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Mosquée Aïcha Oumout Mouminina Thiès chez maman

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مسجد Aïcha Oumout Mouminina Thiès Chez Maman

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Hakkında

Mosquée Aicha Oumout Mouminina Thies chez maman in Thies Nones stands as a small but beloved neighbourhood mosque in the Senegalese city of Thies, named in honour of the Mother of the Believers Aisha, may God be pleased with her, the beloved wife of the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family. The Wolof and French inflected phrase Oumout Mouminina is a local rendering of the Arabic title Umm al Muminin, Mother of the Believers, that is given to the wives of the Prophet. The affectionate tag chez maman, meaning at mother's place, reflects a common Senegalese practice of referring to neighbourhood mosques by the name of the matriarch whose compound or endowment sustained their construction. Thies itself is Senegal's second city, an important railway junction and commercial centre about seventy kilometres east of Dakar, and a meeting point of Wolof, Serer, and Peul communities. The neighbourhood of Thies Nones sits on the expanding outskirts of the city, amid low concrete houses, sandy lanes, and small shops selling cold bissap juice and attieke. The mosque is modest: a painted concrete box with a corrugated roof, a slender loudspeaker tower, a shaded veranda paved in tile, and an interior hall floored in rush mats overlaid with prayer rugs of local weaving. The qibla wall is painted soft green with calligraphy of the shahada in gold. Ceiling fans turn slowly through the dry heat of the afternoon. The congregation is drawn from the surrounding compounds, mostly Wolof families with strong attachments to the traditions of Senegalese Islamic learning that flow from the teachings of revered scholars across the Sine Saloum basin. Daily prayers are faithfully observed, and Jumu'ah fills the hall with men in boubou robes and prayer caps. Sermons are delivered in Wolof with Arabic quotations, often touching on patience, family responsibility, and the example of the Mother of the Believers. Ramadan brings community iftars of thieboudienne, dates, and kinkeliba tea, with long tarawih prayers. Close by stand the Thies railway station built in the colonial era, the vast Senegalese military base, the famous Manufactures Senegalaises des Arts Decoratifs tapestry workshop, the Popenguine pilgrimage cliffs along the Atlantic coast, and the baobab trees of the Sine Saloum delta where Wolof villages stretch toward the Gambia river.

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