Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Perspective: Ahmadiyya Muslim Community contributes much to Philly | Ijaz Ahmed


Our community has worked alongside law enforcement and public officials to clean up streets, help the homeless, and build interfaith relationships.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | US Desk
Source/Credit: The Delaware County Daily Times
By Ijaz Ahmed | January 26, 2015

To the Times:

The City of Brotherly Love is rich in cultural, religious, and ethnic diversity. The report of a mentally ill individual firing at and injuring one of Philadelphia’s finest is appalling. Such a deplorable act warrants condemnation no matter which religion the suspect belongs to. I applaud Mayor Jim Kenney for stating that this had nothing to do with the religion of Islam. Such comments from our leaders are critically important during these challenging times. With over 200,000 Muslims in Philadelphia, it is time for this diverse city to stand united with Muslims in combating the twisted ideologies that influence ill-minded individuals. Some Muslim communities across the city are continually making great strides to eradicate radicalization.

One such Muslim community has been at the forefront of attacking radicalization for about 100 years. The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community are Muslims who believe in the Messiah, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad of Qadian, India and have been at the heart of the Philadelphia community ever since 1920 when an Ahmadi-Muslim missionary arrived in the United States and began preaching the peaceful teachings of Islam to the people of Philadelphia.

Since then, the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community has resided peacefully in the great city of Philadelphia. Our community has worked alongside law enforcement and public officials to clean up streets, help the homeless, and build interfaith relationships. From 2011 to 2014, the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Nationwide partnered with other organizations to collect over 33,000 units of blood as part of our Muslims for Life campaign in commemoration of the lives lost on Sept. 11, 2011. In 2015, the youth of the Ahmadiyya Muslim community alone collected 5,000 units of blood nationally, 10 percent of which came from Philadelphia’s Muslim youth. On a weekly basis, members of our community cook for and feed the homeless at various shelters across the Greater Philadelphia Area. Last year, our campaign fed over 20,000 hungry individuals. This Christmas, we celebrated with our fellow Christian neighbors by distributing gifts and compliments of peace.

Our message has spread over the past 100 years in America, and thus our smaller mosque is no longer suitable for our growing membership. We have begun construction of a large-scale mosque on Broad Street and Glenwood Avenue, and expect its completion by this summer. This is an historic event for Philadelphia as this will be the first mosque built in the city from the ground up. The building of this mosque is a symbol of peace, tranquility, and tolerance in the city of Philadelphia. The true Khalifa of Islam, His Holiness Mirza Masroor Ahmad, has stated that “every Ahmadi Mosque, no matter where in the world it is built, is an abode of peace, security and shelter for all of humanity.”

The Ahmadiyya Muslim community regularly congregates for Friday prayer service at 1:20 p.m. at our mosque on N. 10th St. Our sermons are transmitted on loudspeaker for we have nothing to hide. Our doors are open to all members of the Philadelphia community and we welcome anyone who has any questions or would simply like to meet a Muslim. We humbly ask for everyone to stand with us in our mission to eliminate radicalization and establish brotherly love in our city.

Ijaz Ahmed, PhD, Worcester, Mass., formerly of Pottstown


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