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About
Commemorating the Palestinian revolutionary and preacher Sheikh Izz al Din al Qassam, may God have mercy upon him, this Jordanian mosque in Aydun of the Irbid governorate honours a figure whose life of teaching, resistance, and eventual martyrdom made him a beloved symbol of faith and steadfastness for Palestinians, Jordanians, and Arabs across generations. Irbid lies in the fertile plains of northern Jordan, an ancient city mentioned by Greek and Roman geographers as Arabella, and today the second largest urban centre in the kingdom. Its universities, hospitals, and bustling markets serve a population whose family ties extend across Palestine, Syria, and Iraq.
Sheikh Izz al Din al Qassam was born in the Syrian coastal town of Jablah in 1882 and studied at al Azhar in Cairo before returning to teach and preach across the eastern Mediterranean. He settled in Haifa in Mandatory Palestine, where he preached in the Istiqlal Mosque, taught the Qur'an to local workers and farmers, and organised community self defence during the turbulent years of the British Mandate. He was martyred on the twentieth of November 1935 in a clash with British forces near the village of Yabad in the hills of Jenin, and his funeral in Haifa drew enormous crowds of mourners.
Naming a Jordanian mosque after him anchors the daily worship of Aydun in the memory of a sincere preacher whose life embodied the prophetic teaching that the best of people are those most beneficial to the people. Sheikh Izz al Din loved the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, with profound tenderness, taught his students to recite salawat generously, and urged patience, uprightness, and trust in the Almighty through every hardship.
Architecturally the building follows the characteristic northern Jordanian style. Walls of pale limestone cut from local quarries, a slim minaret with a single muezzin balcony, a modest central dome, arched windows, and a stone paved courtyard with an ablution fountain welcome worshippers. Inside, patterned carpets stretch across the prayer hall, chandeliers of brass hang beneath the painted ceiling, a carved wooden minbar faces the mihrab, and a women's section provides dignified space for mothers and daughters.
Current daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at the masjid appear on this page alongside the Aydun address, a clear map pin, and considerate notes for visitors approaching from Irbid, Ajloun, or the Yarmouk University campus. Ramadan evenings bring iftars of shorba adas, fattoush, mansaf generously poured over fresh taboon bread, and sweet kanafeh with cardamom coffee. Travellers exploring northern Jordan are welcomed with the famed Levantine hospitality, invited to pray within the cool shaded hall, and kindly urged to whisper a sincere supplication that Almighty God may grant the martyred preacher the highest gardens alongside every sincere servant of every generation who ever loved His beloved Messenger.
Sheikh Izz al Din al Qassam was born in the Syrian coastal town of Jablah in 1882 and studied at al Azhar in Cairo before returning to teach and preach across the eastern Mediterranean. He settled in Haifa in Mandatory Palestine, where he preached in the Istiqlal Mosque, taught the Qur'an to local workers and farmers, and organised community self defence during the turbulent years of the British Mandate. He was martyred on the twentieth of November 1935 in a clash with British forces near the village of Yabad in the hills of Jenin, and his funeral in Haifa drew enormous crowds of mourners.
Naming a Jordanian mosque after him anchors the daily worship of Aydun in the memory of a sincere preacher whose life embodied the prophetic teaching that the best of people are those most beneficial to the people. Sheikh Izz al Din loved the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, with profound tenderness, taught his students to recite salawat generously, and urged patience, uprightness, and trust in the Almighty through every hardship.
Architecturally the building follows the characteristic northern Jordanian style. Walls of pale limestone cut from local quarries, a slim minaret with a single muezzin balcony, a modest central dome, arched windows, and a stone paved courtyard with an ablution fountain welcome worshippers. Inside, patterned carpets stretch across the prayer hall, chandeliers of brass hang beneath the painted ceiling, a carved wooden minbar faces the mihrab, and a women's section provides dignified space for mothers and daughters.
Current daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at the masjid appear on this page alongside the Aydun address, a clear map pin, and considerate notes for visitors approaching from Irbid, Ajloun, or the Yarmouk University campus. Ramadan evenings bring iftars of shorba adas, fattoush, mansaf generously poured over fresh taboon bread, and sweet kanafeh with cardamom coffee. Travellers exploring northern Jordan are welcomed with the famed Levantine hospitality, invited to pray within the cool shaded hall, and kindly urged to whisper a sincere supplication that Almighty God may grant the martyred preacher the highest gardens alongside every sincere servant of every generation who ever loved His beloved Messenger.
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Women's section
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Mosque Alshhyd Z Aldyn Alqsam