Beerta darawiishta
About Beerta darawiishta
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Updated April 15, 2024
## Beerta Darawiishta (Mogadishu): What to Know Before You Go
Quick facts
– Type: Urban park/green space
– Somali name: Beerta Daraawiishta
– Location: Central Mogadishu (Banadir), in the Xamar Jajab / Wardhiigley area, near the Sayidka monument and the former national parliament site
– Map coords: 2.0369315, 45.3296468
– Approx. extent: ~0.66 km in length (per OSM-derived mapping). Somalia
### Where exactly is it?
Beerta Darawiishta sits in Mogadishu’s historic core around key civic landmarks. Community and mapping records place it between the Taalada Sayidka (equestrian statue of Sayid Mohamed Abdullah Hassan) and the old People’s Assembly Building (the former parliament). The latter was heavily damaged during the civil war and has seen partial restoration and plans for rebuilding; the current legislature meets inside the Villa Somalia compound instead. Online
Multiple gazetteer-style databases list the park in Xamar Jajab / Wardhiigleey with nearby arteries such as W. Jamaal Cabdi-Naasir, Makka Al-Mukarama, and “Via Moscow,” which helps you triangulate the right block if you’re navigating with offline maps.
> Pin for maps: “Beerta Daraawiishta, Mogadishu” (searchable in OSM-based apps). Coordinates above match the commonly referenced point. Somalia
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## Context: Why the name “Darawiishta”?
“Darawiish/Dervish” references the Dervish movement led by Sayid Mohamed Abdullah Hassan (1856–1920), an anti-colonial figure commemorated by the nearby Taalada Sayidka. The monument remains a central point of orientation in the city.
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## What you’ll realistically find today
– A tree-filled urban strip/patchwork of green rather than a fully serviced “destination park.” OSM-derived data categorizes it as leisure=park and indicates a linear footprint (~0.66 km). Amenities (signed entrances, restrooms, kiosks) are not consistently documented in official sources. Somalia
– Civic setting: Surrounded by government sites and thoroughfares; the exact edges and usage can change with municipal works or security perimeters.
– Occasional non-recreational use: Somali media footage has shown periods where internally displaced families (IDPs) were living in/around the area near parliament, underscoring how public space in Mogadishu can be repurposed by necessity. Treat the space with sensitivity and avoid intrusive photography.
> Important: Online content for Mogadishu parks often conflates different sites—e.g., Beerta Nabadda / Mogadishu Peace Park is a separate, more commercialized venue with food courts and play equipment. Cross-check names carefully to avoid mixing locations.
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## Getting there (and around)
– Reference points: Taalada Sayidka monument and the former People’s Assembly Building ruins are your best physical markers for orientation toward Beerta Darawiishta.
– Road cues on maps: Look for W. Jamaal Cabdi-Naasir, Makka Al-Mukarama, and adjacent ward names Xamar Jajab, Howlwadaag, Waaberi when zooming around the central grid.
– Transport: Visitors typically move with pre-arranged drivers or hosts familiar with current checkpoints and diversions. (City routing and access patterns can shift without public notice; rely on local guidance rather than past trip reports.)
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## Practical tips (evidence-based and respectful)
– Ask before you photograph people. Media reports show IDPs and vulnerable communities in/near the area at times; prioritize dignity and privacy.
– Expect evolving conditions. The status of the old parliament site and surrounding streets changes with reconstruction and security operations. Guidebooks that don’t cite dates are often outdated—verify locally on the day you go.
– Don’t assume amenities. There’s no authoritative, current listing of park facilities for Beerta Darawiishta; plan water, shade, and rest stops accordingly. (If you need café/playground options, Beerta Nabadda / Mogadishu Peace Park is the venue commonly shown with those features—again, it’s a different park.)
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## What to combine it with
– Taalada Sayidka (monument): The equestrian statue honoring Sayid Mohamed Abdullah Hassan; useful for context and navigation.
– Architectural history stroll (street-view style): From the Beerta Darawiishta area toward the People’s Assembly Building site for modernist/brutalist history, then onward (conditions permitting) toward other central landmarks. Be cautious and rely on local hosts.
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## Data quality & currency notes
– Primary location source: OpenStreetMap-derived datasets and third-party mirrors confirm the park’s existence, name, classification (leisure=park), and rough extent. Because these reflect community mapping, precise boundaries and amenities can be incomplete; treat them as navigational aids rather than official park brochures. Somalia
– Adjacency confirmation: Somali community forums and place directories describe Beerta Darawiishta as the treed parkland between Taalada Sayidka and the parliament area, which matches OSM geometry and street lists nearby. Online
– Social conditions: Reports of displaced families in/around the green space are from Somali news footage; circumstances change and may not reflect present-day usage. Verify respectfully on site.
– Nearby but distinct venues: Posts and pages for Mogadishu Peace Park (Beerta Nabadda) showcase cafés/playgrounds and are frequently mis-tagged as “the park in central Mogadishu”—they’re not the same place.
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### Bottom line
If you’re mapping Mogadishu’s civic core, Beerta Darawiishta is the green belt threading major historical and governmental landmarks. Treat it less like a neatly serviced urban park and more like flexible civic open space whose day-to-day reality reflects the city’s ongoing reconstruction and social needs. Keep plans agile, travel with trusted local support, and cross-verify details the same day you visit using the coordinates above and the Sayidka/Parliament landmarks cited here. Somalia
Factual accuracy note: This guide relies on mappable evidence, Somali media clips, and landmark pages with clear time stamps. Where conditions are fluid (security, IDP presence, reconstruction), they’re flagged, and no amenities are promised without a source.
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