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Масҷиди панҷвақтаи маҳаллаи Сари Бозор

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Масҷиди панҷвақтаи маҳаллаи Сари Бозор

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High in the mountainous Sughd Region of northern Tajikistan, in the small mining settlement of Shurob near the Kyrgyz border, the Five Daily Prayers Mosque of Sari Bozor Mahalla carries a name drawn from the Tajik for the head of the bazaar quarter, the traditional centre of trade in a mountain town. Shurob grew during the Soviet period around its coal extraction operations, drawing Tajik, Uzbek, Russian, and Kyrgyz workers whose descendants continue to live in tightly woven mahallas along the hillsides. A mosque described as panjvaqta, serving the five daily prayers, signals a neighbourhood prayer house rather than a Jumu'ah mosque, its role being the rhythm of daily worship for families within walking distance.

The building follows the modest Tajik mountain idiom. A rectangular prayer hall in sun warmed brick is whitewashed on the outside, and a small dome of pressed metal rises above the front veranda. A single minaret of square plan with a simple tiled crown stands to one side, and the entrance is shaded by a carved wooden veranda supported on slender columns, a feature borrowed from the traditional Ferghana valley houses of the region. A small paved courtyard planted with apricot and walnut trees provides shade and the scent of fresh fruit in summer.

Inside, the hall is simple and warm. Red Bukhara style carpets cover the wooden floorboards, and walls are painted in pale cream and soft green. A plain plaster mihrab sits flush within the qibla wall, and a small carved mimbar stands beside it. A modest bookshelf in the corner holds Quran copies in Arabic with Tajik translation and a few basic religious primers used in the afternoon classes for children.

Shurob's mosque gathers its community through the daily rhythm of five prayers, the weekly Thursday night recitation circles, and the communal iftars of Ramadan when families share osh pilaf, sambusa, and sweet green tea. Funerals are remembered with quiet recitation of Yasin, and the mosque treasurers maintain a small fund to help widows and elderly neighbours through the long mountain winters. Eid mornings draw miners and farmers alike into the courtyard for warm embraces and the sharing of festive sweets.

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