Ahmadiyya in Spain

Ahmadiyya is an Islamic branch in Spain, under the spiritual leadership of the caliph in London. The earliest history of the Community in Spain dates back to the period of the Second Caliph, when Malik Mohammad Sharid Gujrati, a missionary of the Community, arrived in Madrid on March 10, 1936[citation needed]. However, in the same year the Spanish Civil War broke out forcing Gujrati to abandon the country. Missionary efforts commenced once again following the Second World War, in 1946 when Karam Ilahi Zafar was sent by the caliph. The Basharat Mosque in Pedro Abad, built by the Ahmadiyya in the 1980s is the first mosque to be built in Spain since the Fall of Granada and the end of Muslim rule at the end of the 15th century.[1][2] Today there are two purpose-built Ahmadi Muslim mosques and roughly 500 adherents in Spain.[3]

  1. ^ Yvonne Y. Haddad, Jane I. Smith: Mission to America. Five Islamic sectarian communities in North America. University Press of Florida, Gainesville 1993, p. 49
  2. ^ "Who are The Ahmadi?". BBC.
  3. ^ Gerardo Elorriaga (June 24, 2014). "El Islam del amor" (in Spanish). Retrieved August 4, 2015.

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