🕌 مسجد
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مزكهوتي شههيد جعفر حاجي صادق رۆزبياني
Mzkhwty Shhhyd Jfr Hajji Sadiq Rۆzbyany
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الفجر
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العشاء
Prayer Timetable
کے بارے میں
Beside the dusty roads of Mexmur, a town in the Nineveh plains of Iraq's Arbil governorate, the Mezgewti Shehid Jafar Haji Sadiq Rojbayani honours the memory of a local martyr whose name is remembered with love and respect across the Kurdish communities of the region. The town of Mexmur sits on a flat plain at the foot of the Qara Chokh mountain range, where agricultural fields of wheat, barley, and sunflower stretch toward the Greater Zab river valley. Its population is predominantly Kurdish, and its mosques reflect the distinctive cultural and linguistic character of the Kurdish Muslim tradition that draws on centuries of scholarship from Sulaymaniyah, Halabja, Duhok, and Erbil.
The term mezgewt is the Kurdish word for mosque, while shehid marks the honoured figure in the name as a martyr, one whose life was taken in circumstances considered sacred by the community. Naming a mosque after a shehid is a long established practice across the Kurdish regions and more broadly across the Muslim world, serving as a living dua for the departed and as a gentle reminder to successive generations of the cost of faith. The Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, himself honoured the martyrs of Uhud with a special visit to their graves each year, and the companions, may God be pleased with them, mourned and honoured their fallen.
The prayer hall is built in the modest style of northern Iraqi village mosques, with whitewashed plastered walls, a single minaret topped by a small cupola, a modest dome, and louvred windows on two sides. Inside, the carpets are muted red, the mihrab is framed by calligraphic inscriptions, and a carved wooden minbar stands beside it. Photographs and simple plaques remember the life of the mosque's namesake.
Daily prayers gather farmers, shopkeepers, and elders of the town. Khutbahs are delivered in Kurdish with Qur'anic verses quoted in Arabic, often dwelling on themes of patience, steadfastness, and the hope of reunion with loved ones in Paradise. Travellers passing through the Nineveh plains will find accurate daily prayer times at this masjid listed on this page, alongside directions, address, and a welcoming note for every visitor.
The term mezgewt is the Kurdish word for mosque, while shehid marks the honoured figure in the name as a martyr, one whose life was taken in circumstances considered sacred by the community. Naming a mosque after a shehid is a long established practice across the Kurdish regions and more broadly across the Muslim world, serving as a living dua for the departed and as a gentle reminder to successive generations of the cost of faith. The Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, himself honoured the martyrs of Uhud with a special visit to their graves each year, and the companions, may God be pleased with them, mourned and honoured their fallen.
The prayer hall is built in the modest style of northern Iraqi village mosques, with whitewashed plastered walls, a single minaret topped by a small cupola, a modest dome, and louvred windows on two sides. Inside, the carpets are muted red, the mihrab is framed by calligraphic inscriptions, and a carved wooden minbar stands beside it. Photographs and simple plaques remember the life of the mosque's namesake.
Daily prayers gather farmers, shopkeepers, and elders of the town. Khutbahs are delivered in Kurdish with Qur'anic verses quoted in Arabic, often dwelling on themes of patience, steadfastness, and the hope of reunion with loved ones in Paradise. Travellers passing through the Nineveh plains will find accurate daily prayer times at this masjid listed on this page, alongside directions, address, and a welcoming note for every visitor.
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مزكهوتي شههيد جعفر حاجي صادق رۆزبياني