+ Arguments over how to integrate Muslims into modern European life,
and how much Islam Europe can accept without betraying its values,
have been tainted by the link to terror. Governments have reacted by
tightening controls on Muslim preachers, many of whom do not speak the
language of their adopted country. Britain has introduced civics tests
for imams. French authorities are planning to set up a school that
would also send preachers in training to secular universities. And in
Denmark, the right-wing People's Party, a government coalition member,
urges a ban on all foreign imams.+

Dak Bangla:
http://dakbangla.blogspot.com/2005/02/islam-europes-rising-class-of.html

Europe's rising class of believers: Muslims
Peter Ford 

PARIS â As the three young North African women talked about their
Muslim faith at a cafe here one recent evening, they could not help
noticing how patrons at the next table were reacting.

One French man leaned so far back in his chair to hear the animated
discussion that he almost joined the group. Suspicion and disapproval
darkened his look.

Nadia Mirad, a psychology student who works at a children's activity
center, knows that look. Last year, she recalled, when she asked for a
day off to celebrate the end of the annual Ramadan fast, her boss
exploded.

"She said I was being unprofessional," Ms. Mirad explained, sipping a
Coke. "She said the world didn't stop turning just for a Muslim
holiday. I'm French, but I felt I was not a full French citizen at
that moment. I really did not feel at home."

Her two student friends, both of them also born and raised in France,
nodded in sympathy. "We feel as French as France will let us feel,"
said BouthaÃna Gargouri. "But it's true, I can't live my religion
fully here."

None of them, for example, wears a head scarf, though they all say
they would like to do so one day. Making such a visible show of their
religion, however, would make it almost impossible for them to get a
job, they agreed.

"I can't afford to put up barriers to what I want to be," said LeÃla
BousteÃla, who hopes to become an interpreter for deaf mutes.

Religion's place in public life has shot to the top of the agenda in
France, and in the rest of Europe, for one reason: Islam, and the
growing millions of people on the Continent who practice it.

Shocked by the discovery of Islamic terrorist networks on their soil,
Europeans have suddenly woken up to the existence of an often
marginalized Muslim minority that takes religion more seriously than
they do.

Today, the relationship between native Europeans and their Muslim
neighbors is fraught with tension. Mistrust on both sides threatens to
explode into violence. Late last year, arsonists destroyed two mosques
and a Muslim school in the Netherlands after an Islamic radical there
was arrested for murdering filmmaker Theo van Gogh, who had criticized
Muslim treatment of women.
Story continues below

Particularly unnerving are the violent messages spread by a number of
radical Muslim preachers. "I believe the whole of Britain has become
Dar ul Harb [abode of infidels]," Syrian-born cleric Omar Bakri
Mohammed told followers in a webcast on "PalTalk" last month. "The
jihad is halal [acceptable] for the Muslims wherever they are."

"Active Christians in mainstream churches across the Continent are
worried by the rise in fundamentalist nationalism," says Jorgen
Nielsen, a professor of Islamic studies at Birmingham University in
England.

"Secularists tend to be more worried not just about Islam but the
return of religion to the public space," he adds.

Europe's Muslim population has tripled in the past 30 years, fueled by
immigration from North Africa, Turkey, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. This
rapid growth "questions our ... ability to integrate" them, warns
Patrick Weil, a French sociologist.

"This is the first time for a long time ... that we have had to show
that we can adapt and accept religious diversity," he adds. "That is a
challenge."

At the same time, acknowledges Tariq Ramadan, one of the foremost
Islamic thinkers in Europe, Muslims must change their thinking on many
customs that alienate Europeans, such as their attitudes about women.
"From Arab Islam, or African Islam, we have to come to European
Islam," he argues.

Arguments over how to integrate Muslims into modern European life, and
how much Islam Europe can accept without betraying its values, have
been tainted by the link to terror. Governments have reacted by
tightening controls on Muslim preachers, many of whom do not speak the
language of their adopted country. Britain has introduced civics tests
for imams. French authorities are planning to set up a school that
would also send preachers in training to secular universities. And in
Denmark, the right-wing People's Party, a government coalition member,
urges a ban on all foreign imams.

Such moves have won support even in some Muslim quarters. "It is not
xenophobic for Europeans to be genuinely worried about the
radicalization of Islam," says Tim Winter, a British Muslim convert
who teaches at Cambridge University and preaches at a mosque. "But it
is not acceptable to say that Islam cannot adapt to European life."

Being religious at all, however, is unusual in European life. Though
Muslims make up only 3 percent of the British population, more people
attend Friday prayers than go to Sunday church, a recent survey found.

That scares many Europeans who fear that Europe could soon lose its
Christian identity. The prospect of Turkey joining the European Union
(EU) in 10 years' time, which would add an expected 83 million
Muslims, deepens their fear.

"Europe is becoming Islamicized," warned Fritz Bolkestein a few weeks
before he left his job as the EU's competition commissioner last
December, noting that the two biggest cities in his native
Netherlands, Amsterdam and Rotterdam, will be minority European within
a few years.

