Muhammad Ilyas Qadri, the soft-spoken face of Dawat-e-Islami, is no ordinary preacher. On camera, he plays the part of a humble, tearful mullah—dripping with fake humility, showering flowery Urdu phrases, and pretending to be apolitical. But behind this sugary front is a man with a mission: to Islamize every corner he can reach, by hook or by crook.
He is not just a mullah; he is the architect of a global conversion factory. Dawat-e-Islami, under his rule, has become a strategic vehicle of Sunni Barelvi Islam—spreading deep into non-Muslim areas, targeting the poor, the vulnerable, and the gullible. This isn't peaceful da'wah—this is psychological warfare wrapped in green turbans and scented caps.
Every speech, every campaign, every public stunt is choreographed to play the long game: convert the kafir, infiltrate through charity, education, and “love,” and slowly establish ideological domination. Their madrasas multiply like spores—backed by a leader who smiles in public but pushes a dogmatic Islamic expansion behind closed doors.
He has mastered the art of remaining uncontroversial in media while quietly empowering an army of preachers who roam bazaars, hospitals, and even prisons with one goal: bring more into Islam—whatever it takes. Consent is blurred. Tactics range from offering food and shelter to broken families, to guilt-tripping lonely souls into “reverting” under emotional blackmail.
This man isn't screaming jihad with a sword—he's waging a velvet jihad. With strategic silence on explosive topics and refusal to openly condemn Islam’s more violent doctrines, he safeguards the image of Dawat-e-Islami while letting its grassroots workers carry out the real ideological invasion.
So don’t be fooled by his saintly act. Muhammad Ilyas Qadri is not just preaching Islam—he’s manufacturing the machinery to reshape societies from inside out, one manipulated conversion at a time.
No notable events have been recorded for this Mullah.