http://www.hudson-ny.org/2355/france-islam-overtaking-catholicism

 


Islam Overtaking Catholicism in France


by Soeren Kern <http://www.hudson-ny.org/author/Soeren+Kern> 
August 18, 2011 at 5:00 am

http://www.hudson-ny.org/2355/france-islam-overtaking-catholicism

                                                

Islamic mosques are being built more often in France than Roman Catholic
churches, and there now are more practising Muslims in the country than
practising Catholics.

Nearly 150 new mosques currently are under construction in France, home to
the biggest Muslim community in Europe. The mosque-building projects are at
various stages of completion, according to Mohammed Moussaoui, the president
of the Muslim Council of France <http://www.lecfcm.fr/>  (CFCM), who
provided the data in an August 2 interview with the French radio station RTL
<http://www.rtl.fr/actualites/politique/article/mohammed-moussaoui-100-a-150
-projets-de-mosquees-en-france-7707457655> .

The total number of mosques in France has already doubled to more than 2,000
during just the past ten years, according to a research report "Constructing
Mosques: The Governance of Islam in France and the Netherlands
<http://dare.uva.nl/document/124687> ." France's most prominent Muslim
leader, Dalil Boubakeur, who is rector of the Grand Mosque of Paris
<http://www.mosquee-de-paris.org/> , recently called for the number of
mosques in the country to be doubled
<http://www.francesoir.fr/actualite/societe/dalil-boubakeur-%E2%80%9Cil-faut
-doubler-nombre-mosquees-en-france%E2%80%9D-54083.html>  again – to 4,000 –
to meet growing demand.

By contrast, the Roman Catholic Church in France has built only 20 new
churches during the past decade, and has formally closed more than 60
churches, many of which are destined to become mosques, according to
research conducted by
<http://www.la-croix.com/Religion/S-informer/Actualite/La-nouvelle-carte-des
-lieux-de-culte-_NG_-2006-10-25-517264> La Croix, a Roman Catholic daily
newspaper based in Paris.

Although 64% of the French population (or 41.6 million of France's 65
million inhabitants) identifies itself as Roman Catholic, only 4.5% (or 1.9
million) of those actually are practising Catholics, according to the French
Institute of Public Opinion
<http://www.ifop.com/media/pressdocument/43-1-document_file.pdf>  (or Ifop,
as it is usually called).

By way of comparison, 75% (or 4.5 million) of the estimated 6 million mostly
ethnic North African and sub-Saharan Muslims in France identify themselves
as "believers" and 41% (or 2.5 million) say they are "practising" Muslims,
according to an in-depth research report on Islam in France
<http://www.ifop.com/media/pressdocument/343-1-document_file.pdf>  published
by Ifop on August 1. The report also says that more than 70% of the Muslims
in France say they will be observing the Islamic holy month of Ramadan in
2011.

Taken together, the research data provides empirical evidence that Islam is
well on its way to overtaking Roman Catholicism as the dominant religion in
France.

As their numbers grow, Muslims in France are becoming far more assertive
than ever before. A case in point: Muslim groups in France are now asking
the Roman Catholic Church for permission to use its empty churches as a way
to solve the traffic problems caused by thousands of Muslims who pray in the
streets.

In a March 11 communiqué
<http://banlieues-respect.org/2011/03/communique-de-presse-du-11-mars-2011>
addressed to the Church of France, the National Federation of the Great
Mosque of Paris, the Council of Democratic Muslims of France and a Muslim
activist group called Collectif Banlieues Respect called on the Catholic
Church – in a spirit of inter-religious solidarity, of course – to make its
empty churches available to Muslims for Friday prayers, so that Muslims do
not have to "pray in the streets" and be "held hostage to politics."

Every Friday, thousands of Muslims in Paris and other French cities close
off streets and sidewalks (and by extension, close down local businesses and
trap non-Muslim residents in their homes and offices) to accommodate
overflowing crowds for midday prayers. Some mosques have also begun
broadcasting sermons and chants of
<http://ripostelaique.com/Dois-je-subir-tous-les-vendredis.html> "Allah
Akbar" via loudspeakers in the streets.

The weekly spectacles, which have been documented by dozens of videos posted
on Youtube.com (here
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RrNSRJAtoHk&feature=related> , here
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yBBWZFb_FjY&feature=related> , here
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IBvQk0QiFhI> , here
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZU6KYgz-14&feature=fvwrel> , here
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZxnM_wgZKRU&feature=related> , here
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2bwy_dQAN2I&feature=related> , here
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pw64Qmk6sMs&feature=related> , here
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yBBWZFb_FjY&feature=related>  and here
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xJmZAqCxjI0&feature=related> ), have
provoked anger and disbelief. But despite many public complaints, local
authorities have declined to intervene because they are afraid of sparking
riots.

