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Mosquee Al-hamraoui Mosque Alhmrawy

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Mosquée Al-Hamraoui مسجد الحمراوي

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Hakkında

Graced by the name al Hamraoui, this mosque in the Spanish enclave of Ceuta on the North African coast serves a community whose religious life crosses the Strait of Gibraltar and blends the heritage of al Andalus with the living culture of modern Morocco. Ceuta, known in Arabic as Sabtah, occupies a narrow promontory that has witnessed the passage of Phoenicians, Romans, Byzantines, Umayyads, Almoravids, Almohads, Marinids, and Portuguese, before becoming a Spanish territory in the seventeenth century. Today the city is home to a substantial Muslim community whose mosques serve both Spanish and Moroccan residents under the same blue skies.

The Strait of Gibraltar carries immense memory in Islamic history. It was here that Tariq ibn Ziyad crossed from North Africa in 711, landing on the rock that still bears his name, Jabal Tariq, from which the English word Gibraltar derives. From that beachhead began the opening of al Andalus, whose cities such as Cordoba, Granada, Seville, and Toledo grew into the brightest centres of Islamic civilisation in medieval Europe, shaping mathematics, medicine, architecture, poetry, and philosophy for a thousand years of flourishing.

The Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, is remembered across this frontier community with salawat recited in Arabic, Spanish, and Tashelhit Amazigh. The community gathers for the five daily prayers, for Jumu'ah sermons that alternate between Arabic and Spanish, for Ramadan tarawih that brings neighbours from every quarter of the small city, and for the two Eid celebrations that fill the streets with the aroma of freshly baked sweets and strong mint tea.

Architecturally the building reflects the Moroccan style that dominates Ceuta's Muslim neighbourhoods. A square tiered minaret with decorative bands, whitewashed walls with green trim, a courtyard with a central fountain, horseshoe arches framing the portico, cedar ceilings carved with interlacing stars, zellige tile wainscoting, and an interior mihrab finished with gypsum muqarnas create a sanctuary of quiet beauty. Patterned Berber carpets stretch across the hall, and a women's section welcomes mothers and daughters.

Accurate daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at the Hamraoui Mosque appear on this page alongside its Ceuta address, a clear map pin, and considerate notes for visitors approaching from the Tarajal border crossing, the Plaza de Africa, or the ferry terminal linking Ceuta to Algeciras across the Strait. Ramadan evenings bring iftars of harira, msemen, briouates, sweet chebakia, and fragrant mint tea generously shared with every neighbour. Travellers pausing between European and African shores are welcomed with the gentle Andalusi hospitality, invited to pray within the cool shaded hall, and kindly urged to whisper a sincere du'a that the beloved Messenger may intercede for the Muslims who live on both sides of every sea.

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