That sounds like scaremongering to some Islamic leaders, who note that
less than 5 percent of Europe's population is Muslim. To others, it
sounds like a call to abandon their faith.

"Many European politicians, as well as average people, are prone to
thinking that the only safe Muslims are those who neither practice
their religion nor manifest their Muslim identity," wrote Mr. Ramadan
in his book, "To Be a European Muslim."

Ramadan is the leading proponent of "European Islam," a school of
thought intended to meet the needs of descendants of immigrants who
have few ties to their ancestral cultures.

Last spring, Time magazine named him one of the 21st century's most
influential people. But last summer, the US Department of Homeland
Security controversially revoked his visa days before he was to begin
teaching at the University of Notre Dame, in Indiana. A department
official said Ramadan had been barred in accordance with a provision
of the Patriot Act.

Ramadan insists that many of the habits Muslims display and that
Europeans revile are not Islamic per se, but rather cultural traits
specific to the Middle East, Africa, or Asia. "Muslims living in
Europe have an opportunity to reread our [religious] sources," he
says.

"We are going through a reassessment," he adds, "and the most
important subject is women. Our experience in Europe has made it clear
we must speak about equality."

"Europeanizing" Islam, says Professor Nielsen, whose home town,
Birmingham, is knows as the "Muslim capital of Britain," "requires
changes in relations between the sexes, in relations between parents
and children, significant changes in attitudes to people of other
religions, and in attitudes toward the state."

That is happening, Nielsen says. A few Muslims are assimilating
completely with secular European culture, "but the majority are
sticking to their religion but divorcing it from the cultural
tradition and redressing it in a new culture."

At the same time, a small minority has turned toward a hard-line
version of their religion, and a handful have taken up jihad, or holy
war against the West. Police in several European countries have
arrested hundreds of young Muslim men in connection with alleged
terrorist plots since 9/11.

In Britain, Scotland Yard is investigating Mr. Bakri Mohammed after
reporters heard him proclaiming that "death will be inevitable ... if
people reject the call of mighty Allah" at a secret rally in London in
January.

"There is a struggle for the soul of Islam," says Dr. Winter, also
known as Sheikh Abdul Hakim Murad. Even as young European Muslims seek
new ways of living their religion, "Gulf embassies ... spend tens of
millions of pounds to ensure that the most fundamentalist form of
Islam prevails in schools and bookshops," he laments. "Liberal Islam -
economically, culturally, and socially - is crying in the wilderness."

The stronger fundamentalist Islam grows, the harder it will be for
most Muslims to integrate, Ramadan says. "It is important for us as
Muslims to be unambiguous that we respect the law and the secular
framework," he insists.

On the other hand, he adds, Europeans "must start considering Islam as
a European religion, and stop building a European identity against
Islam as something external."

That will not be easy, given the secular European tradition of keeping
religion out of the public space for fear that it might undermine
democracy, a tradition developed in the face of an often reactionary
Roman Catholic Church. It will be harder in the case of an unfamiliar
religion often preached in a foreign tongue.

But Islamic thinkers hope that they can persuade Europeans that Islam
has something to offer. "We are accused of encouraging the return of
religious people to the public sphere," says Ramadan. "The question is
whether we are ... contributing to society with concerns about values
and ethics."

"If Islam cannot sit comfortably within the liberal European
mainstream," says Winter, "it will raise the question whether Europe
... can accept substantial differences" among its citizens.

Back in the Paris cafe, Ms. Gargouri and her friends say it would not
take much to make them feel more comfortable as European Muslims. For
a start, suggests Gargouri, "people must stop confusing Islam with
Islamism and even with terrorism. Islam was here long before 9/11."

Ms. BousteÃla agrees. "It would help," she says, "if I did not have a
label stuck on me wherever I show up."


LINK
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0224/p10s01-woeu.html
-- 
Dak Bangla is a Bangladesh based South Asian Intelligence Scan Magazine.
URL: http://www.dakbangla.blogspot.com


------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
DonorsChoose. A simple way to provide underprivileged children resources 
often lacking in public schools. Fund a student project in NYC/NC today!
http://us.click.yahoo.com/EHLuJD/.WnJAA/cUmLAA/TySplB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

--------------------------
Want to discuss this topic?  Head on over to our discussion list, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]
--------------------------
Brooks Isoldi, editor
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.intellnet.org

  Post message: osint@yahoogroups.com
  Subscribe:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Unsubscribe:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]


*** FAIR USE NOTICE. This message contains copyrighted material whose use has 
not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. OSINT, as a part of 
The Intelligence Network, is making it available without profit to OSINT 
YahooGroups members who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the 
included information in their efforts to advance the understanding of 
intelligence and law enforcement organizations, their activities, methods, 
techniques, human rights, civil liberties, social justice and other 
intelligence related issues, for non-profit research and educational purposes 
only. We believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material 
as provided for in section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use 
this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use,' 
you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Reply via email to