The issue of illegal street prayers was catapulted to the top of the
national political agenda in France in December 2010, when Marine Le Pen,
the charismatic new leader of the far-right National Front party, denounced
them as an "occupation without tanks or soldiers
<http://www.lefigaro.fr/politique/2010/12/11/01002-20101211ARTFIG00475-islam
-et-occupation-la-provocation-de-marine-le-pen.php> ."

During a gathering in the east central French city of Lyon on December 10,
Le Pen compared Muslims praying in the streets to Nazi occupation
<http://www.lepoint.fr/politique/marine-le-pen-compare-les-prieres-de-rue-de
s-musulmans-a-une-forme-d-occupation-11-12-2010-1274110_20.php> . She said:
"For those who want to talk a lot about World War II, if it is about
occupation, then we could also talk about it [Muslim prayers in the
streets], because that is occupation of territory. It is an occupation of
sections of the territory, of districts in which religious laws apply. It is
an occupation. There are of course no tanks, there are no soldiers but it is
nevertheless an occupation and it weighs heavily on local residents."

Many French voters agree. In fact, the issue of Muslim street prayers – and
the broader question of the role of Islam in French society – has become a
major issue ahead of the 2012 presidential elections. According to a survey
by Ifop for the France-Soir newspaper
<http://www.lepoint.fr/fil-info-reuters/39-des-francais-approuveraient-les-p
ropos-de-marine-le-pen-15-12-2010-1275361_240.php> , nearly 40% of French
voters agree with Len Pen's views that Muslim prayer in the streets
resembles an occupation. Another opinion poll published by Le Parisien
newspaper
<http://www.leparisien.fr/election-presidentielle-2012/sondage-marine-le-pen
-arrive-devant-sarkozy-dsk-et-hollande-08-03-2011-1348346.php>  shows that
voters view Le Pen, who has criss-crossed the country arguing that France
has been invaded by Muslims and betrayed by its elite, as the candidate best
suited to deal with the growing problem of runaway Muslim immigration.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, whose popularity was at 25% in July –
worse than any predecessor less than a year ahead of a re-election bid,
according to the TNS-Sofres polling group
<http://www.tns-sofres.com/popularites/cote2/redirect.php?nom2=Nicolas+Sarko
zy&perso=sarkozy&id_doumic=5270&fonction=Pr%E9sident+de+la+R%E9publique&star
t=1>  – has been spooked by Le Pen's advance in the opinion polls. He now
seems determined not to allow Le Pen to monopolize the issue of Islam in
France.

Sarkozy recently called Muslim prayers in the street "unacceptable" and said
that the street cannot be allowed to become "an extension of the mosque." He
also warned that the overflow of Muslim faithful on to the streets at prayer
time when mosques are packed to capacity risks undermining the French
secular tradition separating state and religion.

Interior Minister Claude Guéant on August 8 told Muslims who have been
praying on the streets of Paris
<http://www.english.rfi.fr/france/20110808-paris-muslims-offered-disused-bar
racks-stop-prayers-streets>  that they should utilize a disused barracks
instead. "Praying in the street is something that is not acceptable," Guéant
said. "It has to stop."

Meanwhile, France ushered in Ramadan by inaugurating a new mega-mosque for
2,000 worshipers in Strasbourg
<http://en.islamtoday.net/artshow-229-4158.htm> , where the Muslim
population has reached 15%. Construction also continues apace of a new
mega-mosque in Marseille, France's second-largest city where the Muslim
population has reached 25% (or 250,000). The Grand Mosque – which at more
than 8,300 square meters (92,000 square feet) will accommodate up to 7,000
worshippers in a vast prayer hall – is designed to be the biggest and most
potent symbol of Islam's place in modern France.

Boubakeur, of the Grande Mosque of Paris, says the construction of even more
mosques
<http://www.francesoir.fr/actualite/societe/dalil-boubakeur-%E2%80%9Cil-faut
-doubler-nombre-mosquees-en-france%E2%80%9D-54083.html>  – paid for by
French taxpayers – would ease the "pressure, frustration and the sense of
injustice" felt by many French Muslims. "Open a mosque and you close a
prison," says Boubakeur.

But Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has implied that the
construction of mosques and minarets actually is part of a strategy for the
Islamization of Europe. Publicly repeating the words of a 1912 poem written
by the Turkish nationalist poet Ziya Gökalp, Erdogan said: "The mosques are
our barracks, the domes our helmets, the minarets our bayonets and the
faithful our soldiers."

Reflecting on the retreat of Catholicism and the rise of Islam in France,
Archbishop Giuseppe Bernardini
<http://natcath.org/NCR_Online/archives2/1999d/102299/102299a.htm> , an
Italian Franciscan who heads the Izmir archdiocese in Turkey, and who has
lived in the Islamic world for more than 40 years, has recounted a
conversation he once had with a Muslim leader, who told him: "Thanks to your
democratic laws, we will invade you. Thanks to our religious laws, we will
dominate you."

        
        

 



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