The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community originated in India in 1889, with the birth of the Community taking place in Qadian, India. As of 2008 the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community has been established in all Asian countries except for Tajikistan, Turkmenistan (established 2010), Georgia and North Korea.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself in Rabwah on September 30, 1948. Rabwah was a town founded and created from scratch by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in the time of its Second Caliph, Mirza Basheer-ud-Din Mahmood Ahmad and was named ‘Rabwah’ by the Ahmadiyya Missionary Jalal-ud-Din Shams (the author of the famous book “Where Did Jesus Die?” and companion of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad) because ‘rabwah’ in Arabic means ‘elevated/exalted place’ and thus, Jalal-ud-Din Shams coined for the town Rabwah because of the narration in the Qur’an of Jesus being exalted/elevated towards God. Rabwah acted as the International Headquarters of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community after the Partition of India and before the migration of the Fourth Khalifa (International Head) of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, Mirza Tahir Ahmad to Europe in London, England, due to the government of Pakistan’s on-going Anti-Ahmadiyya laws. England is the present location of the International administrative Headquarters of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community.
Bahishti Maqbarah (Ahmadiyya Graveyard). (31°45′42.6″N 72°55′1.2″E)
Jamia Ahmadiyya (Date?)
Tahir Heart Institute. (31°45′30.8″N 72°55′0″E)
Fazle Umar Hospital. (31°45′34.3″N 72°55′2.5″E)
Khilafat Library. (31°45′32.7″N 72°54′52″E)
Masjid-e-Aqsa which is the largest mosque in Rabwah in March, 31st 1972. (31°45′6″N 72°54′38″E)
Masjid Mehdi. (31°45′31″N 72°54′53.9″E)
Yadgar Medhi. (31°45′31.9″N 72°55′2.4″E) marks the location where Khalifa-tul-Masih II of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community first offered prayers upon arrival to Rabwah from Qadian, India.
Hasan Iqbal Mosque.
Construction of Fazle Umar Hospital 1956
13 mosques torched, destroyed or forcibly occupied in 1974.
20 mosques demolished.
25 mosques sealed by authorities.
11 mosques set on fire.
14 mosques forcibly occupied.
35 mosques barred from construction.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1913.
The Bangali Ahmadiyya Community has 103 local chapters across the country, in 425 cities and villages.
There are 65 missionaries, an MTA (Muslim Television Ahmadiyya) studio in Dhaka and a Jamia Ahmadiyya (Missionary Training College).
Maharajpur Mosque in the Natore District
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mosque in Khulna
Galim Gazi Mosque in Betal, Kishoregonj
Madaratek Mosque in Dhaka
Masjid Baitul Baset, in Chittagong.
An Ahmadiyya Muslim Mosque was constructed in Bhutan in 2008.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 2001.
At-Taqwa Mosque
Baitul Awwal Mosque
In 2001, the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community was introduced to a small village in Cambodia called Minchey, which is 70 km from Phnom Penh. All 252 residents of the village converted to the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community.
Nooruddin Mosque inaugurated on March 14, 2004
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1889.
