Germany: Less Jesus, More Muhammad
Germany’s Green Party has introduced into parliament a 24-point plan to secure the “institutional anchoring” of Islam in Germany.
Germany’s Green Party has introduced into parliament a 24-point plan to secure the “institutional anchoring” of Islam in Germany.
The Dutch Parliament has narrowly approved a motion to ban the Muslim Brotherhood, a transnational Islamist group that seeks to establish a global Islamic Caliphate.
A research survey shows that young Muslims in France are markedly more religious than their parents and exhibit a level of religiosity well above that of other religions.
Across Europe, elected officials, business leaders, school superintendents, sports team owners—even Christian and Jewish clergy—are going out of their way to celebrate Ramadan, the month-long commemoration of the time when Muslims believe the Qur’an was first revealed to Muhammad.
A new report on radicalization in Germany has revealed that nearly half of all Muslims under 40 years of age in the country are sympathetic to Islamism, the belief that all social and political systems should be guided by Islam.
Israel’s Ministry for Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism released a new report showing that the Muslim Brotherhood is operating across Europe to “Islamize” the continent, fuel antisemitism, and delegitimize Israel.
A highly publicized new book that claims to reconcile the practice of Islam with France’s principle of state secularism has reopened a long-running debate about the role of Islam in Western societies.
The German government’s laissez-faire approach to Islamism has moved the problem into a taboo zone that has strengthened the Islamists.
A new German Islamist party that is close to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has obtained authorization from Germany’s Federal Election Committee to participate in upcoming elections for the European Parliament.
A new ban on foreign-appointed imams in France is aimed at combating Islamist separatism, but the policy risks making matters worse by handing future decisions about hiring imams over to local groups affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood.
A German government plan to ease citizenship requirements for millions of Turkish immigrants could lead to the creation of Germany’s first national Islamist party, German lawmakers are warning.
Turkish government-controlled mosques in Germany have openly praised the Hamas massacre of 1,200 Israelis to inflame hatred against Jews and Israel. This in turn has spurred calls on the German government to intervene.