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🏛️ Cultural Center ✓ Verified unknown Founded 1992

Muslim Religious Union Warsaw

Qibla finder
المسلم Religious Union وارسو

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About

The Muslim Religious Union premises in Warsaw's Ursynów district serve as one of the small but active cultural and prayer centres for Poland's Muslim community, a population notable for its long and distinct history. Polish Islam traces back to the Lipka Tatars, a Turkic-origin Muslim community that has lived in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth since the fourteenth century and whose villages and modest wooden mosques in north-eastern Poland are among the oldest continuously functioning Islamic communities in Europe. Contemporary Muslim life in Warsaw combines this historic Tatar core with newer arrivals — Arab and Turkish professionals, students, and a growing population of converts — and the Ursynów centre reflects that mix. The facility is purpose-adapted rather than purpose-built: a prayer hall set up in a leased building, complemented by rooms for classes and social gatherings. Fridays see a small but committed Jumu'ah congregation, with khutbahs typically delivered in Polish and Arabic. The Religious Union, which is the main institution representing Polish Muslims and one of the country's officially recognised religious organisations, uses the Warsaw centre as one of its administrative and community hubs. Activities include Polish-language Islamic education for children of converts and of mixed families, Arabic courses, and occasional lectures on Islamic topics delivered in Polish for a wider audience. During Ramadan the centre opens for nightly Taraweeh and small community iftars, and Eid prayers are organised either at the centre or, when numbers require, at rented venues elsewhere in Warsaw. For visitors to Poland interested in the unusual and historically important story of Lipka Tatar Islam, or simply for Muslim travellers passing through Warsaw, the centre is a warm and welcoming point of contact — a modest but meaningful part of an old European Muslim tradition that deserves wider recognition beyond Poland's own borders.

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