Group: soc.culture.pakistan
From: Islamaphobia
Date: Thursday, March 13, 2008 1:51 PM
Subject: Germany opens door for Islam classes in public schools

Meeting calls for Islam instruction at German schools - Summary
Posted : Thu, 13 Mar 2008 15:47:08 GMT

Berlin - Religious instruction in Islam should be available to Muslims attending German
schools, a conference initiated by Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble agreed Thursday. Islam
classes was one of a series of proposals discussed at the day-long meeting between
representatives of the Muslim community and officials from the German government and federal
states.

Complaining of "a lack of understanding" between Germans and Muslims, Schaeuble said the Islam
Conference had a responsibility to cultivate a "common understanding of how we can co-exist."

The meeting, the third in the past 18 months, reviewed ideas presented by four working groups
designed to improve the integration of Germany's 3.4 million Muslims, half of them Turks.

In his opening speech, the interior minister conceded there were still differences between the
two sides, but denied there was "a major dispute about values."

Schaeuble hopes that the introduction of Islam classes at schools will help prevent a
radicalization of young Muslims by so-called hate preachers who speak at mosques.

Under the plans, Germany's federal states, who are responsible for education, would supervise
the religious instruction, which would be carried out in German by state-approved teachers.

"We have freedom of religion. That means there is equality and as a result of this it is
possible to introduce religious instruction for Islam," Schaeuble said ahead of the talks.

One of the conditions for this is that Muslims in Germany organize themselves as a religious
community under Germany's religious incorporation laws, said Schaeuble.

Unlike Christian churches, Islam is not recognized as a religious community in Germany.

A spokesman for the Coordination Council for Muslims in Germany, Bekir Alboga, called the
introduction of Islam classes "a big step forward."

The head of Germany's Protestant Church organization EKD, Bishop Wolfgang Huber, also welcomed
the move, but stressed the lessons should be given by recognized teachers.

Differences between liberal and conservative Muslims had threatened to derail the 30-member
conference, which first met in September 2006. Five figures representing mosques and 10 secular
Muslims spoke for the Muslim community at the gathering.

Thursday's meeting followed an emotional debate on relations between Turks and Germans in the
wake of an apartment block fire which killed nine Turks in the southern city of Ludwigshafen.

Initial reports in the Turkish press spoke of arson, but an investigation showed no evidence
that the February fire had been started deliberately.

A survey published in Germany's Die Ziet magazine this week showed three-quarters of the
Turkish community feels that Chancellor Angela Merkel does not speak for their interests.

The government's commissioner for integration, Maria Boehmer, said the results showed "that we
have a lot to do to increase the sense of belonging among migrants of Turkish origin."

The Emnid survey found that 58 per cent of Turks felt unwanted in Germany and 44 per cent were
opposed to intermarriage with Germans.

In line with a recent call by Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan for Turks not to abandon
their identity, 92 per cent said "Turks in Germany should maintain their own culture."

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