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About
Tucked into the quiet lanes of Al Khankah, a town in the Qalyubiyah governorate just north of Cairo, the King Faisal Mosque stands as one of many Egyptian prayer houses that carry the name of the late Saudi monarch who devoted a significant portion of his reign to supporting Islamic institutions across the Arab world. The mosque greets worshippers with the warm honey tones of limestone walls, tall arched windows edged in mashrabiya patterning, and a single minaret whose crescent catches the first rays of the Delta sun each morning. Al Khankah itself is a town with deep roots; its name traces back to the Mamluk era when a khanqah, a gathering place for travelling scholars, was built here in the thirteenth century, and ever since, the locality has kept alive a quiet tradition of learning and gathering in the name of faith.
Inside, the prayer hall opens into a spacious carpeted space that faces a qibla wall adorned with blue and turquoise tilework, a craft that Egyptian artisans have practised since the Fatimid age. Calligraphic bands tracing verses from Surat Al Baqarah curl above the mihrab, and a wooden minbar carved in geometric stars offers the Friday khutbah a dignified setting. The mosque serves a neighbourhood of farmers, teachers, small traders, and railway workers who fill the rows for dawn and evening prayers, with Friday gatherings pulling in visitors from the surrounding villages of Qalyubiyah.
During Ramadan the building takes on a livelier cadence, with iftar tables laid along the outer colonnade and taraweeh lasting deep into the night. Children stream into the courtyard after Isha for informal Quran recitation circles, and the elders of Al Khankah often share stories of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, reminding the youngest attendees of the Companions like Abu Bakr, may God be pleased with him, who stood by him through every trial. Travellers passing through on the Cairo to Ismailia road are welcome to stop for prayer; ablution facilities are clean and signposted, and a small shoe rack stands just inside the main door.
Inside, the prayer hall opens into a spacious carpeted space that faces a qibla wall adorned with blue and turquoise tilework, a craft that Egyptian artisans have practised since the Fatimid age. Calligraphic bands tracing verses from Surat Al Baqarah curl above the mihrab, and a wooden minbar carved in geometric stars offers the Friday khutbah a dignified setting. The mosque serves a neighbourhood of farmers, teachers, small traders, and railway workers who fill the rows for dawn and evening prayers, with Friday gatherings pulling in visitors from the surrounding villages of Qalyubiyah.
During Ramadan the building takes on a livelier cadence, with iftar tables laid along the outer colonnade and taraweeh lasting deep into the night. Children stream into the courtyard after Isha for informal Quran recitation circles, and the elders of Al Khankah often share stories of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, reminding the youngest attendees of the Companions like Abu Bakr, may God be pleased with him, who stood by him through every trial. Travellers passing through on the Cairo to Ismailia road are welcome to stop for prayer; ablution facilities are clean and signposted, and a small shoe rack stands just inside the main door.
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Wudu
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King Faisal Mosque