In an interview with Deutschlandfunk, the sociologist Necla Kelek criticized, among other things, that the community is missionary and divides the world into believers and unbelievers.
Malik Nasir Mahmood, Mohammad Ahmad Qamar Din and Zaheer Ahmad Sanauri inform about their faith. (Photo Westdeutsche Zeitung) |
Source/Credit: Westdeutsche Zeitung
By Web Report | November 23, 2017
A small community starts a flyer campaign starting on Saturday.
We are all Germany" is on the flyers, which will be distributed from Saturday in Wuppertal. The members of the local Ahmadiyya Muslim community want to seek dialogue with their fellow citizens - Muslim and non-Muslim. The goals are: to break down prejudices, to answer questions about one's own faith, to distance oneself from terrorists who murder in the name of Islam.
The reactions are often positive but not always
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat was founded in India at the end of the 19th century. In Germany, the Islamic community claims to have 45,000 members, and tens of million worldwide. It sees itself as a reforming community. Its founder, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, is considered the follower of the Prophet Muhammad. In Pakistan, among other things, Ahmadis have been massively persecuted since the 1970s, when they were declared non-Muslims.
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