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Srinagar, Kashmir. Srinagar, Kashmir is the site of the tomb of Jesus as according to the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Simliya Ranchi, Jharkhand
Noor Mosque in Andhra Pradesh
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Ahmedabad, Gujarat
Jamay Mosque, built in 2003 in Andhra Pradesh
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Kodambakkam,Chennai, Tamil Nadu
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Adambakkam,Chennai, Tamil Nadu
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Melapalayam, Tamil Nadu South Zone
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Sattankukam, Tamil Nadu South Zone
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Kottar, Tamil Nadu South Zone
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Kaliyakkvilai, Tamil Nadu South Zone
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Soorankudy, Tamil Nadu South Zone
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Virdhunagar, Tamil Nadu South Zone
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Itarsi, M.P
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Gwalior, M.P
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Salichoka, M.P
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Soro, Orissa
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Sungrah, Orissa
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Bhadrak, Orissa
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Bhubaneswar, Orissa
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Cuttack, Orissa
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Keranga, Orissa
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Pankal, Orissa
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Dhuan sahi, Orissa
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Haldipada, Orissa
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in gadpada, Orissa
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Muktadeyi Pur, Orissa
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Ballarpur, Maharashtra
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Shahjahanpur, Uttar Pradesh
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Barely, Uttar Pradesh
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Sitapur, Uttar Pradesh
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Bahuwa, Uttar Pradesh
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Udaypur Kataiya, Uttar Pradesh
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Aroha, Uttar Pradesh
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Agra, Uttar Pradesh
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Saharanpur, Uttar Pradesh
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Gonda, Uttar Pradesh
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Dharmpur, Uttar Pradesh
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Faizabad, Uttar Pradesh
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Patna, Bihar
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Bhagalpur, Bihar
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Khanpur Milki, Bihar
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Barapura, Bihar
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Yadgir, Karnataka
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Gulbarga, Karnataka
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Jind, Haryana
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House on New Park Street in Park Circus, Kolkata.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1889. Qadian was the first International Headquarters of the Community and the birthplace of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad. (31°49′4″N 75°23′31″E)
Mubarak Mosque was the first Ahmadiyya Mosque ever built, foundation stone laid in 1883 by Mirza Ghulam Ahmad.
White Minaret, foundation stone laid on March 13, 1903 by Mirza Ghulam Ahmad; now serves as the symbol of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community and is on the Flag of Ahmadiyyat.
Aqsa Mosque built in 1876 by Mirza Ghulam Murtaza, the father of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad.
Bait ud Dua “House of Prayer”, the site where the founder of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, used to offer his prayers.
Darul Futooh “Place of Victories” Mosque.
Nasirabad “Land of the Helper of Allah” Mosque.
Sarae Tahir “the Tahir Inn” built as a guest house in memory of the Ahmadi Afghan martyr, Sahibzada Abdul Latif.
The Jalsa Salana (Annual Convention) plot of land bought by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community for the purpose.
Founding of Madrassa Ahmadiyya founded in 1906.
The Jamia Ahmadiyya (Missionary Training College) founded on May, 25th 1928.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1925.
Jamia Ahmadiyya established in March 1982.
Nasir Mosque in Indonesia
An-Noor Mosque in Indonesia
Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Guest Quarters and Mission House in Indonesia
There are over 200,000 Ahmadis in Indonesia with 200 missionaries, and more than 300 local branches.
There are 385 mosques, 174 mission houses and 36 schools built by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in Indonesia
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1925 which at the time was the British Mandate of Palestine. After the UN Partition of Palestine, the community established its center in Haifa after 1947.
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Mahmood Mosque on Mount Carmel in Kababir, Haifa, which acts as the National Headquarters for the Ahmadiyya Community in Israel.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1935.
Ahmadiyya Mission House in Nagoya
Darul Tabligh in Tokyo
Bait ul Ahad in Tsushima, Aichi
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1991.
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House and Mosque in Almaty
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1935.
Bait-us-Salam Mosque in Kuala Lumpur
°The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1935.
°Rangoon Mosque in Myanmar
° Ahmadiyya Mosque in Mawlamyaing °Ahmadiyya Mosque in Mandalay
An Ahmadiyya Muslim Mosque was constructed in Nepal in 2008.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1985.
Ahmadiyya Mission House in Manila
The Philippines Ahmadiyya Community has 6 mosques, 5 mission houses, 5 local missionaries, 1 national missionary and is organized in 9 local chapters throughout the country.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1924.
Ahmadiyya Mission House in St. Petersburg
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1935.
Taha Mosque in Singapore
Mirza Masroor Ahmad laid the foundation stone for a two-story mission house in 2006.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1915.
Fazal Mosque in Negombo
Bait-ul-Hamd Mosque in Colombo which acts as the national headquarters of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in Sri Lanka
Ahmadiyya Muslim Centre in Slave Island
Ahmadiyya Muslim mosque in (pasyala)
Thailand
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1986.
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Bangkok
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 2010.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community had been established in all African countries by the year 2000. The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community was introduced to Africa when several individuals living in East Africa became Ahmadis in 1900, during the life of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1957.
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Agonlin.
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Togouihoue.
