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Mosque Almrhwm Hdythh Alkhryshh

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مسجد المرحوم حديثه الخريشه

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Near the industrial town of Sahab, southeast of the Jordanian capital Amman, Masjid al Marhum Hadithah al Khraisheh honours a beloved local benefactor whose family endowment established the mosque as a perpetual waqf for the surrounding quarter. The honorific al marhum, meaning the one shown mercy, is used in Jordanian Arabic for a deceased individual remembered fondly in prayers, and placing it on the building invites every worshipper to include the founder in their own supplications. The Khraisheh family belongs to the respected lineages of the Balqawiyya confederation, whose rural villages and Amman neighbourhoods carry a strong tradition of civic engagement.

Sahab itself developed during the twentieth century as a centre of industry, its factories producing textiles, food products, and building materials that supply both the capital and the Gulf export markets. Waves of residents from across Jordan, Palestine, and the wider region have built quiet residential neighbourhoods around the industrial zones, and the mosques of Sahab reflect that layered civic formation.

The building follows a familiar Levantine idiom. A pale cream limestone façade rises to a simple central dome in pale ochre, flanked by a single minaret of square plan whose muezzin balcony overlooks the surrounding streets. Horseshoe arched windows are framed in white plaster, carved wooden doors welcome worshippers, and a small paved courtyard planted with olive and lemon trees provides shaded rest before entering.

Inside, the hall is plain and dignified. Horseshoe arches on slender painted columns rise to a flat coffered ceiling in pale cedar, long green patterned carpets line the floor, and a marble mihrab flanked by slender columns faces the qibla. A carved wooden mimbar of walnut stands beside the niche, its panels bearing geometric star patterns. A modest partition reserves a prayer space for sisters along one side of the hall.

The daily rhythm of five congregational prayers gives structure to the neighbourhood, and the Friday gathering fills the courtyard with worshippers in fresh thawbs and abayas. Ramadan evenings bring shared iftars of mansaf, maqluba, and fresh khobz shraak from the tabun ovens, while the Eid mornings fill the streets with children greeting their elders. The mosque continues to honour its founder's intent through patient, generous care.

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