100-Mosques-Plan

The 100-Mosques-Plan is the project of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat in Germany to build 100 new mosques. It was initiated by Mirza Tahir Ahmad, the Khalifatul Masih IV, during the centenary celebrations of the community in 1989. The project is completely financed by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, Germany, through collections from the members. The plans and the execution of the projects is also mostly performed by German Ahmadis voluntarily.[1] Ahmadiyya Muslim Community has total of 52 mosques and 65 prayer centres in Germany.

Mosques

Mosque City State Year Comments Photo
Fazl-e-Omar Mosque Eimsbüttel Hamburg 1957 Named after Second Caliph Mirza Basheer-ud-Din Mahmood Ahmad, built before 1989, foundation 22 February 1957, completed 22 June 1957, plot 1,500 m2 (16,000 sq ft), prayer hall 40 m2 (430 sq ft), two minarets at 8 m (26 ft) height 53°35′0.9″N 9°56′36.2″E[M 1]
Nuur Mosque Frankfurt Hesse 1959 "Mosque of the (Godly) light", built before 1989, foundation 8 May 1957, completed 12 September 1959, plot 1,530 m2 (16,500 sq ft), prayer hall 120 m2 (1,300 sq ft), two minarets at 9 m (30 ft) height 50°05′8.8″N 8°41′47″E[M 2]
1. Bait-ul-Shakoor Mosque Groß-Gerau Hesse 1992 "House of the thankful", foundation 1989, completed 1992, at "Nasir Bagh", prayer rooms 600 m2 (6,500 sq ft), one minaret at 7 m (23 ft) height, two prayer halls[2]49°56′31.5″N 8°29′52.2″E[M 3]
2. Hamd Mosque Wittlich Rhineland-Palatinate 1999 "Mosque of Praise (of God)“, foundation Nov 1998, completed Dec 1999, plot 3500 m2, prayer hall 200 m2, one minaret 10 m height, 600 capacity 49°58′28.2″N 6°56′47.5″E[M 4]
3. Basharat Mosque Osnabrück Lower Saxony 2002 "Mosque of good news“, foundation Oct 1999, completed Mar 2002, plot 2481 m2, prayer hall 129 m2, two minarets 10 m height[3] 52°18′2.3″N 8°0′18.3″E[M 5]
4. Nuur-ud-Din Mosque Darmstadt Hesse 2003 "Mosque of the light of the religion“, named after first Caliph Hakeem Noor-ud-Din, foundation May 2002, completed Aug 2003, plot 2418 m2, prayer hall 331 m2, one minaret 17 m height, 450 members[4] 49°53′6.7″N 8°37′15.5″E[M 6]
5. Bait-ul-Momin Mosque Münster North Rhine-Westphalia 2003 "House of the giver of peace“, foundation Aug 2000, completed May 2003, plot 1015 m2, prayer hall 138 m2, two minarets 10 m height[5] 51°53′37.8″N 7°37′49.1″E[M 7]
6. Nasir Mosque Stuhr Lower Saxony 2004 Named after third Caliph Mirza Nasir Ahmad, foundation Nov 2001, completed May 2004, plot 5637 m2, prayer hall 239 m2, one minaret 12 m height[6] 53°1′2.3″N 8°46′50.7″E[M 8]
7. Tahir mosque Koblenz Rhineland-Palatinate 2004 Named after fourth Caliph Mirza Tahir Ahmad, foundation Dec 2002, completed May 2004, plot 2182 m2, prayer hall 338 m2, two minarets 15 m height, 600 members[7] 50°22′31.3″N 7°35′31.4″E[M 9]
8. Aziz Mosque Riedstadt Hesse 2004 "Mosque of the all-powerful“, foundation Nov 2003, completed Aug 2004, plot 1753 m2, prayer hall 200 m2, one minaret 14 m height[8] 49°49′54.9″N 8°29′6.4″E[M 10]
9. Habib Mosque Kiel Schleswig-Holstein 2004 "Mosque of the Beloved“, foundation Nov 2003, completed Aug 2004, plot 1600 m2, prayer hall 242 m2, two minarets 13 m height, 300 members 54°18′5″N 10°7′44.5″E[M 11]
