Attakwa Mosque is one of Sioux Falls' gathering points where Friday prayers draw a genuinely diverse crowd — immigrant families, converts, students, and longtime residents finding common ground on the same carpet.
As a mosque and community organization, Attakwa serves the local Muslim population through congregational prayer, religious education, and community programming. It functions as more than a place of worship — members gather here to observe Islamic holidays, support one another through life events, and connect newcomers to the broader Sioux Falls community.
People choose Attakwa because it holds space for a wide range of backgrounds under one roof without making anyone feel like a visitor. That kind of grounded consistency is harder to build than it looks, and in a city still learning its own diversity, it matters.