🕌 Mosque
unknown
Highway Police Camp Jame Mosque হাইওয়ে পুলিশের ক্যাম্প জামে মসজিদ
مسجد Highway Police Camp Jame হাইওয়ে পুলিশের ক্যাম্প জামে মসজিদ
Prayer Times
Local Time
--:--
Fajr
Sunrise
Dhuhr
Asr
Maghrib
Isha
Prayer Timetable
About
Beside the bustling Dhaka Chittagong national highway, the Highway Police Camp Jame Mosque in Narayanganj serves officers, their families, and the passing motorists of the Dhaka division of Bangladesh. Narayanganj, an ancient port town on the Shitalakshya river, has long been known as the Dundee of the east for its jute industry, and today it continues as one of the busiest commercial and manufacturing hubs of Bangladesh. Highway police camps maintain order on one of the most heavily travelled arteries of the country, and their staff, drawn from every district of the nation, serve long shifts guarding the flow of commerce between the capital and the great port of Chittagong.
Bangladesh carries one of the deepest rural Islamic heritages in South Asia. The faith arrived in Bengal from the twelfth and thirteenth centuries through travelling scholars, darweshes, and Sufi saints who preached through song, parable, and compassionate example along the rivers of the delta. Saints such as Shah Jalal of Sylhet, Khan Jahan Ali of Bagerhat, and countless beloved village pirs gathered the Bengali countryside into the fold of the faith, and the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, became beloved in every Bengali home through poetry recited at weddings, naming ceremonies, and funerals.
Police and highway staff rely heavily on small roadside mosques to preserve the rhythm of their five daily prayers during long shifts far from their hometowns. The Prophet himself taught that the earth had been made a place of purification and a masjid for his ummah wherever the time of salah entered upon them. Highway camp jame masjids continue this merciful teaching, offering wudu facilities, clean carpeted prayer halls, and the soft iqamah whenever congregational prayer is due.
Architecturally the masjid reflects the characteristic Bengali style. Whitewashed walls, three or five arched openings in the façade, a central dome flanked by smaller domes, slender minarets, and a forecourt with a tube well ablution area welcome worshippers. Inside, patterned jamdani woven mats cover the floor, a simple wooden minbar rises beside a calligraphic mihrab, and high lattice windows admit the monsoon breeze during humid summer days.
Current daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at the Highway Police Camp Jame Mosque appear on this page alongside the Narayanganj address, a clear map pin, and considerate notes for visitors approaching from Dhaka, Chittagong, or the intermediate towns along the highway. Ramadan evenings bring iftars of muri, chana, pakora, piyaju, jilapi, and sweet firni shared with every fellow officer. Travellers crossing between the capital and the port are welcomed with gentle Bengali courtesy, invited to pause briefly for two rakats, and kindly urged to whisper a heartfelt supplication asking the Almighty to protect every highway officer and every passing traveller under His endless mercy and light.
Bangladesh carries one of the deepest rural Islamic heritages in South Asia. The faith arrived in Bengal from the twelfth and thirteenth centuries through travelling scholars, darweshes, and Sufi saints who preached through song, parable, and compassionate example along the rivers of the delta. Saints such as Shah Jalal of Sylhet, Khan Jahan Ali of Bagerhat, and countless beloved village pirs gathered the Bengali countryside into the fold of the faith, and the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, became beloved in every Bengali home through poetry recited at weddings, naming ceremonies, and funerals.
Police and highway staff rely heavily on small roadside mosques to preserve the rhythm of their five daily prayers during long shifts far from their hometowns. The Prophet himself taught that the earth had been made a place of purification and a masjid for his ummah wherever the time of salah entered upon them. Highway camp jame masjids continue this merciful teaching, offering wudu facilities, clean carpeted prayer halls, and the soft iqamah whenever congregational prayer is due.
Architecturally the masjid reflects the characteristic Bengali style. Whitewashed walls, three or five arched openings in the façade, a central dome flanked by smaller domes, slender minarets, and a forecourt with a tube well ablution area welcome worshippers. Inside, patterned jamdani woven mats cover the floor, a simple wooden minbar rises beside a calligraphic mihrab, and high lattice windows admit the monsoon breeze during humid summer days.
Current daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at the Highway Police Camp Jame Mosque appear on this page alongside the Narayanganj address, a clear map pin, and considerate notes for visitors approaching from Dhaka, Chittagong, or the intermediate towns along the highway. Ramadan evenings bring iftars of muri, chana, pakora, piyaju, jilapi, and sweet firni shared with every fellow officer. Travellers crossing between the capital and the port are welcomed with gentle Bengali courtesy, invited to pause briefly for two rakats, and kindly urged to whisper a heartfelt supplication asking the Almighty to protect every highway officer and every passing traveller under His endless mercy and light.
Features & Amenities
🅿️
Parking
💧
Wudu
🚺
Women's section
♿
Wheelchair
🙌 Reactions
📍 Get directions to
Highway Police Camp Jame Mosque হাইওয়ে পুলিশের ক্যাম্প জামে মসজিদ