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 unknown

Burhani Masjid Sharjah

Qibla finder
مسجد Burhani الشارقة

Namaz Vakitleri

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

Prayer Timetable

Hakkında

Within the bustling emirate of Sharjah, often described as the cultural capital of the United Arab Emirates, Burhani Masjid serves the Dawoodi community with quiet focus and distinctive devotional rhythms. Burhani, drawn from the Arabic burhan meaning proof or clear evidence, is a name often associated with the Fatimid Tayyibi tradition whose adherents trace their lineage through an unbroken chain of scholars. The community has long maintained a strong presence in Sharjah and Dubai, drawn from Gujarati merchant families who settled along the Trucial Coast during the nineteenth century to pursue the pearling, textile, and maritime trades that linked India to Arabia.

Sharjah itself was a major centre of pearling, poetry, and scholarship long before the discovery of oil, and its historic sikka lanes are still lined with restored merchant houses, wind towers, and modest mosques. The modern city has become a recognised UNESCO cultural capital, home to major Islamic art and calligraphy museums, a distinguished university, and dozens of carefully maintained mosques reflecting the diversity of its resident communities.

Burhani Masjid occupies a site within a residential quarter, its modest scale speaking to the community's preference for intimate and carefully regulated devotional spaces. The building follows a Gujarati influenced idiom familiar from the Dawoodi masjids of Mumbai, Surat, and Karachi. Pale cream plaster walls carry pointed arched windows framed in teak, a small central dome in jade green rises above the hall, and a single modest minaret stands beside the courtyard. Carved wooden doors with brass fittings welcome worshippers, and a paved forecourt shaded by neem and date palms provides cool ablution space.

Inside, the hall is soft and carefully ordered. Long rows of patterned carpet in green and gold lead towards a mihrab of cream marble bordered with calligraphic panels in gilded Thuluth. A stepped mimbar of dark rosewood is positioned beside the prayer niche, and the ribbed ceiling is painted with floral medallions in pale turquoise and cream. A curtained partition ensures a comfortable prayer area for sisters.

The community's annual calendar includes Ashura majlis, the Eid celebrations, and the distinctive Urs commemorations of beloved scholars. Community meals of daal chawal palidu, a Gujarati favourite of rice and lentils, are often shared in the adjoining hall, binding the congregation in hospitable devotion.

Özellikler

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