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Lalo.
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Papatia.
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Manigri.
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Oke-Owo
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Godogossoun
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Suya.
Al-Mahdi mosque which is the largest mosque in Bénin, inaugurated April 27, 2008.
Baitul Tauheed Mosque inaugurated in 2004.
In 1993, 10,000 converts to the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community from Bénin.
In 2000, 801,000 converts.
In 2001, over 1.2 million converts, 328 local branches established within all 328 cities within the country, 228 chiefs and kings converted and 237 Sunni converted Ahmadiyya mosques along with their Imams.
Benin has 251 Ahmadiyya mosques, 77 mission houses and over 2 million adherents of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community. As of 2002, 57 kings of various Beninous communities joined the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1986.
Al Mahdi Mosque in Ougadougou
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mosque in Koudougou
Ahmadiyya Islamic Radio Station established (Radio Islamique Ahmadiyya FM104.1)
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1961.
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Dagara located in the Dabakala district of the Vallée du Bandama region.
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Bouaké.
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Adjamé
Ahmadiyya Mosque in San Pedro
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Abengourou
Ahmadiyya Hospital in Adjamé
Ahmadiyya Primary Schools in Ajamé and Yopougon
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Grand Bassam
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Oumé
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1961.
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Saba
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Burock, a small village located in Foli Kansala which is one of the nine districts in the Western Division of The Gambia.
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Latrikunda, a locale within Serrekunda, largest city in The Gambia.
Baitus Salam Mosque in Talinding Kunjang.
First Ahmadi Governor-General of The Gambia, Al-Haj Sir Farimang Mamadi Singateh.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1921.
Wheat grown for the first time in Ghana due to the efforts of Mirza Masroor Ahmad who was stationed in Ghana as an agriculturalist, philanthropist and the principle of the Ahmadiyya Secondary School Salaga before becoming the present Khalifah of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community.
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mosque in Accra
Ahmadiyya population in Ghana increases 5 fold after one year of being established in 1921.
Ahmadiyya Secondary Schools in Kumasi, Asokore, Fomena, Salaga, Essarkyir, Potsin and Wa.
Nasia Mosque in northern Ghana.
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Salaga
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Kokobila
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Pramso
Nusrat Jehan Mosque in Wa
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Techiman
Kumasi Central Mosque in Kumasi
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Mangoase
Baitul Aleem Mosque in Abura
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Daboase
Asokore Hospital in Ashanti Region
Baitul Habib Mosque in Kumasi
Taleem-ul-Islam School in Kumasi, first school established in Africa by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community
Daboase Hospital in Daboase
Taleem-ul-Islam School in Gomoa Poston
Ahmadiyya Hospital in Agona Swedru
Ahmadiyya Secondary School in Ekumfi Essarkyir
Jamia Ahmadiyya (Missionary Training College) established in Ghana in March 1966.
IT Institute established by Humanity First, which is affiliated by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in Ghana in the year 2007.
Bustan-e-Ahmad (Gardens of Ahmad) plot of land owned by the Community for Annual Conventions, bought in 2004.
Bagh-e-Ahmad (Gardens of Ahmad) plot of land owned by the Community for Annual Conventions, bought in 2008.
2-5 million Ahmadis in Ghana in the year 2007.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1900.
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Nairobi
68 Ahmadiyya Mosques throughout the country
Ahmadiyya Hall (three-story building) inaugurated in 2005.
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Navaisha
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Nukoro
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Banja
Mission House in Eldoret
Parklands Primary School in Nairobi
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1999.
Baitul Mahdi Mosque in Thaba-Bosiu
There are 350 Ahmadis in Lesotho in 7 local branches.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1956.
A college professor is the first convert to the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in 1917.
Baitul Mujeeb Mosque in Monrovia. It was originally built in 1986 but suffered fire damage in 1996 during the First Liberian Civil War. It was reconstructed on July 7, 2000.
Foundation stone laid for Tubmanburg Mosque in 2007
Ahmadiyya Mission House in Gohn Town, Grand Cape Mount County
Ahmadiyya Central Library in Monrovia inaugurated in 2008
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in the 1980s.
