Sat, May 26 2012

Poll finds French, Germans think Muslims have not fully integrated

Fri, Jan 07 2011 00:05 CET 2253 Views 4 Comments
Poll finds French, Germans think Muslims have not fully integrated

Muslims pray during morning prayers to mark the end of the Islamic Holy month of Ramadan in a mosque in Sofia, October 2007.

Photo: Reuters

A new poll finds that most French and Germans believe Muslims have not integrated well into their societies. Many feel they present a threat. 

The study by the polling agency IFOP and France's Le Monde  newspaper confirms rising tensions in traditionally Christian Europe with its new Muslim population. More than two-thirds of the roughly 1600 people polled in France and Germany believe Muslims are not well integrated in their societies. Perhaps more troubling, roughly four out of 10 French and Germans consider Islam a threat. 

Jerome Fourquet is deputy director of IFOP's polling in France:

Fourquet says the findings indicate that in France and Germany - two countries with very different immigration backgrounds - the sentiment is similarly negative about Muslim integration. He said a few years ago the immigration debate centered around security and employment issues. Now it's about national identity and the threat Islam poses to it. 

The poll follows a hardening of attitudes toward Islam - Europe's second largest religion. France and Belgium have passed laws banning the face covering veil. Switzerland voted to ban the minarets on mosques. And far-right parties, most of whom have anti-Muslim and immigrant platforms, have made strides in countries like Sweden and the Netherlands. 

Fourquet said IFOP would like to poll other European countries, and might find slightly different attitudes in places like Britain. But he believes the overall trend is the same.

But Fourquet said there is also a difference between perceptions and reality.  The majority of Germans and French polled for example said they were not against having a Muslim mayor in their towns. The challenge, he said, is how to reconcile increasingly secular European societies with the Muslim populations in their midst.


Source: VOANews.com

  • Print
  • Send via email
  • Translate to
  • Share:

Comments

Anonymous chicha Sun, Jan 09 2011 19:00 CET

We aren't cold blooded ,it's absurd .when we integrat is a problem when not is a probelm too ??? but those EU countries using and taking our energy??

Anonymous KG Sun, Jan 09 2011 17:29 CET

The Muslims believe that they have the absolute truth - religious and secular - hence the forbidding of conversion of a Muslim to any other faith under pain of death. So how can they integrate.
They should not be allowed into any other non- Muslim copuntry unless they swear that they will abide by the legal/secular rules obatining in the country to which they wish to emigrate.
Kg

Anonymous Vincent Fri, Jan 07 2011 21:59 CET

well , they want their host country to integrate to them ....

Islamisation is the name of their game ...

Anonymous we Fri, Jan 07 2011 21:19 CET

Is impossible for them to integrate because they are born cold blooded.


To post comments, please, Login or Register.


Please read the The Sofia Echo forum comments policy.

Copts on global high alert after Egypt bombing

Tensions between Copts and Islamist groups escalated after al Qaida-linked group in Iraq accused Egyptian Copts of detaining 2 women converts to Islam

Bulgarian President on radicalism, police sitcoms and tolerance

Georgi Purvanov: Bulgarian people need security, safety, calm, as well as solid and powerful municipalities.

Raid on radical group was not ‘anti-Islam’, Bulgarian prosecutors say

Imam, supporters and residents where bust of unregistered Muslim radical group took place allege that action by prosecutors and security agents was anti-Islam, while some claim a link to power struggle among Bulgaria’s Muslims.

Bulgaria busts radical Muslim group

Propaganda advocating religious hatred and the overthrow of the constitutional order found during October 6 2010 raid, Interior Ministry says.

Exploiting Islamophobia

Radical Islamists see a propaganda and recruitment opportunity in the New York mosque controversy as well as other manifestations of anti-Muslim feeling

The veiled and the cross

Bulgaria drawn into controversy about religious symbols

More in this category

Global food prices ease, but stay high, FAO says

The global food import bill in 2012 could decline to $1.24 trillion, down slightly from last year’s record of $1.29 trillion.

Bulgarian Olympic champion sentenced to nine years' jail in Brazil

Boevski has been under arrest in Brazil since October, when he was arrested at Sao Paulo's international airport with nine kg of cocaine in his luggage.

Bulgarian media tinted by owners' other interests – SEEMO report

Whereas foreign media ownership is perceived as advantageous for media outlets and journalists, Bulgarian owners are perceived as investors with short-term vision who strive for immediate profits.

Prevent violent extremism by being better at identifying people at risk of radicalisation – Malmström

Killing spree in Norway in July 2011 and the arrests of individuals in a number of EU member states for the preparation of terrorist attacks, are proof of the continuing need for vigilance, Europol says.

On annual World Book Day, UN emphasises importance of translation

In her message to mark the Day, Bulgaria's Bokova said that books are 'valuable tools' for knowledge-sharing, mutual understanding and openness to others and to the world.