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Taj-ul-Masajid: 175,000 [citation needed] 23,000 [14] Bhopal India: 1901 Sunni: Jamkaran Mosque: 150,000 [citation needed] 370,000 Qom Iran: 984: Shia: Egypt's Islamic Cultural Center (Masjid Misr Al Kabeer) 130,000 [citation needed] 250,000 New Administrative Capital Egypt: 2023 Sunni: Djamaa el Djazaïr: 120,000 [15] 20,000 [15] Algiers ...
The Taj-ul-Masajid (Arabic: تَاجُ ٱلْمَسَاجِد, romanized: Tāj-ul-Masājid, lit. 'Crown of Mosques'), also known as the Tāj-ul-Masjid (Arabic: تَاجُ ٱلْمَسْجِد), is a Sunni mosque, affiliated with Tablighi Jamaat, part of the Deobandi movement, located in Bhopal, in the state of Madhya Pradesh, India. [1]
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Taj-ul-Masajid: Bhopal: 1871 CE: Sunni Deobandi: Largest mosque in India; Construction began in 1871 CE [8] Initiated by Shah Jahan Begum of Bhopal and continued to be built by her daughter Sultan Jahan Begum; Work on the masjid resumed in 1971 CE
Houston has an Ahmadiyya community with a mosque. [25] The mosque is located in northern Harris County. [26] On Thursday, May 22, 2008, [27] Sheikh Najam Ali ran an advertisement in his newspaper, the Pakistan Times, that stated that the Ahmadiyya were Muslim and that
A mosque (/ m ɒ s k / MOSK), also called a masjid (/ ˈ m æ s dʒ ɪ d, ˈ m ʌ s-/ MASS-jid, MUSS-), [note 1] is a place of worship for Muslims. [1] The term usually refers to a covered building, but can be any place where Islamic prayers are performed, such as an outdoor courtyard.
The 51st leader of the Dawoodi Bohras, Syedna Taher Saifuddin built Saifee Masjid in 1926, and it was the largest community mosque of that time. [2] Syedna Taher Saifuddin laid the foundation stone of the mosque on May 6, 1923 (21 Ramadan, 1341 Hijri) and inaugurated the completed mosque in a period of three years on March 9, 1926 (25 Shaban 1344 AH).
The begum accepted the suggestion and the palace was renamed to Taj Mahal. [3] The Begum is said to have ordered a three-year-long celebration called Jashn-e-Taj Mahal after the completion of the building. [1] After the partition of India in 1947, Nawab Hamidullah Khan allowed Sindhi refugees to stay in the palace.