10. Bait-ul-Huda Mosque Usingen Hesse 2004 "House of the Guidance“, foundation Mar 2004, completed Sep 2004, plot 1440 m2, prayer hall 150 m2, one minaret 15 m height[9] 50°19′57.9″N 8°31′11.1″E[M 12]
11. Bait-ul-Aleem Mosque Würzburg Bavaria 2005 "House of the all-knowing“, 200 members, foundation Nov 2004, completed 24 Aug 2005, plot 2500 m2, prayer hall 188 m2, one minaret 15 m height[10] 49°43′47.9″N 9°57′39.7″E[M 13]
12. Bashier Mosque Bensheim Hesse 2006 Named after second Caliph Mirza Basheer-ud-Din Mahmood Ahmad, foundation Aug 2005, completed 23 Dec 2006, plot 1006 m2, prayer hall 188 m2, no minaret, 400 members[11] 49°41′8″N 8°35′36.2″E[M 14]
13. Mahmud Mosque Kassel Hesse 2007 Foundation Aug 2005, completed 04 Sep 2007, plot 2959 m2, prayer hall 209 m2, no minaret 51°16′52.5″N 9°28′35.6″E[M 15]
14. Bait-ul-Nasir Mosque Isselburg North Rhine-Westphalia 2007 Named after Mirza Nasir Ahmad, foundation Sep 2005, completed 07 Sep 2007, plot 2120 m2, prayer hall 128 m2, two minarets 10 m height, 100 members[12] 51°50′20.3″N 6°28′7.6″E[M 16]
15. Bait-ul-Jame Mosque Offenbach am Main Hesse 2007 "Home of the Gatherer“, foundation 24 Aug 2005, completed 16 Jan 2007, plot 1566 m2, prayer hall 533 m2, one minaret 16 m height 50°5′55.6″N 8°47′26″E[M 17]
16. Bait-ul-Muqiet Mosque Wabern Hesse 2007 "Mosque of the Sustainer“, foundation May 2005, completed 23 Nov 2007, plot 2956 m2, one minaret 9 m height, 54 members, Mosque 330 m2, prayer halls 2 * 70 m2[13] 51°5′59.6″N 9°21′22.7″E[M 18]
17. Sami Mosque Hannover Lower Saxony 2008 "House of the All-Hearing“, foundation Aug 2006, completed 16 Aug 2008, plot 2800 m2, prayer hall 408 m2, one minaret 16 m height, 300 members[14] 52°25′47.4″N 9°39′28.9″E[M 19]
18. Bait-ul-Karim Mosque Stade Lower Saxony 2008 "House of the Nobel“ first Mosque in Landkreis Stade, foundation 29 Mar 2008, completed 15 Aug 2008, plot 840 m2, prayer hall 62 m2, one minaret 10 m height 53°36′13″N 9°29′23.9″E[M 20]
19. Anwar Mosque Rodgau Hesse 2008 "Mosque of the lights“, foundation Dec 2006, completed 19 Aug 2008, plot 1034 m2, prayer hall 218 m2, one minaret 14 m height 50°1′30.4″N 8°53′48.4″E[M 21]
20. Qamar Mosque Weil der Stadt Baden-Württemberg 2008 "Moon-Mosque“, foundation Dec 2006, completed 21 Aug 08, plot 1145 m2, prayer hall 128 m2, no minaret, 289 m2 for 120 members, €500,000[15] 48°45′24.2″N 8°52′26.3″E[M 22]
21. Khadija Mosque Heinersdorf Berlin 2008 Mosque named after Khadija bint Khuwaylid, first mosque in east Berlin, foundation 2 Jan 2007, completed 15 Oct 08, plot 4790 m2, prayer hall 345 m2, one minaret 12,90 m height, 200 members[16] 52°34′20.6″N 13°25′49.8″E[M 23]
22. Ehsan Mosque Mannheim Baden-Württemberg 2010 "Mosque of the favour“, foundation 17 Dec 2008, completed 24/06/10, plot 1641 m2, prayer hall 208 m2, two minarets 12 m height, 450 members,[17] 3 story mosque, €700,000[18][19] 49°26′56.5″N 8°30′20.6″E[M 24]
23. Bait-un-Nasr Mosque Cologne North Rhine-Westphalia 2011 "House of the Help“, Being used as center since 1985, was changed into a visible mosque on

23/06/11 by building a minaret.[20] 50°58′28.9″N 6°57′55.6″E[M 25]

