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- Q4695651 subject Q8227201.
- Q4695651 subject Q8227204.
- Q4695651 abstract "Approximately 2–5 million members of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community live in Pakistan or were born in Pakistan. Hence Pakistan is the home to the largest population of Ahmadis in the world. The city of Rabwah in Punjab, Pakistan used to be the global headquarters of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community before they were moved to England. The Ahmadiyya population in Pakistan has often come under persecution and discrimination by the Sunni majority. The Ahmadiyya sect has its origins in the Punjab region, in the city of Qadian. Following the independence of Pakistan, as a separate nation for Muslims in the Indian subcontinent, the majority of Ahmadi Muslims in areas constituting present-day India moved to the newly created state, establishing Pakistan as the central and global hub of the international Ahmadiyya Movement in Islam. Although a relatively small minority in the country, there have been a number of notable Pakistani people who have belonged to the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, including the country's first Nobel Prize laureate, Abdus Salam and Pakistan's first foreign minister Muhammad Zafarullah Khan.".
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- Q4695651 wikiPageWikiLink Q781138.
- Q4695651 wikiPageWikiLink Q8227201.
- Q4695651 wikiPageWikiLink Q8227204.
- Q4695651 wikiPageWikiLink Q84.
- Q4695651 wikiPageWikiLink Q843.
- Q4695651 wikiPageWikiLink Q851824.
- Q4695651 comment "Approximately 2–5 million members of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community live in Pakistan or were born in Pakistan. Hence Pakistan is the home to the largest population of Ahmadis in the world. The city of Rabwah in Punjab, Pakistan used to be the global headquarters of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community before they were moved to England. The Ahmadiyya population in Pakistan has often come under persecution and discrimination by the Sunni majority.".
- Q4695651 label "Ahmadiyya in Pakistan".