To "accept Western values" is rejecting Islam.

 

Bruce

 

 

http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3317583,00.html

 

EU's fight against radical Islam

Religious leaders, politician say only if Muslim immigrants accept western
values tensions would subside 

Gil Yaron 


Published: 

10.21.06, 10:31 

(DUSSELDORF) - Henrik Broder, a prominent Jewish journalist in Germany,
recently published a book titled, "Hooray! We Surrender!" which criticizes
what the author refers to as 'Europe's weakness in its battle against
Islam.'

 

"We must define what sets us aside as a society, and what values we must
uphold in our struggle against Islam," Broder tells Ynet. 

 

Broder's remarks come amid the ever-increasing tension in Europe between the
traditional values and those of radical Islam, which are 

 

beginning to spread throughout the continent. It began with the Madrid
terror attack, which was carried out by a cell of immigrants from North
Africa and the Middle East and continued with the London bombings, which
were carried out by UK-born Muslims, and the attempts to attack airliners in
Britain and trains in Germany. In the interim there were the violent riots
in response to the prophet Muhammad caricatures, the outrage and threats
over Pope Benedict XVI's accusations and the public outcry following the UK
veils affair. 

 

With the end of the Cold War 17 years ago, Europe was able to unite around
values of democracy, individualism and a free market. But lately the
atmosphere ion Europe has begun to change, and tolerant Europe has started
to organize against radical Islam (and some say Islam in general), an
ideology that is being referred to more and more as 'an enemy of modern
western society's lifestyle.

 

Until recently political correctness reigned in Europe, and those who dared
point an accusatory finger at minorities were ostracized. When immigrants
attacked their host-countries in Europe, the Europeans blamed western
society for 'inadequately absorbing them.' 

 

Dialogue, not confrontation was the solution to the absorption difficulties
of immigrants; criticism of the Muslim minority, part of which refused to
accept the social ideals of the majority, was dismissed as racist - and so
the Muslims in Europe did not integrate with the western population.

 

But following Madrid and London attacks, as well as the Muslim riots over
the Mohammad caricatures, there are more and more signs indicating that the
European Union is beginning to view Islam and the Muslim immigrants as an
existential threat.

 

Mission: Intelligence 

About 15 million Muslims live In Europe today, which constitute about 3-4
percent of the population in most European countries. In France, Muslims
make up and estimated 10 percent. Police forces across Europe have already
started to focus efforts on collecting intelligence information among their
countries' Islamic communities.

 

For German intelligence, for instance, this is virgin territory. German
police, who confer regularly with Jewish officials to assess the threat to
their safety, admitted to them that they have know idea of the goings-on in
Germany's Muslim communities.

 

Senior police officials themselves confessed to Ynet that, "There are whole
areas in German cities that in our view are 'out of bounds', and we don't
enter them anymore. For too long we thought that as long as we let them
manage themselves, they won't bother us. Now this attitude is taking its
revenge on us."

 

Germany Defense Ministry official Christian Schmidt, a member of the
governing Christian Democrats party (CDU), told Ynet that among the Muslim
community in his country, "Thousands tend towards extremism and pose a
threat to us."

 

He said that contrary to absorption processes in other communities, among
Muslims future generations become more fanatic, with "the third generation
being the most extremist."

 

Currently various German states are considering legislation to obligate
imams to carry sermons in German, to "increase the transparency of Muslim
communities and abate concern and suspicion." In effect, this reflects the
shortage of Turkish and Arabic speakers in the German intelligence community
and the difficulties hindering them from collecting crucial information from
this sector.

 

Tensions between communities have been rising since last summer's thwarted
terror attacks in Britain and Germany. Two and a half month ago plans to
blow up two trains in Koln failed to materialize due to technical failures
in the makeshift bombs hidden in two suitcases.

 

German authorities nabbed a number of suspects and the mastermind of the
attempted attacks, which prompted a debate about whether the government
should make it obligatory for transportation operators to install CCTV
cameras on trains.

 

In Britain a plot to blow up a number of US-bound planes using liquid
explosives, shook a nation that was still trying to come to terms with the
July 7 attacks two years earlier.

 

Relations between 1.8 British Muslims and the rest of the country suffered
another set back as tension grew and a wide-scale arrest raids conducted
against Muslim terror suspects across the country only added fuel to the
fire.

 

The government said it is weighing plans to cut public funds to Muslim
schools, although no such plans were considered for the 36 Jewish and 7,000
Christian schools in the monarchy.

 

In another dramatic development, the Ministry of Education announced new
regulation to the higher education system which would make it obligatory for
British universities to keep track of the activities of Muslim students and
report any suspicious behavior to law enforcement authorities.

 

Many countries did not suffice with discussions: The governments of Germany
and Britain launched dialogue with Muslim organizations in the hope that a
European form of Islam - one that is pragmatic and pacifist - would emerge.

 

In Berlin, the home of many Germans of Turkish origins, Turkish
kindergartens would be forced to adopt the German language as the only
communication tool in the hope to inoculate minority children with the
values of democracy and civil rights.

 

In Switzerland meanwhile, where Muslims constitute less than one percent of
the population, referendums held in a number of cantons reflected the will
of an overwhelming majority to limit the spread of Islam. More so, strict
immigration laws were introduced, and in many areas the construction of new
Mosques has been banned. 

 

Debate on values

But for many this is not enough. While individualism has been a supreme
value in Europe for many decades, common European values have been subject
to intense debate especially to the backdrop of Turkey's impending
membership in the European Union.

 

"We need to start public discussions about our values, which we have to
communicate in a resolute manner," Michael Geller, a member of the European
parliament representing Germany's CDU told Ynet.

 

"Islam is not a threat yet, but a challenge that forces us to define our
common values. Citizen rights and the status of women especially are things
that should be assimilated among Muslim immigrants," he said.

 

Henrik Broder however is a skeptic. "I don't think Europe know to do
something besides to surrender. People have no idea what they are fighting
for. We can't set the clock back, and I don't want Europe to give up on its
Muslims. But when the Dutch justice minister says it is possible for Sharia
to become the basis for Dutch laws and when in England there are independent
Sharia courts - that's the end of European societu as we know it," he said.



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