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Prayer Timetable
کے بارے میں
Gracing the paddy fields of Kampung Rantau Panjang in the Selama district of Perak, the Mosque of the Village of Rantau Panjang gathers the Malay farming households of this northern corner of the peninsula for five daily prayers, Friday khutbas, and the seasonal celebrations that mark rural Muslim life. Rantau Panjang, whose name in Malay means the long reach or bend of a river, sits between the Kedah and Perak rivers in a landscape of oil palm groves, rubber plantations, and terraced paddies that glow emerald in the monsoon and gold at harvest. Selama is traditionally associated with small mosques built by village endowment, each called upon to serve its own mukim, the unit of Malay religious administration.
Perak itself has a long Islamic heritage, going back to the sixteenth century when Sultan Muzaffar Shah I, a descendant of the Malacca line, re established the sultanate after the fall of Malacca to the Portuguese in 1511. His descendants still occupy the throne today, and the state mosques of Kuala Kangsar, Ipoh, and Taiping carry forward the traditions of Malay courtly Islam. Kampung Rantau Panjang is a small thread in that long weave, its mosque linked in spirit to the grand royal sanctuaries through shared prayer times, the same Quran, and invocations of blessing upon the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family.
Architecturally the building follows the traditional Malay kampung form: a steeply pitched tiered roof of green glazed tiles rising in three stages, resting on stout timber columns of chengal hardwood set on stone bases. Walls are painted cream with forest green trim, lattice windows of turned wood let in the humid breeze, and a single slender minaret beside the entrance calls the village to prayer. Inside, the hall presents patterned carpets, the mihrab carved into a niche framed by floral stucco, and a carved wooden minbar stands ready for the Friday sermon.
The mosque hosts tadarus Quran nightly during Ramadan, bubur lambuk distribution, and Hari Raya Aidilfitri prayers that bring the whole village together beneath the palms.
Perak itself has a long Islamic heritage, going back to the sixteenth century when Sultan Muzaffar Shah I, a descendant of the Malacca line, re established the sultanate after the fall of Malacca to the Portuguese in 1511. His descendants still occupy the throne today, and the state mosques of Kuala Kangsar, Ipoh, and Taiping carry forward the traditions of Malay courtly Islam. Kampung Rantau Panjang is a small thread in that long weave, its mosque linked in spirit to the grand royal sanctuaries through shared prayer times, the same Quran, and invocations of blessing upon the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family.
Architecturally the building follows the traditional Malay kampung form: a steeply pitched tiered roof of green glazed tiles rising in three stages, resting on stout timber columns of chengal hardwood set on stone bases. Walls are painted cream with forest green trim, lattice windows of turned wood let in the humid breeze, and a single slender minaret beside the entrance calls the village to prayer. Inside, the hall presents patterned carpets, the mihrab carved into a niche framed by floral stucco, and a carved wooden minbar stands ready for the Friday sermon.
The mosque hosts tadarus Quran nightly during Ramadan, bubur lambuk distribution, and Hari Raya Aidilfitri prayers that bring the whole village together beneath the palms.
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