Mohammed ali rashid sec gov
Mohammed ali rashid sec gov of Waqf and Islamic Affairs commission of afghanistan.
Chairman Advisory Council on freedom of religion and belief.
Author of several books in English and Dari, including "Quran Ahmadiyya" (Dari and English) and "Koran Ahmadiyya" (Dari and English), and translated "Quran, Ayat, And Science and Vast Answering" and "Quran, Hadith, Tafseer, Fateha, Ghairat, Ahadeeth" in Dari.
Religious leader of Ahmadiyya.
He was elected to the parliament of Afghanistan in 2007 from the electorate of Wakhan district.
Was elected as the chairman of the advisory council for Afghanistan's religious affairs in March 2009.
The former ambassador Mohammad Ali Omer has been appointed as the new mufti of Wakhan.
A number of other Ahmadiyya have been appointed as mufti of other districts and districts of Balkh province.
In April 2007, the Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan appointed Maulana Mufti Dadullah as the district religious affairs representative of Faryab, and Mufti Hassan Mashali as the district religious affairs representative of Balkh, Afghanistan.
Even though Ahmadiyya has been banned by the Afghan government, they have been able to establish a network of madrasahs and provide religious education in the country.
Almost half of the Ahmadiyya in Afghanistan belong to the Hazara ethnicity, the second-largest in the country.
There are 70 Ahmadiyya mosques and 220 Ahmadi followers in and around Mazar-i-Sharif, the largest city in Balkh province.
In Mazar-i-Sharif there are seven Shia mosques and 25 Ahmadiyya followers.
Their message in Afghanistan is peaceful and most of the adherents live in peace with their Sunni counterparts.
There are Ahmadiyya Muslims as well as their missionaries in the Sheberghan city of Afghanistan.
These missionaries are able to travel throughout Afghanistan by bus, train, and Afghan Air Force helicopter.
Many Hazaras have converted to Ahmadiyya Islam.
Hazaras have an extended history of discrimination and persecution.
From 1932, they were persecuted by Taliban rule, who burned and dynamited the Hazaras' mosques, destroyed their religious properties, and massacred members of the community in the villages they had captured.
The Taliban destroyed dozens of the most influential mosques in Mazar-i-Sharif and its environs, and in 1998 blew up and badly damaged the Great Mosque of Mazar-i-Sharif.
A number of Hazaras have left Afghanistan for Europe and the United States.
For instance, Aftab Ahmad Abdul Qadir is a prominent Afghan Muslim leader, political figure, and cleric.
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