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Thorough research work on the Ahmadiyya Movement, #ahmadiyya #ahmadiyyat #ahmadiyyafactcheckblog #messiahhascome

AHMADIYYA MOVEMENT IN ISLAM, INC., U.S.A.

Intro
In the USA, in 2024, the Ahmadiyya Movement is still a corporation and Maulvi Syed Shamshad A. Nasir is their agent (an official employee). However, Mirza Maghfoor Ahmad is the unofficial CEO aka President of the USA Jamaat (a volunteer). Mukhtar Malhi is the secretary and Bashir Malik is the Treasurer. There are 3 Directors, Falah ud Din Shams (son of a famous Qadiani Maulvi, Jalal ud Din Shams), Dr. Nasimullah Rehmatullah and Talha Chaudhary.

In 2007, in the USA, Ahmadi’s tried to force the city of Walkersville, Maryland to allow them to make their small town their headquarters in the USA.

In 2015, city of Walkersville, Maryland officials spoke about it.

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United States flag branch nonprofit AHMADIYYA MOVEMENT IN ISLAM, INC., U.S.A. (Hawaii (US), 30 Aug 2017– ) details
United States flag inactive branch nonprofit AHMADIYYA MOVEMENT IN ISLAM, INC., U.S.A. (Louisiana (US), 23 Apr 2013– ) details
United States flag branch nonprofit AHMADIYYA MOVEMENT IN ISLAM, INC., U.S.A. (Tennessee (US), 8 Apr 2013– ) details
United States flag branch nonprofit AHMADIYYA MOVEMENT IN ISLAM, INC., U.S.A. (Florida (US), 27 Jun 1994– ) details
United States flag branch nonprofit AHMADIYYA MOVEMENT IN ISLAM, INC. U.S.A. (Michigan (US), 26 Nov 2007– ) details
United States flag branch nonprofit AHMADIYYA MOVEMENT IN ISLAM INC., USA (New York (US), 11 Dec 2006– ) details
United States flag branch Ahmadiyya Movement in Islam, Inc., U.S.A. (Virginia (US), 3 Jun 2004– ) details
United States flag inactive branch nonprofit AHMADIYYA MOVEMENT IN ISLAM, INC., U.S.A. (Georgia (US), 13 Jun 2002– ) details
United States flag branch nonprofit AHMADIYYA MOVEMENT IN ISLAM, INC., U.S.A. (Washington (US), 17 Oct 2001– ) details
United States flag branch AHMADIYYA MOVEMENT IN ISLAM, INC., U.S.A (Maryland (US), 29 Jul 1982– )

 

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2007
Rural Maryland town wary of plans for mosque

Rural Maryland town wary of plans for mosque

Staff Writer
Cape Cod Times
The 224-acre Moxley Farm along Route 194 at the edge of the small town of Walkersville, Md., is at the center of a proposal by Frederick County town commissioners to change a land usage ordinace that would block the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community from purchasing the land and building a worship center and convention site.

By DAVID DISHNEAU

WALKERSVILLE, Md. — A Muslim group’s plan to build a mosque and convention site on a 224-acre farm has met with resistance from many residents of this rural, overwhelmingly Christian town who fear its tranquility and security may be jeopardized.

The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community USA insists it will be a friendly neighbor, but its proposal — including an annual national gathering of thousands of Ahmadis — could be blocked by a measure under consideration by the town commissioners.

“Muslims are a whole different culture from us,” said the mayor, Ralph Whitmore, taking a break at his livestock feed store. “The situation with the Muslims is a touchy worldwide situation, so people are antsy over that.”

Two days after Ahmadiyya leaders fielded questions at a public forum in August, town Commissioner Chad Weddle introduced a zoning amendment that would prohibit places of worship, schools and private clubs on land zoned for agriculture — including the farm the Ahmadis have contracted to buy.

If the five commissioners approve the measure in a vote expected as early as next week, the Ahmadis could be blocked from building a mosque on the site. Even if the amendment fails, the group still would need a special exception to proceed — their request for one is pending before the town’s planning commission.

To some, Weddle’s amendment smacks of discrimination.

“The situation indicates this is an action that is being directed toward one specific faith community and, as such, that makes it highly suspect,” said Roman P. Storzer, a Washington attorney who has been retained by the land’s prospective seller, David Moxley.

Muqtedar Khan, a political science professor at the University of Delaware, said the blunt opposition voiced by some Walkersville citizens is reminiscent of the persecution Ahmadis have endured in Pakistan. There, they are forbidden to practice their religion because they believe there was a prophet after Muhammad — Hadrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, who died in 1908.

“It is quite ironic,” Khan said, that the Ahmadis — allowed to worship freely in the United States — “are suffering a backlash because of their association with Islam.”

But Syed Ahmad, a federal economist who is managing the Walkersville project for the group, said the persecution in Pakistan is far worse.

“Here, people are civilized and they get up and they talk and they oppose you,” Ahmad said, “but they’re not going to kill you.”

Ahmad, who emigrated from Pakistan in 1980, says members of his community won’t go where they’re not wanted. The group’s leaders have gone door-to-door to persuade Walkersville residents that Ahmadis are not terrorists.

Ahmad acknowledged that the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and the U.S. campaign against terrorism have made residents wary.

“They hear ‘Muslims,’ and they don’t know anything beyond that,” he said. “To me, it’s natural until they get a chance to ask questions what our beliefs are — and then they realize these are good people.”

Some residents aren’t convinced. When the Ahmadis visited Kambra Minor, a clerk at the Walkersville Market, “I told them, you have to understand — there’s a certain connotation to a Muslim group, especially in a blue-collar area like this,” Minor said.

Resident David Sample testified during a hearing last month that he is an intelligence officer whose office at the Pentagon, about 40 miles away, was destroyed in the Sept. 11 attacks.

