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Placing the Marginalized Ahmadiyya in Context with the Traditional Sunni Majority
Author(s) -
Alexa Brand
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of mason graduate research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2327-0764
DOI - 10.13021/g8730t
Subject(s) - apostasy , islam , context (archaeology) , religious studies , order (exchange) , sociology , philosophy , epistemology , theology , history , archaeology , finance , economics
  This essay attempts to describe the Ahmadiyya, a persecuted minority group within Islam, according to the writings of their founder, Hadhrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad. The Ahmadi differ from traditional Sunni Islam in three major ways: their interpretations of jihad, the person- and prophethood of Jesus Christ, and their understandings of Muhammad as the Final Prophet, which has led to accusations of apostasy. Accordingly, this essay intends to compare and contrast Ahmadi interpretations with both Qur’anic and Biblical texts in order to accurately describe where it is the Ahmadi community fits on a globalized scale. Largely ostracized due to their interpretative variances with the larger Sunni community, this essay argues that the Ahmadi, while admittedly different, must be accepted based on their similarities. 

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