Ahmadiyya in Bangladesh

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Ahmadiyya Muslim Jama'at, Bangladesh
আহ্‌মদীয়া মুসলিম জামা’ত, বাংলাদেশ
Formation1913
TypeReligious Community
Headquarters Bakshibazar, Dhaka
Website www.ahmadiyyabangla.org

Ahmadiyya is a minority religion in Bangladesh. Although the first Bengalis to join the religion did covert during the lifetime of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, the religion was first established as a community in the region of Bengal in 1913 by Syed Muhammad Abdul Wahed, during the Caliphate of Hakeem Noor-ud-Din. As the worldwide community is itself is an highly organised group under the Caliph, the national community works under the name Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Bangladesh or Ahmadiyya Muslim Jama'at Bangladesh (Bengali : আহমদীয়া মুসলিম জামা'ত, বাংলাদেশ; abbrv. AMJB). There are an estimated 100,000 Ahmadis in the country as of 2004. [1] [2]

Contents

History

Masjid Baitul Baset, a Ahamadiya mosque in Chittagong, which is situated next to a Sunni mosque named Nawab Wali khan Jame Mosque (not shown in the picture). Masjid baitul baset chittagong.jpg
Masjid Baitul Baset, a Ahamadiya mosque in Chittagong, which is situated next to a Sunni mosque named Nawab Wali khan Jame Mosque (not shown in the picture).
87th annual convention of Ahmadiyya Jama'at Bangladesh Ahmadiyya annual convention.JPG
87th annual convention of Ahmadiyya Jama'at Bangladesh

The Ahmadiyya movement is thought to have reached Bengal in 1905, with Ahmad Kabir Noor Muhammad of Anwara, Chittagong pledging allegiance to Mirza Ghulam Ahmad. He was then followed by Rais Uddin Khan of Kishoreganj. His wife Syeda Azizatunnisa also pledged allegiance and thus became the first Ahmadi woman from Bengal. In 1909, a student named Mubarak Ali from Bogra visited Qadian where he became a member of the movement. The Ahmadiyya movement gained speed in 1912 after the allegiance of Syed Muhammad Abdul Wahid Ahmadi, a Brahmanbarian mawlana . The Ahmadiyya Community became officially established in Bengal in 1913 with the name of "Anjuman e Ahmadiyya". [3]

Ahmad Taufiq Choudhury, who belonged to the Sunni zamindar family of Selbaras, [4] joined the Ahmadiyya movement where he became the regional leader of Khuddam-ul Ahmadiyya in Sylhet. He later migrated to Mymensingh and became the Ameer (leader) of Ahmadiyya Jamaat Bangladesh after independence. [5] [6]

Persecution

Since its establishment in Bangladesh, members of the Ahmadiyya Community have faced persecution from Muslim groups. In 1963 two Ahmadis were killed in Brahmanbaria. In 1992, the Ahmadiyya headquarters in Dhaka were attacked by a mob and a number of Qurans & other books were burnt. In 1999, a bomb blast at an Ahmadiyya mosque killed seven people. On 29 October 2003, an Ahmadi Imam named Shah Alam in Roghunathpurbak village in Jhikargachha upazila of Jessore was killed. [7] In 2004, the International Khatme Nabuyat Movement (IKNM) besieged several Ahmadiyya mosques countrywide. [8] In 2004, the Government of Bangladesh banned all religious texts of the Ahmadiyya community. [9]

On 17 June 2010 an angry mob vandalised an Ahmadiyya mosque and the house of an Ahmadiyya believer at Ghatail upazila in Tangail Thursday. [10] In February 2013, a mob set fire to Ahmadiyya property at a site which had been prepared to hold the community's centenary celebrations, causing tens of millions worth of damage in local currency. [11]

In March 2023, after Ahmadiyya homes were attacked in Panchagarh District, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina donated 10 million BDT to the Ahmadiyya families affected. [12] [13]

Ahmadiyya in Bangladesh were attacked after Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was overthrown. [14] [15]

Countrywide centers

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References

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  16. 1 2 Ahmadiyya Mosques Around the World, pg. 118
  17. 1 2 3 Ahmadiyya Mosques Around the World, pg. 119