This article is about Mawlid. For other uses, see Mawlid (disambiguation).
Part of a series on
Algerian Islamic reference
Institutions
Ministry of Religious Affairs and Endowments
Algerian high islamic council [ar]
Algerian fiqh academy [ar]
Algerian scientific council of fatwa [ar]
Algerian forum of maliki fiqh [ar]
National Union of Algerian Zawiyas [ar]
Dar al-Imam [ar]
Dar al-Quran [ar]
Quranic readings institute [ar]
National Agency for the implementation and management of Djamaa el Djazaïr [ar]
National crescent control committee [ar]
National office for Hajj and Umrah [ar]
Islam in Algeria
Islam
Religion in Algeria
Muftis of Algeria
Mosques of Algeria
Cemeteries of Algeria
List of mosques in Algiers [ar]
Quran in Algeria
Quran
Warsh recitation
Algeria Quran
Thaalibia Quran
Sunnism in Algeria
Sunnism
Sunni Islam in Algeria
Malikism in Algeria
Malikism
Sufism in Algeria
Sufism
List of Muslim saints of Algeria
Zawiyas of Algeria
Celebrations
Public holidays in Algeria
Ashura
Ashura in Algeria
Mawlid
Mawlid in Algeria
Mawsim
Sebiba
Tweeza
Wezeea
Sufi Orders
Alawiyya [ar]
Chabiyya
Darqawiyya
Dardouriyya
Habibiyya
Hansaliyya [ar]
Isawiyya
Karzaziyya [ar]
Khalwatiyya
Madyaniyya
Nasiriyya
Omariyya
Ouazzaniyya
Qadiriyya
Rahmaniyya
Senusiyya
Shadhiliyya
Sheikhiyya
Taïbiyya
Tijaniyya
Youssoufiyya
Zaïaniyya
Zarrouqiyya
Zawiyas of Algeria
Zawiya Thaalibia (Algiers)
Zawiya Thaalibia (Issers)
Zawiyet Sidi Amar Cherif
Zawiyet Sidi Boumerdassi
Zawiyet Sidi Boushaki
Zawiyet Sidi M'hamed Bou Qobrine (Algiers) [ar]
Zawiyet Sidi M'hamed Bou Qobrine (Bounouh) [ar]
Zawiyet Sidi Saadi [ar]
Zawiyet Sidi Amar [fr]
Zawiya Belkaïdia (Algiers) [fr]
Zawiya Belkaïdia (Oran) [ar]
Zawiyet El Hamel [ar]
Zawiyet Sidi M'Hamed Saadi [ar]
Zawiyet Sidi Ali Debbaghi [ar]
Zawiyet Sidi Ghobrini [ar]
Zawiyet Sidi Salem [ar]
Cult
Raising hands in Dua
Qunut
Hizb Rateb
Salka
Hezzab
Bash Hezzab
Nass al-Houdhour
Dua
Dhikr
Wird
Wazifa
Wazifa Zarruqiyya
Lazimi
Salat al-Fatih
v
t
e
Part of a series on Islam Sufism
Tomb of Abdul Qadir Gilani, Baghdad, Iraq
Ideas
Abdal
Al-Insān al-Kāmil
Baqaa
Dervish
Dhawq
Fakir
Fana
Hal
Haqiqa
Ihsan
Irfan
Ishq
Karamat
Kashf
Lataif
Manzil
Ma'rifa
Maqam
Murid
Murshid
Nafs
Nūr
Qalandar
Qutb
Silsila
Sufi cosmology
Sufi metaphysics
Sufi philosophy
Sufi poetry
Sufi psychology
Salik
Tazkiah
Wali
Yaqeen
Practices
Anasheed
Dhikr
Haḍra
Muraqabah
Qawwali
Sama
Whirling
Ziyarat
Sufi orders
Alians
Ba 'Alawi
Bektashi
Qadiri
Chishti
Naqshbandi
Shadhili
Suhrawardi
Rifa`i
Khalwati
Rahmani
Badawi
Desuqi
Tijani
Darqawi
Idrisi
Senusi
Bayrami
Jelveti
Maizbhandari
Malamati
Mouridi
Sülaymaniyya
Salihiyya
Azeemia
Kubrawi
Mevlevi
Shattari
Uwaisi
Hurufi
Ni'matullāhī
Nuqtavi
Qalandari
Safavi
Zahabiya
Akbari
Galibi
Haqqani Anjuman
Inayati
Issawiyya
Jerrahi
Madari
Mahdavi
Noorbakshi
Zahedi
Zikri
List of sufis
Notable early
Notable modern
Singers
Topics in Sufism
Tawhid
Sharia
Tariqa
Haqiqa
Ma'rifa
Art
History
Sufi music
Persecution
Ziyarat
Islam portal
v
t
e
Part of a series on the
History of Algeria
Prehistory
Aterian Culture (80,000 BC)
Iberomaurusian Culture (20,000 BC)
Capsian culture (10,000 BC)
Rock art in Oran, Djelfa, Tassili and Ahaggar
Roknia
Madghacen
Jedars
Related: Archeology of Algeria
Antiquity
Phoenicia
Ancient Carthage
Numidia (202–46 BC)
Punic Wars (264–146 BC)
Jugurthine War (111–106 BC)
Roman Mauretania and Africa (146 BC–590 AD)
Vandal Kingdom (435–534 AD)
Mauro-Roman Kingdom (477–578 AD)
Kingdom of the Aurès (484–703 AD)
Kingdom of Altava (578–708 AD)
Prefecture of Africa (534–585 AD)
Exarchate of Africa (585–698 AD)
Early African Church
Partenia
Fossatum Africae
Gemellae
Middle Ages
Arab conquest (647–709 AD)
Umayyad Caliphate (703–744 AD)
Ifranids (742–1066 AD)
Muhallabids (771–793 AD)
Rustamids (776–909 AD)
Idrisids (789–828 AD)
Aghlabids (800–909 AD)
Fatimids (909–1171 AD)
Maghrawas (970–1068 AD)
Zirids (973–1152 AD)
Hammadids (1014–1152 AD)
Almoravids (1040–1147 AD)
Almohads (1121–1269 AD)
Marinids (1215–1465 AD)
Hafsids (1229–1574 AD)
Ziyyanids (1235–1556 AD)
Modern times
Regency of Algiers (16th–19th centuries)
Ottoman governors
Emirate of Beni Abbas
Emirate of Kuku
Barbary pirates
Barbary Slave Trade
First Barbary War
Second Barbary War
French Algeria (19th–20th centuries)
French conquest
French governors
Resistance
Pacification
Emir Abdelkader
Fatma N'Soumer
Mokrani Revolt
