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Masjid Al - Hasyimi Mandi Angin Sukamerindu

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مسجد Al Hasyimi Mandi Angin Sukamerindu

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The small city of Prabumulih, set amid the oil palm plantations and rubber estates of South Sumatra, shelters many neighbourhood mosques, and Masjid Al Hasyimi at Mandi Angin Sukamerindu serves the families of that quiet subdistrict. The name Al Hasyimi refers to the clan of Banu Hashim, the honoured lineage of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, within the tribe of Quraysh, and Indonesian mosques often carry such names to express love for the household of the Messenger. South Sumatra's Islamic heritage was shaped by the Palembang sultanate, whose ruler Sultan Mahmud Badaruddin corresponded with scholars from the Haramayn and whose court produced manuscripts of Qur'anic exegesis, Arabic grammar and Malay jawi poetry that still circulate among traditional pesantren today. Prabumulih itself grew in the twentieth century around the oilfields that feed refineries in Plaju and Sungai Gerong, and the population remains a mix of indigenous Sumatrans, Javanese transmigrants and labourers from across the archipelago. Architecturally the building reflects that practical layering, with a whitewashed hall topped by a green steel dome, a single minaret finished in white tile and a porch shaded by a zinc roof extended over the courtyard. Inside, ceiling fans rotate above a green carpet, the mihrab is tiled in cream and gold, and the mimbar is carved from local jati wood. Daily prayers are called by a rotating roster of local muezzins, Jumu'ah is delivered in Bahasa Indonesia with Arabic recitation, and Ramadan evenings bring a shared iftar of sweet es buah, rendang and rice. Tarawih continues past nine and qiyam sessions fill the last ten nights. Eid mornings draw families in batik finery who gather afterwards for rice cakes, shrimp crackers and syrup lemonade. Visitors should dress modestly, leave shoes on low wooden racks and accept the polite offer of tea from the takmir committee. Nearby landmarks include the Ampera Bridge at Palembang, the Musi River waterfront, the Sultan Mahmud Badaruddin II Museum and the tomb of Pangeran Sido Ing Lautan near the estuary. The Friday market that unfolds along the adjoining street sells fresh coconut, chili sambal and Sumatran pempek fish cakes, and the mosque's muezzin is himself one of the vendors, bridging commerce and worship in the familiar Sumatran style that still shapes community life across Prabumulih and its smaller plantation towns.

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