Baitun Nasir Mosque in Andranomadio
Ahmadiyya Mission House in Madagascar
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1913.
Nusrat Mosque in Quatre Bornes
Baitul Zikr Mosque in Rose-Hill
Noor Mosque in Pailles
Dar-us-Salam Mosque, which was the first mosque built in Mauritius and the central mosque in Rose Hill, Mauritius
Mubarak Mosque in Montagne Blanche. It was renovated in 1961 into a concrete structure which was financed by the local Ahmadis
Bait-us-Salam Mosque in New Grove.
Tahir Mosque in Quartier Millitiare
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Casernes
Fazal Mosque in Phoenix
Usman Mosque in Stanley
Rizwan Mosque in St. Pierre
Umar Mosque in Triolet
Noor Muhammad Noroya, first Mauritian convert to the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community
French Ahmadiyya newspaper called ‘Islamism’ established by Noor Muhammad Noroya.
Rodrigues Island
Mahmood Mosque, La ferme
Noor mosque, Port Mathurin
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1956.
Mahmood Mosque in Duobo, Niamay Region
Noor Mosque in Algada, Marawi Region
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1916.
Baitur-Raheem Mosque in Ibadan inaugurated in 2008
Ahmadiyya Central Mosque in Sabo Quarter, Ilaro Town, Ogun State
Mubarak Mosque in Abuja, which is the last Ahmadiyya mosque, built in the first century of the Ahmadiyya Caliphate.
Tahir Mosque in Ojokoro
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Orita, Ilaro Town, Ogun State
Owode Mosque in Ogun State
Hadeeqa-e-Ahmad, a plot of land bought for Annual Conventions.
Auxiliary Guest Houses in Lagos
Ahmadiyya General Hospital in Apapa
Ahmadiyya Muslim Weekly newspaper (first Muslim weekly newspaper in the country) called ‘The Truth’
Jamia Ahmadiyya (Missionary Training College) in Ilaro, Ogun State
The Qur'an translated into several Nigerian dialects, including Yoruba, Hausa, Igo, Etsako and Tiv
Hafiz class in Nigeria (Class for the teaching of the memorization of the whole Qur’an).
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1937.
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Gbonkobana
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Gbendembu
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Kailahun
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Makeni
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Bo
There are 573 mosques, 19 central missionaries, 131 local missionaries, 184 Ahmadiyya primary schools and 50 secondary schools in Sierra Leone
Ahmadiyya Muslim Radio Station established in 2007
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1946.
Baitul Awwal Mosque in Cape Town
Swaziland
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1997.
Baitul Hadi Mosque in Hiatikulu, which is the first Ahmadiyya mosque in Swaziland and the only mosque in the region whereupon the mosque is located in.
There are over 250 Ahmadis in Swaziland.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1934.
Qur'an translated into Swahili in 1936
Ahmadiyya newspaper established in 1936 called ‘Mapenzi ya Munga’ (The Love of God).
The first ever English language Muslim newspaper called ‘East African Times’ established by the late MM Ahmad (former vice-president of the World Bank, Pakistani civil servant, Amir of the USA Ahmadiyya Community and Amir of East African countries. He translated the Qur'an into Swahili)
Ahmadiyya Primary School opened in 1940
Tanzania was formerly named ‘Tangantika’. The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community was involved with the struggle of independence of the country and an Ahmadi, Mohammed Iqbal Dar, coined the name ‘Tanzania’ for the country.
Kitonga Ahmadiyya Mosque in Dar-es-Salaam
Salam Mosque in Dar-es-Salaam
Baitul Hamid Mosque in Dodoma
Fazal Mosque inaugurated in 1947 in Tabora, which is popularly known as the ‘Taj Mahal of East Africa’
Uganda
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1935.
Oil found in Uganda for the first time in history due to the help offered by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community.
Ahmadiyya Central Mosque in Kampala which has 6 minarets and can hold up to 9,000 worshippers.
