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جامع سعد بن أبي وقاص رضي الله عنه
Grand Mosque Sd Bn Aby Wqas Rdy Allh Nh
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Situated among the historic quarters of Aleppo, one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in the world, Jami Saad bin Abi Waqqas honours the noble companion Saad ibn Abi Waqqas, may God be pleased with him. Saad accepted Islam as a youth of seventeen, was among the ten companions promised paradise during their lifetime, and commanded the decisive Battle of al Qadisiyya in 636, opening Persia to the faith. He was also the seventh person to embrace Islam, a maternal uncle of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, and the first to shoot an arrow in the path of God.
Aleppo's own Islamic heritage is deep. The city opened its gates to the companion Abu Ubayda ibn al Jarrah, may God be pleased with him, in 637, and within a generation its scholars were travelling to Mecca, Medina, and Kufa, contributing to the great classical Islamic sciences. Over the centuries Aleppo produced celebrated figures in hadith, jurisprudence, poetry, and medicine, and its covered souk, stretching for thirteen kilometres before modern damages, was among the most impressive in the Muslim world. Naming a mosque after Saad ibn Abi Waqqas links the city's congregation to the earliest days of Islamic history.
Architecturally the building draws on the classical northern Syrian tradition. Walls of pale yellow limestone cut from quarries south of the city, carved ablaq stone above the doorway, a square minaret in the Mamluk style, and a small dome above the mihrab distinguish the facade. Inside, woven Persian and local Aleppo rugs cover the floor, carved cedar panels line the mihrab niche, and calligraphic inscriptions cite verses praising the noble companions.
Accurate daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at Jami Saad bin Abi Waqqas are listed on this page along with the Aleppo address, a map pin, and respectful notes for any visitor approaching from the ancient citadel, the Umayyad Great Mosque, or the souks now slowly reviving after years of trial. During Ramadan neighbours share simple iftars of kibbeh, muhammara, yalanji, and sweet halawet al jibn prepared in home kitchens, and tarawih evenings fill the hall with voices shaped by the classical Aleppine school of recitation. Any traveller who reaches this wounded yet enduring city is warmly invited to enter, to kneel upon the rugs among the steadfast Aleppine congregation, and to whisper a soft salam upon Saad ibn Abi Waqqas whose unmatched courage once parted the curtain between two great empires at the edge of the same river where his memory now continues to bless every humble worshipper of an old, patient, and forever storied Syrian city.
Aleppo's own Islamic heritage is deep. The city opened its gates to the companion Abu Ubayda ibn al Jarrah, may God be pleased with him, in 637, and within a generation its scholars were travelling to Mecca, Medina, and Kufa, contributing to the great classical Islamic sciences. Over the centuries Aleppo produced celebrated figures in hadith, jurisprudence, poetry, and medicine, and its covered souk, stretching for thirteen kilometres before modern damages, was among the most impressive in the Muslim world. Naming a mosque after Saad ibn Abi Waqqas links the city's congregation to the earliest days of Islamic history.
Architecturally the building draws on the classical northern Syrian tradition. Walls of pale yellow limestone cut from quarries south of the city, carved ablaq stone above the doorway, a square minaret in the Mamluk style, and a small dome above the mihrab distinguish the facade. Inside, woven Persian and local Aleppo rugs cover the floor, carved cedar panels line the mihrab niche, and calligraphic inscriptions cite verses praising the noble companions.
Accurate daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at Jami Saad bin Abi Waqqas are listed on this page along with the Aleppo address, a map pin, and respectful notes for any visitor approaching from the ancient citadel, the Umayyad Great Mosque, or the souks now slowly reviving after years of trial. During Ramadan neighbours share simple iftars of kibbeh, muhammara, yalanji, and sweet halawet al jibn prepared in home kitchens, and tarawih evenings fill the hall with voices shaped by the classical Aleppine school of recitation. Any traveller who reaches this wounded yet enduring city is warmly invited to enter, to kneel upon the rugs among the steadfast Aleppine congregation, and to whisper a soft salam upon Saad ibn Abi Waqqas whose unmatched courage once parted the curtain between two great empires at the edge of the same river where his memory now continues to bless every humble worshipper of an old, patient, and forever storied Syrian city.
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جامع سعد بن أبي وقاص رضي الله عنه