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Alhagie Mbemba Sillah's Masjid

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مسجد Alhagie Mbemba Sillah's

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Named in memory of Alhagie Mbemba Sillah, a respected Gambian elder whose honorific Alhagie marks the completion of the Hajj pilgrimage to the holy city of Makkah, this Basse Santa Su mosque serves the eastern Upper River region of The Gambia along the great bend of the river that gives the country its name. Basse has long functioned as a commercial crossroads, where Mandinka, Fula, Serahule, and Wolof traders gather produce and livestock bound for the coast and for neighbouring Senegal. The town's Islamic heritage reaches back centuries to the scholarship of the great Jakhanke clerical families whose settlements seeded learning across the Senegambia. West African mosque architecture favours mud brick construction, broad arcaded prayer halls shaded from the fierce sun, and conical or stepped minarets whose silhouettes echo the ancient clay traditions of Djenne and Timbuktu. More recent construction has introduced rendered masonry and reinforced concrete, but the spatial pattern of shaded courtyards and open prayer halls continues. This mosque named for Alhagie Mbemba Sillah welcomes worshippers through a modest entry into a carpeted interior cooled by deep verandas. Five daily prayers draw traders, farmers, and teachers from the surrounding quarters, and Jumu'ah fills the hall with men of all ages. The khutbah mixes Arabic Qur'anic recitation with Mandinka or Fula reflection so that every listener, regardless of formal schooling, benefits from the lessons. Ramadan becomes the most cherished season of the year, with communal iftar meals of benechin, domoda, and sweet porridge shared from large bowls, followed by taraweeh prayers that extend into the night. Qur'anic memorisation classes meet daily, and senior students frequently travel onward to study at the historic centres in Mauritania or Egypt. Women worship in a dedicated section with its own entry. Eid celebrations draw the extended family of the town together for communal prayer on the open ground beyond the mosque. Nearby attractions include the weekly lumo market, the riverside bantaba gathering trees, and the historic Wassu stone circles. Weekly lumo markets nearby bring farmers, traders, and pilgrims together in bustling exchange, and the mosque benefits from the hospitality traditions that naturally extend toward travelling visitors of every background.

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