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mosque in Iganga
There are several mosques, high schools, elementary schools in Uganda and also a hospital in the town of Mbale which has a maternity ward and modern radiology technology, established by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in Uganda
Qur'an translated into the local Ugandan language.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community was introduced to Europe in 1907 when, in response to Mirza Ghulam Ahmad’s messages to Europe, a German woman converted to the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community. The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community is established in all European countries except for Latvia, Slovakia and Greece, though there are individual members of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community within the latter which consist of mostly Arabs and a small number of indigenous Greeks.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in c. 1934.
Baitul Awwal Mosque in Tirana which is one of the largest mosques in Albania.
Darul Falah Mission House in Tirana
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in c. 1936. Website: Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Austria
Ahmadiyya Mission House in Vienna
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in c. 1982. Website: Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Belgium
Baitul Islam Mosque in Belgium which is the first mosque ever created in Belgium
Baitul Salam Mission House in Dilbeek a town just outside the capital city of Brussels
Baitur Raheem Mosque in Hasselt
Bosnia and Herzegovina
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1996.
Baitul Salam in Sarajevo
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1959.
Nusrat Jehan Mosque in Copenhagen in 1967 (55°39′3.5″N 12°28′44.25″E)
Faroe Islands
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 2010.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1946. Website: Ahmadiyya Muslim Community France
Mubarak Mosque (Saint Prix)
Baitus Salam Mission House in Paris
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1923 in Berlin. (52°39′15.2″N 13°18′41.5″E) Website: Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Germany
German Headquarter Baitus Sabuh (50°11′30.6″N 8°39′28.2″E)
Jamia Ahmadiyya Germany opened on 17. December 2012 by Khalifatul Masih V(atba) in Riedstadt, near the city Darmstadt.
47 Mosques have been built in Germany as of June 2015 under the 100-Mosques project 100-Mosques-Plan.
Baden-Württemberg
Baitul Ahad Mosque in Bruchsal.
Eshan Mosque in Mannheim.
Baitul Baqi Mosque in Pforzheim.
Qamar Mosque in Weil der Stadt.
Bavaria
Gebetszentrum in Augsburg.
Baitul Aleem Mosque in Würzburg.
Al-Mahdi Mosque in Neufahrn bei Freising.
Berlin
Khadija Mosque built in 2008 in Berlin which is the first mosque of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community ever built in Berlin.
Bait ul Malik Mosque in Berlin Reinickendorf.
Bremen
Nasir Mosque in Bremen.
Baitul Wakeel Mosque in Bremerhaven.
Hamburg
Fazle-Omar Mosque in Hamburg which is the first mosque constructed by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in Germany and also the first mosque built in Germany after World War II.
Baitur Rashid Mosque in Hamburg.
Hesse
Nuur-ud-Din Mosque in Darmstadt.
Baitul Qayyum Mosque in Frankfurt am Main.
Baitus Sabuh in Frankfurt am Main.
Noor Mosque in Frankfurt am Main. This mosque is notable for the fact that the U.S. heavyweight boxing champion, Muhammad Ali prayed within it.
Baitul Shakoor Mosque in Groß-Gerau.
Baitul Zafar Mosque in Immenhausen.
Aziz Mosque in Riedstadt.
Gebetszentrum in Schlüchtern.
Baitul Huda Mosque built in 2004 in Usingen.
Mahmud Mosque in Kassel.
Bashier Mosque in Bensheim.
Baiutl Baqi Mosque in Dietzenbach.
Baitul Ghafur Mosque in Ginsheim-Gustavsburg.
Mahmud Mosque in Kassel.
Baitul Aman Mosque in Nidda.
Baitul Muqiet Mosque in Wabern.
Baitul Wahid Mosque in Hanau.
Lower Saxony
Gebetszentrum in Hannover.
Basharat Mosque in Osnabrück.
Sami Mosque in Hannover.
Baitul Karim Mosque in Stade.
Nasir Mosque in Stuhr.
North Rhine-Westphalia
Baitun Nasr Mosque in Cologne.
Baitil Momin Mosque in Münster-Hiltrup.
Baitul Nasir Mosque in Isselburg.
Mansoor Mosque in Aachen
Rhineland-Palitanate
Tahir Mosque in Koblenz
Hamd Mosque in Wittlich
Schleswig-Holstein
Habib Mosque in Kiel.
