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Mosquee Youssef Ibn Tachfine Mosque Ywsf Bn Tashfyn

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Mosquée Youssef Ibn Tachfine مسجد يوسف بن تاشفين

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About

Commanding a prominent avenue in the eastern Moroccan city of Oujda, the Mosque of Yusuf ibn Tashfin honours the founder of the Almoravid dynasty, the Saharan general and saintly statesman whose armies unified Morocco in the eleventh century and carried the faith into al Andalus after the Battle of Zallaqah in 1086 of the common era. Yusuf ibn Tashfin, may God have mercy upon him, founded the city of Marrakesh in 1070 and laid the foundations for a political and spiritual renewal that would produce the Almoravid and later Almohad movements. His name graces mosques across Morocco as a reminder of disciplined piety joined to public service.

Oujda itself sits on the border between Morocco and Algeria, a city of date groves and orchards whose wealth once came from the caravan trade linking Fes with Tlemcen and beyond. Its Islamic heritage is marked by the medieval mosque of Sidi Yahya, the Marinid madrasa, and the many zawiyas that preserve the memory of saints like Sidi Abdelkader and Sidi Meimun. The people of Oujda speak a distinctive eastern Moroccan Arabic enriched by Berber and Algerian influences, and their devotional life blends Andalusi Fassi traditions with the more austere desert piety of the steppes.

Architecturally the Mosque of Yusuf ibn Tashfin follows the grand Maghribi idiom: a broad main dome finished pale cream stone with geometric tilework, a tall square minaret rising in tiers of blind arcading and zellij mosaic, and a courtyard paved with carved tile in geometric patterns. The façade is opened by a large pointed horseshoe portal, its spandrels carved with floral plaster and Thuluth calligraphy. Inside, the hall opens onto Berber carpet, the mihrab set into a deep niche bordered by zellij and carved plaster, and the minbar carved in carved cedar with inlaid marquetry echoing the Almoravid craft traditions of medieval Morocco. Framed verses glorify God and send salawat on the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family.

Daily salat, the Jumu'ah sermon in classical Arabic, memorisation classes for the Qur'an, Ramadan tarawih, and Eid prayers draw worshippers from across Oujda's neighbourhoods year round.

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