Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Leeds Grand Mosque (LGM) is a mosque in Leeds with a regular congregation of 1,200. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It is located at 9 Woodsley Road, Hyde Park , Leeds, LS6 1SN West Yorkshire , England . The mosque has a diverse and ethnically mixed congregation with facilities for both male and female worshippers. [ 1 ]
Operated by Leeds Hindu Charitable Trust Leeds Grand Mosque: 9 Woodsley Road, LS6 1SN Islam: 1965 The mosque was formerly Sacred Heart Catholic Church, changed to a mosque in 1994. According to a Leeds City Council planning department the building is "of a distinctive modernist design". [218] St Augustine's Church, Wrangthorn [219] Hyde Park ...
Leeds Grand Mosque; N. New Synagogue (Leeds) S. Sinai Synagogue (Leeds) Stratford Street Mosque This page was last edited on 22 April 2019, at 16:14 (UTC). Text is ...
Leeds Grand Mosque: Leeds: Sunni Muslim [citation needed] Makkah Masjid: Leeds: Stratford Street mosque: Leeds: Sunni Muslim: Officially the Omar Mosque or Masjid-e-Umar: Baitus Salaam Mosque: Scunthorpe: 2002 [a] AMJ Capacity of 250-300 worshippers Baitul Afiyat Mosque [34] Sheffield: 2008 AMJ Madina Mosque: Sheffield: 2006 B Also known as the ...
Mohammed Al Ameen Mosque; Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque, Sohar; Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque; Great Mosque of Surakarta; Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque, Solo; T. Jameh Mosque ...
Sheffield-formed metal band BMTH last headlined Reading and Leeds in 2022 and have received critical praise for recent records such as 2019’s Amo and 2024’s Post Human: Nex Gen.
In the 1990s, the church was sold and was bought in 1994 by Sheikh Saif Bin Muhammad Al-Nehayyan of Abu Dhabi, who converted it into Leeds Grand Mosque. [8]
The Baitul Hamd (English: A Praiseworthy Place) is a mosque located on Leeds Road in Bradford, England. It is one of the oldest mosques of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in the UK. [1] It was formally inaugurated on 2 October 1980 by Mirza Nasir Ahmad, the third caliph of the community and can accommodate around 200 worshippers. [2]