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.