24. Bait-ul-Afiyat Mosque Lübeck Schleswig-Holstein 2011 "House of security“, foundation 21 Aug 2009, completed 13/06/11, plot 1934 m2, prayer hall 128 m2, one minaret 11 m height, 160 members; about 500 000 Euro[21] first new mosque building in Lübeck 53°50′53.4″N 10°40′47.6″E[M 26]
25. Bait-ul-Ghafur Mosque Ginsheim-Gustavsburg Hesse 2011 "House of the All-Forgiving“, foundation 02/2009, completed 18/06/2011,[22] plot 2725 m2, prayer hall 352 m2, one minaret 12 m height, cost about 1.2 Mio. Euro;[23] 607 capacity for 350 members[24] 49°59′22.5″N 8°19′54.1″E[M 27]
26. Bait-ul-Hadi Mosque Seligenstadt Hesse 2011 "House of the Guide“, foundation 8 Apr 2011, completed 19 Jun 2011, plot 1574 m2, prayer hall 313 m2, one minaret 13 m height, 200 capacity for 150 members, €300,000,[25] Mosque was built in 3 months using module based manufacturing.[26] 50°3′18.1″N 8°57′48.3″E[M 28]
27. Bait-ul-Aman Mosque Nidda Hesse 2011 "House of Peace“, foundation Dec 2008, completed 20 Jun 2011, plot 2189 m2, prayer hall 301 m2, two minarets 8 m height[27] 50°24′22.4″N 9°0′38.7″E[M 29]
28. Bait-ul-Baqi Mosque Dietzenbach Hesse 2011 "House of the Rest“ Bought 1993, foundation Dec 2009, completed 21 Jun 2011, plot 1500 m2, prayer hall 318 m2, one minaret 9 m height,[28] bought for €510,000 and converted for €200,000 in a mosque.[29] 50°1′13.7″N 8°47′22.5″E[M 30]
29. Bait-ul-Ahad Mosque Limburg an der Lahn Hesse 2012 "House of the One“. 200 members,[30] foundation 7 Oct 2011, completed 27 May 2012, 9 m high minaret, Mosque was built in modular technique for €320,000[31]50°23′50.6″N 8°3′52.4″E[M 31]
30. Bait-ur-Rasheed Mosque Schnelsen Hamburg 2012 "House of the Rightly Guided“. 2300 members, metal factory bought in 1993. Renovated and two 14 m high minarets were built.[32] 53°38′3″N 9°54′17″E[M 32]
31. Bait-ul-Ahad Mosque Bruchsal Baden-Württemberg 2012 "House of the One“, plot bought in 2010, foundation 20. Sep 2011.[33] Completed 12 Dec 2012 49°7′12.9″N 8°34′58.7″E[M 33]
32. Bait-ul-Baqi Pforzheim Baden-Württemberg 2012 "House of the ???“, foundation 16 Dec 2009, minaret 10 m;[34] costs €750,000, capacity for 150 members,[35] completed on 12 Dec 2012,[36] 48°54′2.5″N 8°39′26″E[M 34]
33. Ata Mosque Flörsheim am Main Hesse 2013 "Gift Mosque“. The Penny super market in the Altkönigstraße was closed in 2010.[37] It was converted to a mosque since Oct. 2012.[38] 128 members from Flörsheim and Hochheim.[39] completed on 26 Jun 2013.[40] 50°0′57.4″N 8°25′48.8″E[M 35]
34. Bait-ur-Raheem Mosque Neuwied Rhineland-Palatinate 2013 "House of the Merciful“, foundation 7 Nov 2009, completed on 25 Jun 2013, 2500 m2 for 130 members.[41] two prayer halls 70 m2 and a 10 m high minaret, costs €500,000, first mosque in Neuwied.[42] 50°26′0.6″N 7°28′20.2″E[M 36]
35. Dar-ul-Amaan Mosque Friedberg Hesse 2014 "House of Peace“. 300 members, plot 2000 m2,[43] foundation 29. May 2012,[44] completed on 7 Jun 2014. 50°19′23″N 8°44′33.2″E[M 37]
36. Al-Mahdi Mosque Neufahrn bei Freising Bavaria 2014 "House of the Mahdi“. ? plot ??? m2, completed on 9 Jun 2014. Conversion of a house into a mosque.[45]

48°19′21.3″N 11°39′35.7″E[M 38]

