Giriş Kayıt Ol
Keşfet
Ramazan Hakkımızda İletişim
Dil
English العربية Français Türkçe Bahasa Indonesia Bahasa Melayu اردو فارسی Deutsch Español Português বাংলা Soomaali Kiswahili Hausa 中文 Русский Nederlands हिन्दी தமிழ் Azərbaycanca Bosanski Shqip پښتو ਪੰਜਾਬੀ Italiano
🕌 Cami Sünni

Demirciler Camii

Qibla finder
مسجد Demirciler

Namaz Vakitleri

Yerel Saat --:--
Sonraki Namaz
Fajr
Sunrise
Dhuhr
Asr
Maghrib
Isha
📅

Prayer Timetable

Hakkında

Demirciler Camii — 'the Mosque of the Blacksmiths' — takes its name from the old Turkish guild of the demirciler, the ironworkers and blacksmiths whose workshops once clustered in particular quarters of every Anatolian town. Such occupational place-names are common across the older districts of Turkish cities and serve as living reminders of the guild structures that organised Ottoman urban life for centuries, each trade with its own patron saint, its own quarter, and frequently its own mosque. The Mamak mosque bearing this name is a neighbourhood structure of modest scale, with a single minaret, a central dome, and a forecourt paved in stone. Although the original blacksmiths' workshops have long since given way to other kinds of small business, the name on the façade preserves the memory of generations of skilled craftsmen who fed their families by the work of their hands, pausing five times a day to turn toward Mecca in prayer. Inside, the prayer hall is carpeted in the familiar Turkish pattern, and the mihrab is framed in Kütahya tile. The imam's Friday sermons often touch on the Islamic ethics of labour and craftsmanship, themes that resonate with a congregation of mechanics, welders, small traders, and workshop owners whose working lives continue the tradition of manual skill that the mosque's name recalls. Women pray in an upper gallery, and children attend Qur'an classes in the annex. Ablution facilities are clean and heated. During Ramadan the mosque runs a full programme of tarawih. A small anvil, donated by the last blacksmith of the old quarter before the closure of his workshop in the 1980s, is displayed in the mosque's entrance hall as a memorial to the trade whose name the mosque carries — a gentle, physical reminder that the call to prayer once rose from this street to hands blackened by the work of the forge. For Muslim visitors to Mamak, Demirciler Camii is a welcoming place to pray, and the name on the minaret is itself a quiet tribute to all those who continue to earn their living by the honest work of their own hands.

Özellikler

🅿️ Otopark
💧 Abdest
🚺 Kadınlar bölümü
Engelli erişimi
🕌 Sünni
🙌 Tepkiler
Bu yeri bildir
Bilgilerin doğruluğunu korumamıza yardımcı olun
Sebep
Deneyiminizi geliştirmek ve analitik için çerezler kullanıyoruz. Daha fazla bilgi