Mahdi Abad Mosque in Limburg an der Lahn.
Baitul Afiyat Mosque in Lübeck.
Ireland
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 2001. Website: Ahmadiyya Muslim Community UK & Ireland
Ahmadiyya Mission House in Galway
Ahmadiyya Mosque in Galway, which is the first mosque in Galway.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1947. Website: Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Kosovo
Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Centre under construction in Kosovo
Luxembourg-Grand-Duché de Luxembourg
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 2012.
Website: Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Luxembourg
The Netherlands
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1947. Website: Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Holland
Mubarak Mosque in The Hague. It was inaugurated by Sir Muhammad Zafrulla Khan, an Ahmadi, who was serving as the President and Head Judge of the International Court of Justice at The Hague.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1957.
Noor Mosque in Oslo August 1, 1980
Baitun Nasr mosque at outskirts of Oslo Norway which is the largest mosque in Scandinavia.
More about the community in Norway no:Ahmadiyya and http://www.alislam.no
Poland
One of the Ahmadi representatives, Ayyaz Khan, visited Poland in 1937 to establish Ahmadiyya mission in the country. His work was disrupted by the outbreak of World War II in 1939. 60 years later, Stowarzyszenie Muzułmańskie Ahmadiyya (Ahmadiyya Muslim Community) was officially registered as an Islamic religious organisation with the government on December 3, 1990. It owns a freestanding house in Warsaw that acts as its mosque, educational center and missionary headquarters.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1957.
Ahmadiyya Mission House
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1946. Website: Comunidad Ahmadía en España
Mezquita Basharat (Basharat Mosque), which is the first mosque to be built after 750 years in Spain, built in Pedro Abad near Cordoba in 1982. September 10, 1982
Bait-ur-Rahman Mosque is the second mosque built in Spain by Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in La Pobla de Vallbona near Valencia. It was inaugurated by head of the worldwide Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Mirza Masroor Ahmad on 29 March 2013.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1956.
Nasir Mosque in Gothenburg built in 1963, torn and rebuilt in 2000. August 20, 1976
Mahmood Mosque in Malmö finished 2016.
Switzerland
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1956.
Mahmood Mosque built in Zürich in 1963.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1912. It is the present place acting as the International Headquarters of the Community. (51°27′4″N 0°12′27″W)
Hadeeqa-tul Mahdi (Oakland Farm) (51°8′5″N 0°54′37″W) is a large patch of land in Alton with a few large halls used for the Annual International Conventions of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community which are held in the UK as that is the place of the International Headquarters of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community.
Islamabad (51°11′30″N 0°45′10″W), is a piece of land in Tilford, Surrey is owned by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community and is reminiscent of Rabwah (as they were both locations essentially pieces of land established by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community at International Headquarters)
Jamia Ahmadiyya (Missionary Training College) in Colliers Wood (London).
Baitul Mu’eed Mosque in Cambridge
Baitur Rahman Mosque in Glasgow
Baitus Salam Mosque in Islamabad (Tilford)
Baitul Ikram Mosque in Leicester
Baitul Islam Mosque in Scunthorpe
Greater London
The first mosque built in London in 1924, Fazl Mosque is the only mosque to date with the distinction of being called ‘The London Mosque’ and serves as the National Headquarters of the UK Ahmadiyya Community.
The largest mosque in Western Europe, built in 2003, Baitul Futuh “House of Victories” is located south of London in Morden, Surrey and serves as the International Headquarters of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community at large. It was mentioned as one of the top 50 buildings in the world in the periodical “The Informer”.
