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Taking its name from one of the most beloved titles of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, Masjid al Mustafa in Al Bunayyat ash Shamaliyah welcomes worshippers on the outskirts of Amman, the Jordanian capital whose rolling hills have been continuously inhabited since the ancient Ammonite kingdom. Al Mustafa, the chosen, is a title by which the Muslim tradition expresses deep affection for the final messenger, and naming a masjid in his honour is regarded as a blessing that attracts the mercies of heaven upon the neighbourhood. Amman grew dramatically in the twentieth century from a small Circassian settlement to a sprawling metropolis of millions, absorbing successive waves of Palestinian, Iraqi, Syrian, and Yemeni families, each community enriching the city's devotional life with their own traditions of recitation, architecture, and charity. The Al Bunayyat area lies among the dense residential neighbourhoods that ring the capital, its streets winding over steep hills that afford sweeping views across the Jordan Valley toward the distant mountains of Palestine. Masjid al Mustafa expresses the practical modern Jordanian idiom, cut limestone blocks sourced from the kingdom's quarries, a compact dome over the central prayer hall, a thin minaret whose adhan travels across the surrounding rooftops, and an open courtyard where worshippers gather before and after salat. Inside, the carpet is figured in floral medallions, the mihrab inscribed with verses of surat al Baqarah, and the mimbar carved from local cedar. Daily prayers follow the Ministry of the Awqaf calendar while Jumu'ah draws families from the surrounding blocks. Ramadan iftars feature Jordanian specialities such as mansaf, maqluba, kunafa, and the famous knafeh Nabulsi brought from bakeries across the city. Eid prayers spill into the adjoining streets. Visitors exploring Amman's Citadel, the Roman Theatre, the bustling Rainbow Street cafes, or the nearby Dead Sea will find this neighbourhood masjid a welcoming pause for prayer during their journey through Jordan's hospitable capital. The modest neighbourhood masjid stands as a warm reminder that even in a sprawling modern capital, the rhythms of the five daily prayers, the weekly Jumu'ah, and the annual Ramadan and Eid celebrations continue to knit together families into communities bound by ancient bonds of shared faith.

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ہم آپ کے تجربے کو بہتر بنانے اور تجزیات کے لیے کوکیز استعمال کرتے ہیں۔ مزید جانیں