Apart from the traditional Tatar communities, since the 1960s Poland has also been home to a small immigrant Muslim community. In the 1960’s and 1970’s Poland attracted a number of immigrants from many socialist-friendly Arabic-speaking Muslim states of the
Middle East and
North Africa. Some of them decided to stay in Poland. In the late 1980s this community became more active and better organized. They have built mosques and praying houses in
Warsaw,
Białystok,
Gdańsk (built by the
Tatar community),
Wrocław,
Lublin and
Poznań. There are also praying rooms in
Bydgoszcz,
Kraków,
Łódź,
Olsztyn,
Katowice and
Opole. Since the overthrow of the communist
Polish People’s Republic in 1989, other Muslim immigrants have come to Poland. Relatively prominent groups are
Turks and fellow ethnic-Slavic Muslims from the
former Yugoslavia. There are also smaller groups of immigrants from
Bangladesh,
Afghanistan, and from other countries, as well as a refugee community coming from
Chechnya. The Polish
Shia minority includes foreign students, migrants, and embassy staff, mainly from countries such as
Iraq,
Iran,
Bahrain,
Lebanon, along with native converts to Islam. Currently, Shi'ites in the country do not have their own freestanding mosque, but they do meet for weekly
Friday prayer and major Islamic holidays. The 2002 census showed only 447 people declaring Tatar nationality. According to the 2011 census, there are 1,916 Tatars in Poland (including 1,251 people who declared composite national-ethnic identity, e.g. identify as both Polish and Tatar). In recent years, increasing oppression from
Alexander Lukashenko's authoritarian Government in
Belarus and economic hardships has prompted a larger number of Lipka Tatars to come to Poland. In November 2010, a monument to Poland's Islamic leader Dariusz Jagiełło was unveiled in the port city of
Gdańsk at a ceremony attended by President
Bronislaw Komorowski, as well as
Tatar representatives from across Poland and abroad. The monument is a symbol of the important role of Tatars in Polish history. The monument is the first of its kind to be erected in Europe. The exact number of Muslims living in Poland remains unknown as the last all-national census held by the
Central Statistical Office in 2011 did not ask for religion.
Tatar–Salafi relations There's an ongoing conflict between Polish native Sunni Muslim
Lipka Tatars, who have a
unique approach towards Islam and have been living in Poland for 600 years, and an increasingly vocal group of mainly foreign-born and foreign-sponsored, but also native-born convert, group of Sunni Muslims who adhere to the
Salafi movement. The conflict divides country's Sunni Muslims and causes bureaucratic confusion, as both sides lay claim to representation of country's Sunni Muslims. The "native born" Sunni Muslims (Lipka Tatars), run Muzułmański Związek Religijny w Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej (Muslim Religious Union in the Polish Republic), and "foreign born" Sunni Muslims run Liga Muzułmańska w Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej (Muslim League in the Polish Republic). The latter is mainly based upon foreigners living in the country, such as Arabs, Bengalis, Chechens etc. Liga Muzułmańska is also a branch of a worldwide
Muslim Brotherhood organization.
Islamophobia Despite the fact that Muslims in Poland constitute less than 0.1% of the total population,
stereotypes, verbal, violent, and physical displays of anti-Islam are widespread and, mostly, socially acceptable. Vandalism and attacks on the mosques are reported, and women (especially converts) who cover themselves are seen as "traitors" to their own culture. From January 1, 2013, Poland's Muslims and Jews were both affected by a European Union
ban on
ritual slaughter after lawmakers deemed
halal and
kosher practices incompatible with
animal rights legislation, specifically the Animal Protection Law of 1997. In December 2014, the
Constitutional Tribunal ruled the ban unconstitutional on the grounds that it violated
freedom of religion guaranteed by the Polish laws and
constitution. Both ways of slaughtering animals were illegal in the country between January 1, 2013 and December, 2014, almost two years, and still is a controversial topic because of the concern of animal cruelty by those practices. In May, 2016, shortly before the
World Youth Day 2016, police in
Kraków asked foreigners, mainly among the Muslim community, in the city if they “knew any terrorists". The
Polish Ombudsman's office released statement that such actions are offensive and unacceptable.
Perception == Notable Muslims ==