Baitus Subhan Mosque in Croydon
Earlsfield Mosque in Earlsfield
Baitul Ahad Mosque in East London
Baitus Salam Mosque in Southall
Baitun Noor Mosque in Hounslow
Ahmadiyya Center in Tooting
Birmingham
Darul Barakaat Mosque, opened in 2004
Bradford
Baitul Hamd Mosque
Al Mahdi Mosque
Gillingham
Nasir Hall
Leamington Spa
Baitul Ehsan Mosque
Manchester
Darul Aman Mosque
Liverpool
Mahmood Mosque 309 Breck Road Liverpool L5 6PU
309 Breck Road Liverpool L5 6PU
Oxford
Baitul Shukoor Mosque
Sheffield
Baitul Aafiyat Mosque
Huddersfield
Baitus Samad Mosque
Hartlepool
Nasir Mosque.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community was introduced to North America in 1921, with the pioneering efforts of the missionary Mufti Muhammad Sadiq. The first country to receive the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community was the United States where it appealed mainly to the African-American population though with some Caucasian converts. Many eminent jazz musicians converted to the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community like Sahib Shihab, Art Blakey (Abdullah ibn Buhaina) and Yusef Lateef.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1963. Website: Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Canada. It has about 50 Local Chapters scattred across the country concentrating mainly in southern Ontario. The community has a good relationship with the government and it helps in humanitarian causes regularly across the country. The community is very active in faith outreach and has held hundreds of interfaith religious events across the country as far north as Yellowknife and White Horse.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1920. Website:www.ahmadiyya.us
The first mosque in the nation's capital was established as the American Fazl Mosque. It served as the Headquarters of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community from 1950-1994.
Headquarters since 1994 is Baitur Rehman Mosque, Silver Spring, Maryland. (39°6′10″N 76°58′56″W)
Arizona
Yousuf Mosque in Tucson.
The Phoenix Mosque in Phoenix
California
Darus Salam Mosque in Bay Point.
Baitul Hameed Mosque in Chino.
Baitus Salam Mosque in Hawthorne.
Bait-ul-Baseer Mosque in Milpitas (Silicon Valley).
Connecticut
Baitul Aman Mosque.
The Hartford Mosque in Hartford.
District of Columbia
American Fazl Mosque in Washington, DC.
Florida
Bait-ul-Naseer Mosque in Miami.
Baitul-Aafiyat Mosque in Orlando, Florida
Georgia
Bait-ul-Baqi Mosque in Norcross.
Illinois
Al-Sadiq Mosque in Chicago which is the first mosque built in the USA by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community due to the missionary pioneering efforts of Mufti Muhammad Sadiq; thus the mosque was named after him ‘Sadiq’ (meaning ‘honest/truthful in all respects’ in Arabic).
Van Buren Mosque in Chicago.
Masjid Bait-ul-Jamey Mosque in Glen Ellyn.
Zion Mission House and Mosque in Zion. (42°27′24″N 87°50′22″W)
Louisiana
Mission House in Kenner.
Mission House in New Orleans.
Maryland
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission House in Baltimore.
Baitur Rehman Mosque, Silver Spring, Maryland, which serves as the National Headquarters of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community USA.
Massachusetts
Mission House in Sharon (near Boston).
Michigan
Bait-ul-Muzaffar Mosque in Detroit.
Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Center in Rochester Hills.
Missouri
Sadiq Mosque in St. Louis which is under construction.
New Jersey
Bait-ul-Wahid Mosque in Clifton, NJ.
Bait-ul-Hadi Mosque in Old Bridge, NJ.
Bait-ul-Nasr Mosque in Willingboro, NJ.
New York
Bait-ul Huda Mosque in Amityville, NY.
Bait-ul Tahir Mosque in Brooklyn, NY.
Bait-ul Zafar Mosque in Queens, NY.
Baitun Naseer Mosque in Rochester, NY.
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mosque in Albany
Masjid Mahdi in Buffalo, NY.
North Carolina
Ahmadiyya Muslim Mosque in Research Triangle, NC.
Ohio
Bait-ul Ahad Mosque in Bedford, OH.
Fazal Mosque in Dayton, OH.
Bait-ul Nasir Mosque in Groveport, OH constructed in 2007.
Oregon
Portland Rizwan Mosque in Portland, OR.
Pennsylvania
Nasir Mosque in Philadelphia, PA.
Nur Mosque in Pittsburgh, PA.
Mission House in Pittsburgh, PA.
Noor Mosque in York, PA.
Hadee Mosque in Harrisburg, PA.
Texas
Bait-ul Ikram Mosque in Allen, TX.
Bait-us Samee Mosque in Houston, TX which is notably, the largest mosque in Texas.