37. Mansoor Mosque Aachen North Rhine-Westphalia 2015 "Named after Mirza Mansoor Ahmad“. plot 300 m2, 170 members, 14 m minaret, costs €450,000, foundation 5 Jun 2012[46] completed on 23 May 2015.[47][48]50°47′28″N 6°6′50.8″E[M 39]
38. Bait-ul-Wahid Mosque Hanau Hesse 2015 "House of the One (God)“, completed 27 May 2015.[49]50°7′25″N 8°55′0″E[M 40] 38. Bait ul-Wahid Moschee, Hanau
39. Bait-ul-Qaadir Mosque Vechta Lower Saxony 2015 "House of the Omnipotent“, plot bought in 2010, 120 members, plot 2000 m2, foundation 11. Oct. 2011, completed on 9 Jun 2015.52°45′6″N 8°16′39.2″E[M 41]
40. Subhan Mosque Mörfelden-Walldorf Hesse 2016 1600 m2 plot for 500,000 Euro. 16 m minaret. Foundation 24 Jun 2013.[50] Completed on 9 Jul 2014. 49°59′14.8″N 8°34′38″E[M 42]
41. Salam Mosque Iserlohn North Rhine-Westphalia 2016 70 members, prayer hall 110 m2, minaret 12 m, completed on 9 Oct 2016.[51] 51°24′26″N 7°41′34″E[M 43] 46. Salam-Moschee, Iserlohn
42. Afiyat Mosque Waldshut-Tiengen Baden-Württemberg 2017 "House of the ?“, foundation ?, completed 10/04/2017, plot ? m2, prayer hall ? m2, two minarets ? m 47°37′52.1″N 8°15′56.4″E[M 44]
43. Bait-un-Naseer Mosque Augsburg Bavaria 2017 "House of the Helper“, foundation 20 Nov 2009, completed on 11 Apr 2017.[52] capacity for 140 members[53] €600,000[54] 48°23′40.8″N 10°52′53.2″E[M 45]
44. Bait-us-Samad Mosque Giessen Hesse 2017 "House of the Independent“ foundation 28. May 2012, completed on 21 Aug 2017.[55] 50°35′49.5″N 8°41′0″E[M 46]
45. Bait-ul-Hamid Mosque Fulda Hesse 2019 350 members,[56] 4.500 m2 plot for 350,000 Euro, 15 m high minaret.[57] foundation 26 Jun 2013[58] completed on 20 Oct 2019.50°32′24.4″N 9°41′14.7″E[M 47]
46. Bait-ul-Baseer Mosque Nahe Schleswig-Holstein 2019 "House of the All-Seeing“ in Mahdi Abad, plot 176.479 m2 bought in Jun 1989,[59] foundation 14 Jun 2011,[60] completed on 25 Oct 2019.[61] 53°47′49.5″N 10°8′17.1″E[M 48]
47. Mubarak Mosque Wiesbaden Hesse 2019 "House of the ?“, foundation 04/06/2014, completed 14/10/2019, plot ? m2, prayer hall ? m2, ? minaret ? m 850 members 50°4′27.3″N 8°12′21.7″E[M 49]
48. Sadiq Mosque Karben Hesse Under construction Foundation 07 Jun 2014 50°14′44.2″N 8°44′57.1″E[M 50]
49. Bait-ur-Rehman Mosque Nuremberg Bavaria Under construction "House of the Gracious“, foundation ?, completed ?, plot ? m2, prayer hall ? m2, ? minaret ? m 49°25′11.5″N 11°4′52.5″E[M 51]
50. N. N. Erfurt Thuringia Under construction Foundation 13 Nov 2018[M 52]
N. N. Leipzig Sachsen In planning [62]

[63]

N. N. Mainz-Hechtsheim Rhineland-Palatinate Planned Capacity for 200 members, 49°57′37″N 8°15′13″E
N. N. Pinneberg Schleswig-Holstein Planned Capacity for 940 members“[64]
N. N. Dreieich Hesse Planned 550 m2 for 250 members, 400,000 €,[65] 50°0′47.5″N 8°41′24.5″E
N. N. Stuttgart Baden-Württemberg Planned [66] Not sold[67] 48°50′15″N 9°9′30″E
N. N. Heidelberg Baden-Württemberg Planned [68]
N. N. Hochheim Hesse Planned [69]
N. N. Betzdorf-Alsdorf Rhineland-Palatinate Planned 50 members[70]
N. N. Schwalmtal North Rhine-Westphalia Planned For the area Mönchengladbach and Viersen[71]
N. N. Bad Homburg Hesse Planned 50°13′0″N 8°36′25″E[72]
N. N. Nürnberg Bavaria Planned plot 800 m2, 13 m minaret, 100 members[73] 49°25′15″N 11°4′30″E
N. N. Marburg Hesse Planned Search for a plot[74]
Bait us-Sabuh (Frankfurt, 2000)
Other projects
  1. Bait ul-Malik (Berlin-Reinickendorf, 1988, 52°33′50″N 13°19′3″E)
  2. Bait us-Salam ("House of peace“, Freinsheim, Rhineland-Palatinate, 1993, 49°30′21″N 8°12′40″E)
  3. Bait us-Sabuh ("House of the Holy“, Frankfurt-Bonames, Deutschlandzentrale seit 2000, 50°11′30.6″N 8°39′28.2″E)

