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مسجد Masaajidka Berbera المركزي

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Masaajidka Berbera Central Mosque

أوقات الصلاة

التوقيت المحلي --:--
الصلاة القادمة
الفجر
الشروق
الظهر
العصر
المغرب
العشاء
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جدول الصلاة

عن المكان

Set along the weathered coral stone lanes of old Berbera town, this central congregational house of prayer carries the Somali word Masaajidka, meaning simply the mosques, a collective title that reflects how the building has long been regarded as the spiritual heart of the ancient port city on the gulf. Berbera itself rests on the southern shore of the Gulf of Aden in the Woqooyi Galbeed region of northern Somalia, and the town has welcomed traders and travellers from Yemen, Oman, India and the wider Horn since the earliest centuries of Islam, when pilgrims and merchants carried the faith across the narrow stretch of sea to the African coast. Local scholars remember the Somali sage Sheikh Ishaaq ibn Ahmad, may God have mercy upon him, whose descendants populated the coastal belt and whose devotion to learning still shapes the religious atmosphere of the whole region. The mosque follows the coastal Horn tradition of thick whitewashed walls, carved timber doors brought by dhow from Arabian workshops across the sea, slender minarets that catch the cool sea breeze at dawn and dusk, and prayer halls cooled by high clerestory openings that channel the afternoon wind off the gulf. Five daily prayers are observed with an unhurried discipline inherited from generations of seafarers, and the Friday gathering draws fishermen from the harbour, pastoralists visiting from the dusty interior, and families from every quarter of Berbera town. During the blessed month of Ramadan the courtyard fills after sunset with plates of sweet dates, canjeero bread and fresh camel milk shared freely with travellers, and the long nights of tarawih continue until the first prayer of the new dawn. The two festivals of Eid gather the whole town for open prayer, after which children visit relatives across the neighbourhood in their fresh new clothes. Visitors are welcomed warmly with the characteristic Somali hospitality, though modest dress is expected and women should bring a clean headscarf. Nearby lie the old Ottoman era cisterns, the colonial customs house by the harbour, and the lively weekly livestock market, all reminders that the call to prayer here has risen above commerce and pilgrimage for more than a millennium of unbroken devotion and teaching along this beautiful coast.

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