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The mosques are mostly situated in regular city blocks, and are not easily visible features of the cities. Some of the earliest attempts to organize Islamic worship in Norway was done by labor organizations as early Muslims were labor migrants. [35] The first mosque was established in 1972 by Pakistani immigrants. [35]
Name Images City Year G Remarks Nusrat Djahan Moske: Copenhagen () : 1967 AMJ First mosque in Scandinavia, financed solely by the female members of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community.
Baitun Nasr Mosque (Norwegian: Baitun Nasr moské), also known as the Furuset Mosque (Norwegian: Furuset moské), is an Ahmadi Muslim mosque in Furuset in the borough of Alna, northeast of Oslo, Norway. [1] The mosque is the largest in the country, and can accommodate up to 5,000 people.
On April 6, 2024, a white supremacist threatened and supposedly planned an attack on the mosque using an assault rifle, using the social network app, Discord.A photo was posted with a rifle, a combat vest and a piece of paper which said “THIS IS MY GUN, CENTRAL JAM-E MOSQUE, TMD NORWAY”, along with a map with routes to three mosques, with Central Jamaat being number “1”.
The move came as a consequence of three individuals who contacted Yousuf themselves, when they became interested in Islam. Following their conversion, the Ahmadiyya Community of Norway was founded. [1] [2] However, the Community was first officially registered in the country in 1974, following larger immigration of Pakistani Ahmadis into Norway ...
The Rabita Mosque (Norwegian: Rabita-moskéen) is a mosque in Oslo, Norway that is supervised by Basim Ghozlan. It has around 3,000 active members. [1] The mosque was visited by King Harald V of Norway and Haakon, Crown Prince of Norway in 2009. [2]
Islamic Cultural Centre Norway Oslo Norway: 1974 Founded by Pakistani-Norwegians aided by Danish Muslims; of the Sunni Deobandi school. The first Shi'i mosque, Anjuman-e Hussain, opened in 1975; the first Sunni Barelvi mosque opened in 1976. Nasir Mosque Gothenburg Sweden: 1976 Stockholm Sweden: 2000 [158]
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