🕌 مسجد
unknown
مسجد امام حسين عليه السلام كانون فرهنكي شهداي نهرميان
Mosque Imam Husayn Lyh Alslam Kanwn Frhnky Shhday Nhrmyan
نماز کے اوقات
مقامی وقت
--:--
الفجر
الشروق
الظهر
العصر
المغرب
العشاء
Prayer Timetable
کے بارے میں
Serving the rural village of Nahramian near Shazand in the Markazi province of Iran, the Mosque of Imam Husayn ibn Ali and the Cultural Centre of the Martyrs of Nahramian gathers a close knit farming community around the memory of the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, who fell with his companions on the plain of Karbala in the year 680 of the common era. Imam Husayn, may peace be upon him, is honoured each year during the month of Muharram with mourning processions, recitations of the tragedy of Karbala, and communal meals called nadhri offered to the poor. The cultural centre also remembers the local martyrs of Nahramian, young men of the village who gave their lives during the Iran Iraq war of the 1980s.
Shazand and its surrounding villages lie amid wheat fields, alfalfa meadows, and saffron plots that produce some of the finest Iranian spice. The Markazi province has long been a centre of Persian piety, with the holy city of Qom to the east and the seminaries of Arak and Khomeyn producing generations of jurists and preachers. The village of Nahramian follows the gentle rhythms of rural Iranian life, its households gathering at the mosque for daily prayers, weekly Quran reading, and the great mourning assemblies that mark the Islamic devotional calendar.
Architecturally the building follows the restrained Iranian village idiom: plastered brick walls finished in warm cream, a low dome of pale blue glazed tile above the prayer hall, and a single slender minaret crowned with muqarnas and turquoise tilework. The entrance iwan carries verses of the Quran in cobalt and white calligraphy, honouring God and sending peace upon the Prophet's household. Inside, the floor within displays patterned Kashan carpet, the mihrab tiled in floral arabesque, and the minbar finished in walnut with latticed polygon panels.
Beyond daily prayers, the cultural centre runs Quran classes, calligraphy workshops, youth gatherings, and the annual Muharram mourning programmes whose tazieh passion plays and zanjir chains fill the village with the deep emotion of devotion that has shaped Iranian piety for more than a thousand years.
Shazand and its surrounding villages lie amid wheat fields, alfalfa meadows, and saffron plots that produce some of the finest Iranian spice. The Markazi province has long been a centre of Persian piety, with the holy city of Qom to the east and the seminaries of Arak and Khomeyn producing generations of jurists and preachers. The village of Nahramian follows the gentle rhythms of rural Iranian life, its households gathering at the mosque for daily prayers, weekly Quran reading, and the great mourning assemblies that mark the Islamic devotional calendar.
Architecturally the building follows the restrained Iranian village idiom: plastered brick walls finished in warm cream, a low dome of pale blue glazed tile above the prayer hall, and a single slender minaret crowned with muqarnas and turquoise tilework. The entrance iwan carries verses of the Quran in cobalt and white calligraphy, honouring God and sending peace upon the Prophet's household. Inside, the floor within displays patterned Kashan carpet, the mihrab tiled in floral arabesque, and the minbar finished in walnut with latticed polygon panels.
Beyond daily prayers, the cultural centre runs Quran classes, calligraphy workshops, youth gatherings, and the annual Muharram mourning programmes whose tazieh passion plays and zanjir chains fill the village with the deep emotion of devotion that has shaped Iranian piety for more than a thousand years.
سہولیات
🅿️
پارکنگ
💧
وضو
🚺
خواتین کا حصہ
♿
وہیل چیئر
🙌 ردعمل
📍 Get directions to
مسجد امام حسين عليه السلام كانون فرهنكي شهداي نهرميان