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مدرسة Darul Hadhanah Kampung Hilir Melaka
مدرسة Darul Hadhanah Kampung Hilir Melaka
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الفجر
الشروق
الظهر
العصر
المغرب
العشاء
Prayer Timetable
کے بارے میں
Along the quiet residential lanes of Kampung Hilir in the historic state of Malacca on the south western coast of Peninsular Malaysia, Madrasah Darul Hadhanah offers young children their first introduction to the Qur'an, to Arabic letters, to the essentials of worship, and to the beloved life of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family. The word hadhanah in Arabic refers to the nurturing care of small children, and Darul Hadhanah, the House of Nurture, expresses the institution's mission to receive the youngest students with warmth and with patient Qur'anic education.
Malacca's Islamic heritage is cherished across the Malay world. The Sultanate of Melaka, founded by Parameswara in the early fifteenth century and embraced by his son Megat Iskandar Shah who became the first Muslim sultan of the peninsula, transformed into a dazzling centre of trade and Islamic learning under Sultan Mansur Shah and his descendants. Scholars such as Sheikh Ismail from Mecca and Maulana Abu Bakar shaped the early religious curriculum, and the sultanate served as a gateway through which Islam spread across Sumatra, Java, Sulu, and the Moluccas.
Architecturally the madrasah reflects the Malaccan kampung vernacular. A single storey building with a pitched tiled roof, perforated white walls for cross ventilation, shaded verandahs where children remove their sandals, a small prayer room facing north west toward Mecca, and a garden of banana, mango, and pandan trees offer a calm environment for learning. Inside, low tables, woven mats, and white boards line the classrooms, and softly sung Qur'anic recitations drift throughout the afternoon hours.
Accurate daily prayer timings for the attached musalla at Madrasah Darul Hadhanah appear on this page along with the Kampung Hilir address, a map pin, and hospitable notes for any visitor arriving from the Dutch Square, the Jonker Street night market, or the Portuguese settlement at Ujong Pasir. During Ramadan the madrasah hosts shared iftars of nasi lemak, asam pedas, satay, and sweet cendol ice desserts, and tarawih evenings fill the nearby neighbourhood mosque with families drawn by the clear recitation of the young student qaris. Any traveller journeying along the Straits of Melaka between Port Dickson and Muar is warmly welcomed to step within these patient halls, to sit among the small learners reciting their opening surahs, and to whisper a soft supplication of gratitude for every teacher whose gentle daily labour continues to shape the very earliest love of revelation in countless small Malaccan hearts waiting to lift their first trembling sajda to a kind and sheltering heaven.
Malacca's Islamic heritage is cherished across the Malay world. The Sultanate of Melaka, founded by Parameswara in the early fifteenth century and embraced by his son Megat Iskandar Shah who became the first Muslim sultan of the peninsula, transformed into a dazzling centre of trade and Islamic learning under Sultan Mansur Shah and his descendants. Scholars such as Sheikh Ismail from Mecca and Maulana Abu Bakar shaped the early religious curriculum, and the sultanate served as a gateway through which Islam spread across Sumatra, Java, Sulu, and the Moluccas.
Architecturally the madrasah reflects the Malaccan kampung vernacular. A single storey building with a pitched tiled roof, perforated white walls for cross ventilation, shaded verandahs where children remove their sandals, a small prayer room facing north west toward Mecca, and a garden of banana, mango, and pandan trees offer a calm environment for learning. Inside, low tables, woven mats, and white boards line the classrooms, and softly sung Qur'anic recitations drift throughout the afternoon hours.
Accurate daily prayer timings for the attached musalla at Madrasah Darul Hadhanah appear on this page along with the Kampung Hilir address, a map pin, and hospitable notes for any visitor arriving from the Dutch Square, the Jonker Street night market, or the Portuguese settlement at Ujong Pasir. During Ramadan the madrasah hosts shared iftars of nasi lemak, asam pedas, satay, and sweet cendol ice desserts, and tarawih evenings fill the nearby neighbourhood mosque with families drawn by the clear recitation of the young student qaris. Any traveller journeying along the Straits of Melaka between Port Dickson and Muar is warmly welcomed to step within these patient halls, to sit among the small learners reciting their opening surahs, and to whisper a soft supplication of gratitude for every teacher whose gentle daily labour continues to shape the very earliest love of revelation in countless small Malaccan hearts waiting to lift their first trembling sajda to a kind and sheltering heaven.
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مدرسة Darul Hadhanah Kampung Hilir Melaka