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Within the working class city of Russeifa in the Zarqa governorate of Jordan, Masjid Dahiyat al Madina al Munawwara carries a name that points the heart straight toward the radiant city of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family. Madina al Munawwara, the illuminated city, has been a beacon for believers since the Hijra of the Prophet from Mecca in the year 622, when its inhabitants, the Ansar, welcomed him with the famous nashid talaa al badru alayna, the full moon has risen upon us. Naming a Jordanian neighbourhood after Medina expresses a longing that runs through every Muslim heart for the blessed city of the Prophet.
Russeifa itself grew rapidly through the second half of the twentieth century, fed by Palestinian families displaced in 1948 and 1967 who made new lives along the busy highway between Amman and Zarqa. Jordan, whose Hashemite monarchs descend from the Prophet through Hasan ibn Ali, may God be pleased with him, has served as a place of refuge for waves of Muslims from Palestine, Iraq, and Syria over the decades, and its mosques often carry names that remember distant holy cities such as Mecca, Medina, Jerusalem, and Hebron.
Architecturally the masjid follows the modest Jordanian municipal taste. Pale cream stone walls drawn from local quarries, a single dome above the prayer hall, twin slim minarets, and tall arched windows welcome the desert breeze into the interior. Inside, green patterned carpets cover the floor, a wooden mimbar stands beside the mihrab, calligraphic panels cite verses praising the Prophet's city, and a separate women's gallery accommodates mothers and grandmothers during the five daily prayers.
Accurate daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at Masjid Dahiyat al Madina al Munawwara appear on this page alongside the Russeifa address, a map pin, and hospitable notes for any visitor arriving from Amman, Zarqa city, or the road north toward Jerash. During Ramadan the courtyard fills with tables of mansaf, maqluba, fattoush, and sweet knafeh Nabulsiya prepared by neighbours, and tarawih evenings gather large congregations of families from the surrounding blocks. Any traveller on the long Jordanian highway between the ruins of Philadelphia and the citadel of Ajloun is warmly invited to step within these quiet walls, to kneel upon the patterned carpets beside the steadfast Jordanian worshippers, and to send a heart lifted salawat upon the Prophet and upon the Ansar of his luminous city, asking God to reunite every longing believer with the green dome and the soft sands of a blessed oasis many centuries away.
Russeifa itself grew rapidly through the second half of the twentieth century, fed by Palestinian families displaced in 1948 and 1967 who made new lives along the busy highway between Amman and Zarqa. Jordan, whose Hashemite monarchs descend from the Prophet through Hasan ibn Ali, may God be pleased with him, has served as a place of refuge for waves of Muslims from Palestine, Iraq, and Syria over the decades, and its mosques often carry names that remember distant holy cities such as Mecca, Medina, Jerusalem, and Hebron.
Architecturally the masjid follows the modest Jordanian municipal taste. Pale cream stone walls drawn from local quarries, a single dome above the prayer hall, twin slim minarets, and tall arched windows welcome the desert breeze into the interior. Inside, green patterned carpets cover the floor, a wooden mimbar stands beside the mihrab, calligraphic panels cite verses praising the Prophet's city, and a separate women's gallery accommodates mothers and grandmothers during the five daily prayers.
Accurate daily prayer timings for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at Masjid Dahiyat al Madina al Munawwara appear on this page alongside the Russeifa address, a map pin, and hospitable notes for any visitor arriving from Amman, Zarqa city, or the road north toward Jerash. During Ramadan the courtyard fills with tables of mansaf, maqluba, fattoush, and sweet knafeh Nabulsiya prepared by neighbours, and tarawih evenings gather large congregations of families from the surrounding blocks. Any traveller on the long Jordanian highway between the ruins of Philadelphia and the citadel of Ajloun is warmly invited to step within these quiet walls, to kneel upon the patterned carpets beside the steadfast Jordanian worshippers, and to send a heart lifted salawat upon the Prophet and upon the Ansar of his luminous city, asking God to reunite every longing believer with the green dome and the soft sands of a blessed oasis many centuries away.
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