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🕌 Mosque unknown

Mwsy Abn Jfrmsjd Lyh Alslam Kanwn Frhnky Shhyd Mstfy Khmyny

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موسي ابن جعفرمسجد عليه السلام كانون فرهنكي شهيد مصطفي خميني

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About

Musa ibn Jafar Mosque, attached to the cultural centre named for Shahid Mostafa Khomeini, sits in the town of Komijan in Markazi province, a quiet agricultural district west of Tehran where the Zagros foothills begin to rise. Iran's Markazi, meaning central, province has produced scholars, poets, and craftspeople across the centuries, and its small town mosques often double as neighbourhood cultural centres, offering Quran classes, lecture series, and community welfare programmes. This mosque is named for the Prophet's descendant the Imam Musa al Kazim ibn Jafar al Sadiq, upon them be peace, a revered figure remembered in countless Iranian villages for his patience and his devotion to prayer. The building is a modest example of late twentieth century Iranian neighbourhood mosque architecture: a turquoise tiled dome over the central hall, twin minarets in pale brick, a portal faced with muqarnas plasterwork in soft yellow, and an interior courtyard planted with roses and fig trees whose scent perfumes the summer evenings. The prayer hall is carpeted in deep red Persian patterns, with a mihrab of polished tilework and a wooden minbar bearing carved calligraphy of Surah al Jumuah. Daily prayers unfold with the customary Iranian rhythm of recitation and quiet dhikr, and the attached cultural centre runs evening programmes for youth, women's Quran gatherings, and classes on the biographies of the Imams and of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family. Ramadan fills the hall each night; the courtyard hosts iftar tables of zereshk polo, ab dugh khiar, and fresh bread from the local bakery. During the nights of Qadr the mosque holds long vigils of Quran recitation and supplication, and on the days of Muharram remembrance gatherings are held in the adjoining hall. Komijan itself is surrounded by wheat fields and the orchards of apples and walnuts that mark Markazi's plateau. Visitors reaching the town from Tehran along the Saveh road can also visit nearby hot springs, the historic caravanserais on the old Silk Road route, the shrine of Shah Abdul Azim in Rey on the return journey, and the traditional qanat irrigation works that still water the fields of Markazi.

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