Notes

References

  1. Al-Hamarneh, Ala; Thielmann, Jörn (2008-01-01). Islam and Muslims in Germany. BRILL. ISBN 978-9004158665.
  2. Darmstädter Echo, 9 April 2008: „Stolz auf gute Integration der Jugend“
  3. "Osnabrück - 100 Jahre Khalifat in der Ahmadiyya-Moschee". Archived from the original on 2008-12-27. Retrieved 2015-11-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  4. Moscheevereine – Kulturvereine – Islamische Gemeinschaften
  5. "Münster-Tafel: Tüns will vermitteln | Ibbenbürener Volkszeitung - Lokales und Nachrichten Münster Süd". Archived from the original on 2011-02-27. Retrieved 2015-11-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  6. Nachrichten/landkreis-diepholz/stuhr/motto-liebe-alle-hass-keinen-508619.html Kreiszeitung, 2 November 2009
  7. heinersdorf-oeffne-dich.de
  8. "Glaube & Religion". Archived from the original on 2011-11-20. Retrieved 2015-11-11.
  9. Rhein-Mainer, 4 October 2008
  10. Main-Post: 30 September 2008 Archived 10 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine, 15 November 2008 Archived 2016-01-10 at the Wayback Machine
  11. Website Bashir-Moschee Bensheim,
    Grüne Liste Bensheim: ,
    Archived November 21, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  12. "Moschee kurz vor Vollendung | BBV-Net". Archived from the original on 2007-09-13. Retrieved 2015-11-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link), BBV-Net, 10 September 2007;
    Minarete über Isselburg, RP-Online, 18 August 2007;
    Isselburger Moschee eingeweiht, RP-Online 29 April 2008.
  13. Planungsbüro für ökologisches Bauen Archived 2017-01-08 at the Wayback Machine, „Die neue Moschee der Ahmadiyya-Gemeinde Wabern wurde jetzt eröffnet“, HNA, 2 June 2008, „Beten unter Lehmziegeln: In Wabern hat die muslimische Ahmadiyya-Gemeinde eine Moschee gebaut“, HNA, 15 December 2008, HNA, 8. March 2010
  14. Angst vor Minaret: Bürgerprotest gegen Moschee Die Welt, 14 September 2004.
  15. szbz.de: Weil der Stadt: Einweihung der Qamar-Moschee mit 60 Ehrengästen / Bürgermeister Straub hofft auf Impulse für das Gemeindeleben „Gemeinsam eine gute Zukunft bauen“ 27 April 2009;
    Leonberger Kreiszeitung: Eröffnung der Qamar Moschee in Weil der Stadt – 21. August 2008;
    SZ-BZ:
  16. "Was ist los in Heinersdorf? > Hauptstadtblog > Blog > Wir bloggen Berlin". Archived from the original on 2008-06-22. Retrieved 2015-11-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link),
    Ahmadiyya-Gemeinde geht auf Nachbarn zu. Tagesspiegel, 11 November 2008
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  18. "17 December 2008". Archived from the original on 2015-11-19. Retrieved 2015-11-11.
  19. Dr. Peter Kurz, Oberbürgermeister Mannheim (Jahresversammlung 2009 der AMJ), 14 August 2009.
  20. Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger, 4 October 2007
  21. Neues Gebetshaus für Muslime in Lübeck
  22. Main-Spitze Archived 2011-07-13 at the Wayback Machine, 20 June 2011; Verlag Dreisbach Online, October 2011.
  23. Main-Spitze: Grundsteinlegung für Moschee, 5 October 2009.
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  25. Bauplan der Muslime erfährt christlichen Beistand Frankfurter Rundschau, 29 October 2008;
    "Nachrichten aus Deutschland und der Welt | Frankfurter Rundschau". Archived from the original on 2009-09-19. Retrieved 2015-11-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link);
  26. Offenbach Post, 12 April 2011
  27. Kreisanzeiger, 2 June 2010
  28. op-online, 15 February 2011
  29. Willkommensgrüße auf Urdu
  30. Neue Moschee neben der Polizei, Naussauische Neue Presse, 27 September 2011.
  31. Ahmadiyya feiert neue Moschee Archived 2012-08-04 at archive.today, mittelhessen.de, 29 May 2012.
