Iceland review - 2014, Side 67

Iceland review - 2014, Side 67
ICELAND REVIEW 65 a s I enter the humble facilities of the Muslim Association of Iceland in an office building in central Reykjavík, I’m greeted by young men playing ping pong. A moment later the association’s chair, Ibrahim Sverrir Agnarsson, arrives. “This is the hottest activity here. You can see that there’s not much terrorist plotting going on,” he remarks sarcastically, referring to the harsh protest that arose when plans for the first mosque in Iceland constructed as such, a house of worship for the up to 2,000 Muslims living here, were announced. DIVErSE MuSlIM cOMMuNITy There are two official Islamic associa- tions in Iceland. The Muslim Association of Iceland, founded by Salmann Tamimi, originally from Palestine, in 1997, from whom Sverrir took over as chair in 2010. According to Statistics Iceland, the associa- tion has 465 members. “My guess is that it comprises people of more than 30 differ- ent nationalities,” says Sverrir. “More than half of its members were born in Iceland, perhaps 40-50 to non-Muslim parents.” Chaired by Karim Askari, originally from Morocco, the Islamic Culture Center, which now has 305 members, was founded in 2008. The association runs a mosque in Next summer, ground will be broken for Iceland’s first mosque, which will serve 2,000 people. Eygló Svala Arnarsdóttir met with members of the Islamic community and learned about their views of this major milestone and life as a Muslim in Iceland.

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