Login Register
Explore
Ramadan About Contact
Language
English العربية Français Türkçe Bahasa Indonesia Bahasa Melayu اردو فارسی Deutsch Español Português বাংলা Soomaali Kiswahili Hausa 中文 Русский Nederlands हिन्दी தமிழ் Azərbaycanca Bosanski Shqip پښتو ਪੰਜਾਬੀ Italiano
🕌 Mosque unknown

Mosque Alaslah Mosque Ghyr Aljam

Qibla finder
مسجد الإصلاح مسجد غير الجامع

Prayer Times

Local Time --:--
Next Prayer
Fajr
Sunrise
Dhuhr
Asr
Maghrib
Isha
📅

Prayer Timetable

About

Masjid al Islah, whose name means the Mosque of Reform, serves as a non jami prayer house in Alor Setar, the capital of Kedah state in northern Peninsular Malaysia. The designation masjid ghair al jami signifies that the building is registered as a place for daily worship and occasional events rather than the principal Friday assembly, an administrative distinction peculiar to the Malaysian religious council system and visible across many Malay towns. The name al Islah carries connotations of personal and communal rectification, echoing a reform minded tradition in Malay religious thought that stretches back to the early twentieth century journals of Singapore and Penang. Kedah itself is among the oldest polities in the Malay world, with archaeological evidence of maritime trade reaching back to the early centuries of the common era, and Islam arrived here through Arab and Indian merchants whose dhows brought the faith alongside spices and textiles. The sultanate of Kedah has supported religious endowments for centuries, and its rulers have patronised Qur'an copyists, jurists and ulema. the local architectural vocabulary of the northern peninsula favours pitched tiled roofs, timber or masonry walls painted in cool pastels, airy verandahs, and understated domes, reflecting influences from Aceh, Patani and southern Thailand. The mosque hosts five daily prayers with a dependable core congregation of residents, tarawih gatherings through Ramadan that draw additional visitors from the padi growing hinterland, and Eid prayers followed by family meals of nasi lemak and kuih on the surrounding lawns. Qur'an recitation classes are offered to children on weekend afternoons, and women gather on occasional evenings for study circles led by visiting ustazah. Travellers arriving by the Kuala Kedah ferry after visiting Langkawi, or driving through the padi plains towards the Zahir Mosque in the city centre, will find Masjid al Islah a modest welcoming station on their onward journey. A small library attached to the back hall stocks classical jawi texts, Malay translations of the Qur'an and contemporary pamphlets on family welfare and moral development, available for borrowing by any member of the surrounding Alor Setar residential community throughout the week as part of the ongoing reform minded educational mission that inspired the mosque's founders.

Features & Amenities

🅿️ Parking
💧 Wudu
🚺 Women's section
Wheelchair
🙌 Reactions
Report this Place
Help us keep information accurate
Reason
We use cookies to improve your experience and for analytics. Learn more