Cheikh Bouamama
Attack on Mers-el-Kébir
Operation Torch
Sétif and Guelma massacre
Algerian War (1954–1962)
Nationalism
RCUA
FLN
GPRA
1958 crisis
1961 putsch
Évian Accords
Independence referendum
Pied-Noir
Harkis
Oujda Group
Contemporary era
1960s–80s
FFS rebellion
1965 coup d'état
Berber Spring
1988 riots
1990s–2000s
Algerian Civil War
Timeline
Massacres
FIS
GIA
High Council of State
Civil Concord
Black Spring
Peace Charter
Insurgency in the Maghreb
2010s to present
Arab Spring
Hirak Movement
COVID-19 pandemic
Related topics
Outline of Algeria
Military history of Algeria (List of wars involving Algeria)
Postal history of Algeria (List of people on stamps of Algeria)
History of North Africa
v
t
e
Mawlid in Algeria
In Algeria, the Day of Mawlid (Arabic: يوم المولد النبوي; meaning the Birth of Muhammad) has been traditionally a day of celebration and joy, because Mawlid is celebrated on the twelfth day of Rabiʽ al-Awwal across the Muslim world.[1] Algerian people, however, embrace this day with cheerful remembrance of those who have died, and it is a custom to pay visit to cemetery in order to pray for the departed ones.[2]
^"Perpétuer la tradition malgré le Covid-19". www.djazairess.com.
^"Célébration du Mawlid Ennabawi : La Sira du Prophète est une référence pour tout musulman". www.djazairess.com.
InAlgeria, the Day of Mawlid (Arabic: يوم المولد النبوي; meaning the Birth of Muhammad) has been traditionally a day of celebration and joy, because...
Mawlid (Arabic: مَولِد), also known as Eid-e-Milad an-Nabi (Arabic: عید ميلاد النبي, romanized: ʿīd mīlad an-nabī, lit. 'feast of the birth of the prophet')...
Religion inAlgeria is dominated by Muslims, with nearly ninety-eight of the population (over ninety-nine percent of the population that state any religion)...
ISBN 978-81-7625-267-6. Piga, Adriana (2006). Les voies du soufisme au sud du Sahara (in French). Paris: Éditions Karthala. ISBN 978-2-84586-801-4. Piraino, Francesco;...
period including Easter holidays in early Northern Hemisphere spring at universities and schools, which has been observed in Europe since the late 19th century...
list of mosques inAlgeria. According to the Ministry of Religious Affairs and Endowment in 2006, there are around 15,000 mosques inAlgeria as a whole, of...
Endowments inAlgeriaAlgerian Islamic reference Ashura inAlgeria Islam inAlgeriaMawlidinAlgeria Ministry of Religious Affairs and Endowments inAlgeria Religion...
In Sufism, the lazimi or wird lazim (Arabic: الْوِرْدُ اللَّازِمُ ; obligatory litany) is a regular litany (wird) practiced individually by followers (murids)...
a temporary ceasefire in a combat zone for humanitarian aid access. The day was first established in 1981 and first observed in September 1982 and is...
Rateb Zawiyas in Algeria Muftis in Algeria Malikism inAlgeria Ashura inAlgeriaMawlidinAlgeria al-Alwani, Taha J.; sadeq, A. H. M.; Osman, Fathi; Ellhyeb...
In Sufism, the Wazifa Zarruqiyya (Arabic: الْوَظِيفَةُ الزَّرُّوقِيَّةُ) is a regular wazifa or litany practiced by followers in the Shadhili order of...
club was named Mouloudia referring to Mawlid (the birthday of Muhammad) hence the name Mouloudia of Mawlid. In 1924, the club merged with Hamidia Club...
al-Raḥmāniyya) is an Algerian Sufi order (tariqa or brotherhood) founded by Kabyle religious scholar Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Raḥman al-Azhari Bu Qabrayn in the 1770s...
qāriʾ supervising or participating in the Hizb Rateb in mosques and zawiyas inAlgeria according to the Algerian Islamic reference under the supervision...
referred to as MC Alger or MCA for short, is an Algerian football club based in Algiers. The club was founded in 1921 and its colours are red, green and white...
There are a number of cemeteries in Algiers. Among them is the Thaalibia Cemetery, the oldest one. A number of them have listed buildings or structures...
Hezzab supervising the Hizb Rateb and Salka in mosques and zawiyas inAlgeria according to the Algerian Islamic reference under the supervision of the...
in the countries of the Maghreb, the muslims used to recite the Quran together in what is known as the Hizb Rateb, in line with the current custom in...
they travelled to Algeria from their own homeland and became noted in their hagiography for their work inAlgeria and amongst the Algerian people. A small...