The building is the oldest Lipka Tatar mosque in Poland, built on the plan of a rectangle, in specifications of 10 by 13 metres.
[2] The village of Kruszyniany was assigned by King John III Sobieski to the Tatars who had participated on the side of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in the war against the Ottoman Empire.
[4] Kruszyniany village was designated one of Poland's official national Historic Monuments (Pomnik historii) on November 20, 2012.
On the ridge of the roof stands a third tower, windowless and smaller than the others; it is somewhat closer to the mihrab (the niche in the wall indicating the direction of Mecca).
In the wall at the front of the men's prayer hall, pointing southeast toward the Mecca, is a small niche, the mihrab, in which the sacred books are kept.