearby dormitory blocks. The approach is along a paved walkway lined with young jackfruit and mango trees planted by successive graduating classes. A shaded ablution pavilion beside the entrance provides ample taps, marble benches and a shelf for shoes.
Inside, the prayer hall is a clean rectangular space carpeted in pale green, with ceiling fans whirring overhead and a ring of large windows admitting the humid monsoon breezes. The mihrab is finished in white marble with a simple inscription from the Quran urging those of intellect to reflect upon the signs of creation, a fitting reminder for an engineering community. A wooden minbar carved by a local artisan stands beside it, and a modest bookshelf near the rear holds Bengali translations of the Quran, tafsir works by Maulana Muhammad Abdur Rahim and a few English language Islamic titles.
Five daily prayers are held in congregation, drawing students between classes, tutorials and laboratory sessions. Friday attendance fills the hall and extends into the forecourt under temporary awnings, with a student khatib occasionally invited to deliver the sermon alongside the resident imam. A student run Islamic study circle meets on Tuesday evenings in a side room to discuss topics ranging from prophetic biography to the ethics of engineering practice.
During Ramadan the student hall kitchen coordinates with the mosque to provide simple iftar meals of chola, puffed rice, dates and tea for students unable to travel home. Tarawih prayers are led by a hifz student from a neighbouring madrasa, and the end of Ramadan brings communal Eid prayers on the adjacent sports field. Visitors to the MEC campus are welcomed and encouraged to see how Bangladeshi engineering students balance rigorous study with quiet, consistent faith.
The building is a modest but dignified modern structure in pale yellow brick with white trim, a single dome painted forest green and a slim minaret visible above the nearby dormitory blocks. The approach is along a paved walkway lined with young jackfruit and mango trees planted by successive graduating classes. A shaded ablution pavilion beside the entrance provides ample taps, marble benches and a shelf for shoes.
Inside, the prayer hall is a clean rectangular space carpeted in pale green, with ceiling fans whirring overhead and a ring of large windows admitting the humid monsoon breezes. The mihrab is finished in white marble with a simple inscription from the Quran urging those of intellect to reflect upon the signs of creation, a fitting reminder for an engineering community. A wooden minbar carved by a local artisan stands beside it, and a modest bookshelf near the rear holds Bengali translations of the Quran, tafsir works by Maulana Muhammad Abdur Rahim and a few English language Islamic titles.
Five daily prayers are held in congregation, drawing students between classes, tutorials and laboratory sessions. Friday attendance fills the hall and extends into the forecourt under temporary awnings, with a student khatib occasionally invited to deliver the sermon alongside the resident imam. A student run Islamic study circle meets on Tuesday evenings in a side room to discuss topics ranging from prophetic biography to the ethics of engineering practice.
During Ramadan the student hall kitchen coordinates with the mosque to provide simple iftar meals of chola, puffed rice, dates and tea for students unable to travel home. Tarawih prayers are led by a hifz student from a neighbouring madrasa, and the end of Ramadan brings communal Eid prayers on the adjacent sports field. Visitors to the MEC campus are welcomed and encouraged to see how Bangladeshi engineering students balance rigorous study with quiet, consistent faith.
Kemudahan
🅿️
Tempat Parkir
💧
Tempat Wudu
🚺
Bahagian wanita
♿
Kerusi roda
🙌 Reaksi
📍 Get directions to
Central Mosque, MEC কেন্দ্রীয় জামে মসজিদ, ময়মনসিংহ ইঞ্জিনিয়ারিং কলেজ