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Dedicated to the blessed companion Musab ibn Umayr, may God be pleased with him, the TOKI Akçağlayan Musab bin Umayr Camii stands in the Osmangazi district of Bursa, the first capital of the Ottoman dynasty. Bursa sits on the northern slopes of Mount Uludag in northwestern Anatolia, famous for its thermal springs, its silk weaving, its kebap traditions, and above all its extraordinary Ottoman architectural heritage including the Green Mosque of Sultan Mehmed I, the Great Mosque of Sultan Bayezid I, and the Muradiye complex where sultans and princes rest under carved marble tombstones.
Musab ibn Umayr, may God be pleased with him, was the beloved young companion whom the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, sent ahead to Medina as the first teacher of Islam before the blessed Hijra. Born into wealthy Meccan luxury, Musab accepted Islam in his youth and abandoned his silks and fragrances in exchange for a single threadbare cloak. The Messenger wept when he saw the humility to which his young companion had willingly descended in service of the faith. Musab was martyred at the Battle of Uhud in 625, and when they sought a shroud large enough to cover his body they found none.
The TOKI designation refers to the Turkish Mass Housing Administration, which builds residential developments across Turkey and often includes a community mosque within each large estate. Naming a TOKI mosque after Musab ibn Umayr anchors the daily life of ordinary Turkish families in the founding sacrifice of the first generation of believers, reminding every resident that the faith is a gift for which the earliest Muslims willingly gave everything they possessed.
Architecturally the building reflects the contemporary Turkish mosque style that echoes classical Ottoman models. A central dome rises on a low octagonal drum, a slender minaret tipped with a brass crescent marks the skyline, stained glass windows inscribed with calligraphic panels bathe the interior in coloured light, and the mihrab niche is finished with carved marble and tilework. Patterned carpets stretch across the hall, a wooden minbar faces the mihrab, and a women's gallery overlooks the main space.
Current daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at the mosque appear on this page alongside the Osmangazi Akçağlayan address, a clear map pin, and considerate notes for visitors approaching from the Green Mosque, the Koza Han silk market, or the Uludag teleferik cable car. Ramadan evenings bring iftars of Turkish pide, mercimek corbasi, iskender kebap, and sweet kemalpaşa tatlisi shared with every neighbour. Travellers exploring the first Ottoman capital are welcomed warmly, invited to pray in the cool shaded hall, and affectionately encouraged to whisper a heartfelt supplication that the young martyred companion may rest under the shade of the throne beside his beloved Messenger and every sincere believer of every generation.
Musab ibn Umayr, may God be pleased with him, was the beloved young companion whom the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, sent ahead to Medina as the first teacher of Islam before the blessed Hijra. Born into wealthy Meccan luxury, Musab accepted Islam in his youth and abandoned his silks and fragrances in exchange for a single threadbare cloak. The Messenger wept when he saw the humility to which his young companion had willingly descended in service of the faith. Musab was martyred at the Battle of Uhud in 625, and when they sought a shroud large enough to cover his body they found none.
The TOKI designation refers to the Turkish Mass Housing Administration, which builds residential developments across Turkey and often includes a community mosque within each large estate. Naming a TOKI mosque after Musab ibn Umayr anchors the daily life of ordinary Turkish families in the founding sacrifice of the first generation of believers, reminding every resident that the faith is a gift for which the earliest Muslims willingly gave everything they possessed.
Architecturally the building reflects the contemporary Turkish mosque style that echoes classical Ottoman models. A central dome rises on a low octagonal drum, a slender minaret tipped with a brass crescent marks the skyline, stained glass windows inscribed with calligraphic panels bathe the interior in coloured light, and the mihrab niche is finished with carved marble and tilework. Patterned carpets stretch across the hall, a wooden minbar faces the mihrab, and a women's gallery overlooks the main space.
Current daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at the mosque appear on this page alongside the Osmangazi Akçağlayan address, a clear map pin, and considerate notes for visitors approaching from the Green Mosque, the Koza Han silk market, or the Uludag teleferik cable car. Ramadan evenings bring iftars of Turkish pide, mercimek corbasi, iskender kebap, and sweet kemalpaşa tatlisi shared with every neighbour. Travellers exploring the first Ottoman capital are welcomed warmly, invited to pray in the cool shaded hall, and affectionately encouraged to whisper a heartfelt supplication that the young martyred companion may rest under the shade of the throne beside his beloved Messenger and every sincere believer of every generation.
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مسجد TOKİ Akçağlayan Musabbin Umeyr