"We are a group of people who due to rising fear and polarisation in society want to show that we don't see Muslims as a threat but as an asset," organisers of the "ring of solidarity" wrote on Facebook.
"We are glad that Muslims are a part of our society and we feel that they are an exposed minority in Norwegian society," they added.
At midday Monday nearly 400 people had indicated they would attend the rally to be held outside Oslo's Jamaat Ahle Sunnat mosque.
Norwegian Muslims create a human peace ring around the synagogue in Oslo, Norway on February 21, 2015. PHOTO: AFP
The gathering follows Saturday's vigil outside an Oslo synagogue which drew around 1,300 people in a show of solidarity organised by young Norwegian Muslims.
Read: Norway's Muslims link hands to form human chain outside Oslo synagogue
News of the event spread internationally after the twin attacks in Denmark on a free-speech seminar and a synagogue that killed two people, a Jewish man and a filmmaker.
Read: Gun attack on free speech event in Denmark leaves one dead
The gunman was identified as Omar El-Hussein, a Dane of Palestinian origin.
Policemen secure the area around a building in Copenhagen, Denmark, where shots were fired on February 14, 2015 outside the venue of a debate held on art, blasphemy and free speech. PHOTO: AFP
The Danish attacks, which occurred just weeks after gunmen killed 17 people in Paris, raised fears in Nordic countries of heightened tension between religious communities.
Read: 12 dead in gun attack at French magazine
In Sweden, organisers are planning a "peace ring" human shield outside Stockholm's synagogue on Friday.
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