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Mosque Alqsr Alkbyr Ayt Hsan Masjid Al-qasr Al-kabir Ait Hassan

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مسجد القصر الكبير آيت حسان Masjid Al-Qasr Al-Kabir Aït Hassan

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Set amid the olive terraces and mountain hamlets of the historic Fes Boulemane region of central Morocco, the Masjid al Qasr al Kabir Ait Hassan takes its name from the Amazigh lineage of the surrounding village of Ait Hassan and the descriptive qasr kabir, meaning great castle or large fortified compound, pointing to the mosque's origin as part of a traditional kasbah complex. Morocco's interior highlands have long been home to Amazigh communities who embraced Islam during the early centuries and developed their own distinctive architectural and devotional traditions while remaining in continuous dialogue with the urban centres of Fes, Meknes, and Marrakech. The city of Fes itself is among the oldest continuous centres of Islamic learning in the world, home to the Qarawiyyin founded in the ninth century by Fatima al Fihri, may God be pleased with her, and generations of Moroccan ulama whose influence radiated across the western Maghreb and sub Saharan Africa. Village mosques like al Qasr al Kabir Ait Hassan inherited this learning through itinerant teachers and through the books copied from Fes manuscripts. Architecturally the mosque displays the simple Maghrebi rural style, thick whitewashed walls, a squared minaret with a green tiled cap and small finial at its summit, a modest courtyard with a fountain for ablutions, and a prayer hall floored with reed mats overlaid by woollen rugs. Carved cedar beams support the ceiling, and the mihrab bears traditional geometric and floral stucco work. The mosque hosts daily prayers for Ait Hassan and surrounding hamlets, Jumu'ah with a khutbah often delivered in Tamazight as well as Arabic, and the nightly Ramadan programme of taraweeh and dhikr. It also serves as a meeting point during the two Eid festivals and weddings, reinforcing the social fabric of the village. Travellers crossing between Fes and the Middle Atlas discover in this mosque a living testament to the deep rooted Islamic culture of the Moroccan highlands. Shepherds bringing flocks down from summer pastures still stop beneath its cedar porch to exchange the news of the week and drink glasses of mint infused tea.

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