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Mili Görüş Utrecht Mescid-i Aksa

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مسجد Mili Görüş أوتريخت I Aksa

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Utrecht, the medieval cathedral city in the central Netherlands whose Domtoren rises more than a hundred metres above the Oudegracht canal and whose university is among the oldest in the kingdom, hosts a Turkish heritage mosque operated by the organisation known in Dutch and Turkish as Milli Gorus, and the prayer hall takes the evocative name Mescid i Aksa after the Masjid al Aqsa in Jerusalem, which for Muslims is the third most sacred precinct on earth. The Dutch Muslim community grew substantially during the second half of the twentieth century through Turkish and Moroccan labour migration agreements, followed by family reunification and the establishment of Islamic organisations such as Milli Gorus, Diyanet and the Moroccan umbrella bodies that provide religious services, language teaching and youth programmes across the Netherlands. Utrecht's local Muslim presence is concentrated in the neighbourhoods of Overvecht, Kanaleneiland and Lombok, where mosques, grocers, barber shops and tea houses serve an internally diverse Dutch Muslim community. Architecturally the Milli Gorus Utrecht building is a converted commercial property whose interior has been carefully remodelled into a carpeted prayer hall, a women's section on a raised platform, a library of Qur'anic commentaries in Turkish, Arabic and Dutch, and a teaching wing for weekend classes. The mihrab is modest but dignified, the mimbar rises in two carved steps and a cedar inlaid ceiling medallion bears the divine name al Rahman. Daily prayers draw commuters and residents, the Jumu'ah sermon is delivered in Turkish with Dutch translation and Ramadan evenings bring iftar of mercimek corbasi, pide, olives, dates and Turkish tea. Eid mornings move to a rented hall to accommodate the crowd, while the Utrecht building remains open for reflection. Non Muslim neighbours are welcomed to open house events held each autumn, and the centre maintains friendly relations with local churches, synagogues and the municipal council. Practical visitors should dress modestly, leave shoes on the angled wooden racks and silence mobile devices before entering. Nearby lie the Dom tower, the Rietveld Schroder house listed by UNESCO, the canal terraces of the Oudegracht and the Centraal Museum holding one of the largest collections of Dutch design, art and paintings in the country.

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