"Mosque leaders should do all they can to protect their houses of worship by working with local law enforcement authorities, installing security cameras and employing security officers during the daily prayers," said Edward Ahmed Mitchell, executive director of the Georgia chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).
Two mosques in Alabama received identical emails two weeks ago, CAIR says. The Washington-based Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization says the threats are part of a mass mailing to mosques nationwide.
In the first two months of 2017, four mosques across the country were set on fire.
On February 24, Greenview Madani Center in Lawrenceville, Georgia, received a mailed, handwritten letter. It said, "Death is waiting for you and your kind" and included a hand-drawn picture of someone being beheaded.
CAIR posted the threats on its Facebook page.
The mosque alerted local law enforcement to the letter.
Three other mosques in and around Atlanta received a threatening email February 18. Its subject line was "YOUR ONE WARNING" and said, in part, "PLAN TO RUN OR DIE."