“I just stress to the board and the community that we pay attention to what’s going on, what the motive is, who the people are,” he said.

Others worry about the traffic that large-scale Muslim gatherings would generate in the town of 5,600. Mark Mowen suggested that the Ahmadis continue holding their conventions at an exposition center in Chantilly, Va., where this year’s three-day event drew about 4,200 participants a day.

Weddle said he offered his amendment not to block the Muslims but as part of a plan to preserve open space and help the Banner School, a private, nonsectarian institution for grades K-8. The school, now located in nearby Frederick, won a special exception last year to build on a tract of Walkersville farmland, but construction was stalled by Frederick County’s refusal to extend public sewer lines to land zoned for agriculture.

The town responded by rewriting its comprehensive plan to include a new “institutional” zoning category, Weddle said. The commissioners approved the category during the same meeting in August at which Weddle offered his amendment barring schools and places of worship on agricultural land. The timing, so soon after the Ahmadis’ community forum, was coincidental, he said.

Weddle said the Banner School plans to have its land rezoned for institutional use, and the Ahmadis could do likewise.

“My ordinance should benefit that group if they want to build on that property” because without rezoning, the site can’t be served by public water and sewer, Weddle said.

However, Ahmad said the Ahmadis plan to use the farm’s private well and septic systems and won’t need public water and sewer.

Resident Kris Anderson said he doesn’t trust the Ahmadis and that unless they’re stopped, “we’re opening the door to something we may not know and we may not like.”

But others, including two neighboring farmers, said the community should welcome the Ahmadis as property owners who will help preserve open space.

As for the once-a-year traffic congestion, said 64-year-old farmer Robert Ramsburg “that’s no worse than the carnival, and I’ve learned to live with the carnival.”

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Hindsight 2020: Walkersville residents debate Muslim community center throughout 2007 | Hindsight | fredericknewspost.com

Hindsight 2020: Walkersville residents debate Muslim community center throughout 2007

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Plans for a Muslim retreat in Walkersville were hotly debated throughout a large chunk of 2007.

At the heart of the discussion was a plan from the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, who attempted to buy about 275 acres of land to both build a recreational center for 20 local families and also host an annual three-day religious convention, the Jalsa Salana festival, that would draw 5,000 to 10,000 people.

The plan drew criticism from some who believed that building the center in Walkersville might attract “terrorist activity” in the area, as the Frederick News-Post wrote in August of that year. As a result, Ahsan Zafar, president of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, told residents at a summer town hall meeting that his community were “not extremists,” and they were “not violent.”

“We are not here to disrupt life, we are here to be a part of life,” Zafar also told the crowd while also noting that the center would be open to people of all faiths.

His words would ultimately fall on deaf ears however, as after an 11-day hearing in early 2008, the Walkersville board of Zoning Appeals denied the group’s proposal to build at 8939 Woodsboro Pike, which at the time was property owned by David Moxley.

Roman P. Storzer, the attorney for Moxley, said after the decision was made that he believed the underlying issue in play was hostility toward Muslims. He also added that it was a “sad, sad situation” for the town to deny Ahmadiyya members the ability to worship freely in America.

The conflict didn’t end there, however, as in 2009, Moxley filed a $16.5 million lawsuit against Walkersville’s burgess and four town commissioners. Moxley alleged the town blocked the sale of the land to the Ahmadiyya Muslim community on the basis of religious and racial bias. As part of the settlement, the Town of Walkersville bought the land for about $4.7 million from Moxley.

The farm has since been transformed into a wedding venue called Walker’s Overlook.

Ahmadiyya Muslim Community’s proposition served as a precursor to the issue of immigration throughout the county. Frederick County Sheriff Chuck Jenkins in recent years has been vocal about his support of the 287(g) program and ICE, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, throughout Frederick, which in turn has sparked debate regarding both the county’s ability and desire to allow illegal immigrants to reside in local areas.

In 2007, though, it was clear where those who led Walkersville stood.

“People are very unrested,” Ralph Whitmore, the town burgess, told The Baltimore Sun. “People in Walkersville, and I include myself, we know what a great place it is to live and raise families and are always concerned about things that might change our quality of life.”

Currently, the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community has more than 70 local chapters throughout the United States and it has community centers located in Baltimore, Silver Spring and Richmond

Follow Colin McGuire on Twitter: @colinpadraic

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Links and Related Essay’s

Rural Maryland town wary of plans for mosque

AHMADIYYA MOVEMENT IN ISLAM, INC., U.S.A. :: Illinois (US) :: OpenCorporates

https://opencorporates.com/companies/us_il/CORP_31036941

Who is Mirza Maghfoor Ahmad? – ahmadiyyafactcheckblog

Who is Maulvi Syed Shamshad A. Nasir? – ahmadiyyafactcheckblog

businessentitysearch (ilsos.gov)

Who is Talha Chaudhry? A Waqf-e-Zindighi? And fraudster working as Secretary of Finance in the USA? – ahmadiyyafactcheckblog

Who is Jalal-ud-Din Shams? 1901-1966 – ahmadiyyafactcheckblog

businessentitysearch

Who is Nasim Rehmatullah? – ahmadiyyafactcheckblog

Business Entity Search (ilsos.gov)

Who is Falah ud Din Shams? – ahmadiyyafactcheckblog

Mukhtar Malhi is working as the General Secretary of the entire USA Jamaat – ahmadiyyafactcheckblog

Who is Bashir Ahmad Malik? – ahmadiyyafactcheckblog

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Tags

#ahmadiyya #ahmadiyyafactcheckblog #messiahhascome #ahmadiyyat #trueislam #ahmadianswers #mirzaghulamahmad #qadiani #qadianism

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