Bait-ul Muqeet Mosque in Round Rock, TX.
Washington
Bait-Ul-Ehsaan Mosque Monroe, WA.
Wisconsin
Bait-ul-Qadir Mosque in Milwaukee, WI.
Qamar Mosque (established November 28, 2010) 300 North Eagle Street Oshkosh WI 54904Oshkosh, WI.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community was introduced to South America in the 1950s, beginning with its presence on the island nation of Trinidad & Tobago in 1952. It is now on established in all of South America except for Paraguay, Uruguay, Chile, and Panama.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1986.
Petropolis Mission House in Petropolis which is about 60 km from Rio de Janeiro
Brazil Mosque in Brasilia
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 2002.
Guadeloupe Mission House in Guadeloupe
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1989.
Baitul Awal in Guatemala, inaugurated on July 3, 1989 in celebration of the centenary of the creation of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in 1889
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1956.
Baitul Noor
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1956.
Nasir Mosque in Paramaribo which is one of the largest mosques in Suriname, established in 1971.
Nasar Mosque established in 1984.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1952.
Baitul A’ala Mosque in Caratel
Rahim Mosque in McBean
Baitul Aziz Mosque in the northern region of Valencia
Ahmadiyya Anjuman Isha'at-e-Islam Inc. Trinidad and Tobago
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community was introduced to Oceania in the 1920s. Since then, it has expanded to several island nations such as Tuvalu, the Solomon Islands, Tonga, Vanuatu, Kiribati, Nauru, Micronesia, Guam, Palau, New Zealand, and the Fiji Islands.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community was introduced here around the 1920s.
Sydney
Baitul Huda Mosque, which acts as the National Headquarters of the Australian Ahmadiyya Community. It is one of the largest mosques in Australia and one of the first to ever be built there. September 30, 1983
Khilafat Centennial Hall, adjacent to the Baitul Huda Mosque.
Hassan Musa Library, within Baitul Huda Mosque, named after the first Ahmadi convert from Australia, Sufi Hassan Musa Khan, who was also a companion of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad.
Brisbane
Baitul Masroor Mosque
Melbourne
Ahmadiyya Muslim Centre in Melbourne one of the largest Ahmadiyya community mosque in the world; it is a totally pillarless building, still under construction and scheduled to be complete in early 2011. The building was purchased in 2006.
Adelaide
Masjid Mahmood was derived from an Italian soccer club in 2013. Since when it has been renovated and formed into a place of worship. Five minutes from Adelaide's CBD and Adelaide airport, the location is convenient for local members, honourable guests and visitors of the inter-state community.
Gulshan-E-Masroor is an area of farm-land owned by the Jammat, which is located in Aldinga. The land is located at a 45 drive from Adelaide CBD and is used mainly for farming and functional purposes.
Fiji Islands
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community established itself here in 1960.
Viti Levu
Rizwan Mosque in Sugar City, Lautoka.
Aqsa Mosque in Nadi.
Mahmud Mosque in Maro
Vanua Levu
Aiwane Mustafa Lajna (Women’s) Hall in Samabula
Fazl-e-Umar Mosque in Samabula which is the largest mosque in the South Pacific. It can hold thousands of worshippers and includes a library, community hall and other facilities.
New Zealand
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community was formed in 1987 under the guidance of Hadrat Mirza Tahir Ahmad, Khalifatul Masih IV (rha).
Since then the community has purchased its own property in 1999 at 20 Dalgety Drive, Manukau Central 2104, Auckland, Zealand. Hadrat Mirza Tahir Ahmad, Khalifatul Masih IV named the new centre Bait ul Muqeet.
In 2010, the community opened a proper communal kitchen to serve the community and guests. This new communal kitchen (Langar Khana) of the Promised Messiah was completed in preparation for the community's Annual Convention to be held on 27–28 January 2012.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Jama'at NZ has constructed their first Historic mosque in Auckland. The mosque design was approved by Hadrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad, Khalifatul Masih V (atba). He kindly named it Masjid Baitul Muqeet. On Friday, 1 November 2013, Hadrat Khailfatul Masih V (atba) officially inaugurated the mosque.