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Raised in honour of the valiant commander Salah al Din al Ayyubi, this mosque rises in the industrial coastal town of Umm Sa'id, also called Mesaieed, in the Al Wakrah Municipality of Qatar. Salah al Din, born in Tikrit in 1137 and passing in Damascus in 1193, is celebrated across the Muslim world for recovering al Quds, the holy city of Jerusalem, after the Battle of Hittin in 1187. His courage, humility, and magnanimity even towards his enemies became proverbial, and naming a Qatari mosque after him weaves the present day peninsula into the great Ayyubid legacy that once stretched from Cairo to Aleppo and beyond.
Umm Sa'id itself grew from a modest coastal village into a planned industrial city during the second half of the twentieth century, as Qatar developed its petrochemical and metallurgical industries along the southern shores of the peninsula. Workers from across Qatar and the wider Muslim world gather in the town's residential quarters, and the masjid offers them a spiritual anchor amid the rhythms of shift work, long desert commutes, and the distant horizons of the Arabian Gulf shimmering under the coastal sun.
Architecturally, the building follows the classical Qatari mosque style favoured across the emirate. Smooth cream coloured stone blocks, a low central dome, a single tapered minaret from which the muezzin's call carries across the industrial quarter, a courtyard planted with date palms and ghaf trees, and air conditioned prayer halls protect worshippers from the searing summer temperatures that regularly exceed forty five degrees Celsius. Inside, soft red carpets, a simple mihrab, and calligraphic panels quoting Surah al Fath welcome every visitor.
The present page lists daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at Salah al Din al Ayyubi Mosque in Umm Sa'id, together with its address and practical notes for visitors arriving from Doha along the new coastal expressway, from the Al Wakrah old harbour with its restored pearling era dhows, or from the dunes of Khor al Udaid near the Saudi border. Friday khutbahs are delivered in classical Arabic, and during Ramadan the courtyard hosts community iftars funded by local merchants who follow the charitable traditions of their ancestors. Travellers crossing the peninsula between the capital and the inland sea are encouraged to stop here, to pray for the soul of the noble commander whose name the mosque bears, and to remember that every believer inherits a share of his courage by holding fast to the faith with sincerity and love.
Umm Sa'id itself grew from a modest coastal village into a planned industrial city during the second half of the twentieth century, as Qatar developed its petrochemical and metallurgical industries along the southern shores of the peninsula. Workers from across Qatar and the wider Muslim world gather in the town's residential quarters, and the masjid offers them a spiritual anchor amid the rhythms of shift work, long desert commutes, and the distant horizons of the Arabian Gulf shimmering under the coastal sun.
Architecturally, the building follows the classical Qatari mosque style favoured across the emirate. Smooth cream coloured stone blocks, a low central dome, a single tapered minaret from which the muezzin's call carries across the industrial quarter, a courtyard planted with date palms and ghaf trees, and air conditioned prayer halls protect worshippers from the searing summer temperatures that regularly exceed forty five degrees Celsius. Inside, soft red carpets, a simple mihrab, and calligraphic panels quoting Surah al Fath welcome every visitor.
The present page lists daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at Salah al Din al Ayyubi Mosque in Umm Sa'id, together with its address and practical notes for visitors arriving from Doha along the new coastal expressway, from the Al Wakrah old harbour with its restored pearling era dhows, or from the dunes of Khor al Udaid near the Saudi border. Friday khutbahs are delivered in classical Arabic, and during Ramadan the courtyard hosts community iftars funded by local merchants who follow the charitable traditions of their ancestors. Travellers crossing the peninsula between the capital and the inland sea are encouraged to stop here, to pray for the soul of the noble commander whose name the mosque bears, and to remember that every believer inherits a share of his courage by holding fast to the faith with sincerity and love.
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