  32. Moschee mit 14 Meter hohen Minareten wird eingeweiht, Hamburger Abendblatt, 5 December 2012.
  33. Hoher Besuch in Bruchsal Archived 2012-12-14 at the Wayback Machine, Baden TV, 12 December 2012.
  34. Pforzheimer Zeitung: 17 December 2009, 9 December 2009
  35. Pforzheimer Zeitung: 14 July 2008, 17. Juli 2008, Interview: Ahmadiyya-Moschee Archived 2011-02-25 at the Wayback Machine, Umfrage: Zweite Moschee in Pforzheim?
  36. Kalif Mirza Masroor weiht neue Moschee in Pforzheim ein, Pforzheimer Zeitung, 12 December 2012.
  37. Main-Spitze, 31 July 2010
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  41. CDU Neuwied: Ahmadiyya-Muslim-Gemeinde plant Bau eines 2500 Quadratmeter großen Gotteshauses – Voranfrage positiv beschieden, 9 October 2007;
    CDU-Ortsverband spricht über Bauvorhaben der Ahmadiyya-Gemeinde, 26 October 2007;
  42. Moschee in Neuwied eröffnet, NR-Kurier, 26 June 2013
    Gotteshaus mit Kuppel und Minaret: Kalif weiht Neuwieder Moschee ein Rhein-Zeitung, 26 June 2013
    Kalif eröffnet Neuwieds erste Moschee Rhein-Zeitung, 26 June 2013.
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  46. Grundsteinlegung der Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat-Moschee, az-web.de, 5 June 2012.
  47. An der Feldstraße entsteht eine neue Moschee, Aachner Zeitung, 18 October 2011.
  48. News/hochschule-detail-az/1845600?_link=&skip=&_g=Neue-Moschee-Viele-Fragen-und-einige-Aengste.html Neue Moschee: Viele Fragen und einige Ängste, Aachner Zeitung, 18 October 2011.
  49. Frankfurter Rundschau 13 April 2012
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  53. Augsburger Allgemeine 18 January 2008, 4 February 2011
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  55. Bürgermeisterin Weigel-Greilich setzt den fünften Stein Gießener-Anzeiger, 31 May 2012, only for registered abonents
  56. Fuldarer Zeitung, 22 February 2010
  57. Weltweites Oberhaupt der Ahmadiyya legte Grundstein für Moschee – VIDEO, Osthessen-News, 27 June 2013.
  58. Grundstein ist gelegt: Fuldas “Ahmadiyya-Muslim”-Gemeinde baut Moschee Archived 2013-06-28 at archive.today Fulda aktuell, 26 June 2013
    Erster Moschee-Neubau im katholischen Fulda, Südhessen Morgen, 26 June 2013.
  59. Lübecker Nachrichten, 17 October 2007; Hamburger Abendblatt, 17 October 2007 (Ahmadiyya-Gemeinde darf nach 17 Jahren Diskussionen endlich auf ihrem Grundstück bauen – aber nur halb so groß, wie sie es gewünscht hatte.)
  60. Grundsteinlegung der „Bait-ul-Baseer“-Moschee in Mahdi-Aabad (Nahe), 14 June 2011.
  61. "Gebetszentrum Mahdi-Abad in Nahe". 2010-08-28. Archived from the original on 2010-08-28. Retrieved 2020-09-03.
  62. "mephisto 97.6 (Uni-Leipzig), 15 August 2006". Archived from the original on 29 August 2012. Retrieved 11 November 2015.
  63. Stefan Locke: Bitterböses Blut faz.net, 16 November 2013, retrieved, 18 November 2013.
  64. Hamburger Abendblatt, 4 January 2007
  65. FAZ, 10 June 2008.
  66. "Aktuelle Nachrichten". Archived from the original on 2009-07-07. Retrieved 2015-11-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
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    "Integration: Bezirksbeirat: Wohnungen statt Moschee". Archived from the original on 2009-07-12. Retrieved 2015-11-11.
  68. Mannheimer Morgen, 20 August 2009
  69. "Main-Spitze 18 January 2008". Archived from the original on 2008-02-22. Retrieved 2015-11-11.
  70. Siegener-Zeitung, 29 October 2008
  71. RP-Online, 29 November 2007
  72. Frankfurter Rundschau, 10 April 2010
  73. Nürnberger Nachrichten, 16 May 2012
  74. 13 November 2011
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