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🕌 unknown Fundado 2000

Communauté Afar de Belgique

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Communauté Afar de Belgique

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Sobre

The Afar community association in Brussels, known as the Communauté Afar de Belgique, maintains a small prayer space and cultural centre serving one of the less widely known East African diaspora communities in the Belgian capital. The Afar are a predominantly Muslim ethnic group whose homeland straddles Djibouti, Eritrea, and parts of Ethiopia, and whose presence in Brussels reflects decades of migration driven by conflict in the Horn of Africa and by Belgium's role in hosting international institutions. The centre sits in a modest building that doubles as prayer space, social meeting room, and cultural hub. The prayer hall is small — accommodating perhaps one hundred worshippers — and simple, with a carpet, a mihrab niche, and a minbar. Friday prayers bring together a close-knit congregation in which the Afar language is widely spoken alongside Arabic, French, and increasingly Dutch. The community's religious life is distinctly East African in flavour: pre-prayer gatherings draw on Afar oral traditions, the Qur'an recitation carries the particular rhythm of East African huffaz, and the sense of community reflects a diaspora that knows its numbers in Belgium are small and that gathers accordingly. The centre runs Arabic and Qur'an classes for children, maintains informal networks that help newcomers navigate Belgian bureaucracy, and organises regular cultural events — including occasional performances of Afar poetry and music — that keep the community's heritage accessible to the next generation growing up in Brussels. Ramadan brings nightly community iftars, with dishes that reflect Djiboutian and Eritrean kitchens — injera-like flatbreads, spiced stews, sweet porridge — alongside the more familiar halal fare of the wider Belgian Muslim community. Eid prayers are held either at the centre or with the wider Muslim community at larger venues. For curious visitors or for Afar families passing through Brussels, the centre is a small but warmly welcoming anchor.

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