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Refugees will shake up German Muslim community

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In a country where the Turkish culture is dominant, the huge influx of refugees to Germany is expected to shake up the Muslim community, opening new gates of diversity and integration.

“Most sermons are held in Turkish,” Yasemin El-Menouar, Islam expert at think-tank the Bertelsmann Foundation, told Agence France Presse (AFP) on Wednesday, October 14.

For long decades, the Turkish culture and language have been dominant in Germany.

Starting from post-WWII industrial revival, the more than four-million Muslim community is “two-thirds of Turkish origin or culturally Turkish,” the researcher told AFP.

In the 1960s and 70s, Turkish construction and factory workers came to participate in the “economic miracle” years.

Today, “even in the second and third generation, Turkish influence is strong,” said El-Menouar.

Currently, most of the countries mosques, about 900 mosques, are managed by the DITIB, the European arm of the Turkish state secretariat for religious affairs, a key interlocutor for German authorities on matters related to the third largest religion in the country.

In these religious communities imams have usually been sent directly by Ankara for over 30 years.

Most of the time, they do not speak German, and very often, it is a portrait of Ataturk, the father of modern, secular Turkey, which adorns the walls of the organization.

The huge influx of refugees is expected to make a huge change to the status quo.

“Now they will have to open up to Muslims from other parts of the world,” said El-Menouar.

It could be a “stroke of luck,” said Mouhanad Khorchide, who holds the Chair on Islam at the University of Munster.

“Islam in Germany will gain in diversity,” said Khorchide, who lives under police protection after receiving death threats from radical Islamists.

The number of newcomers is enormous. Of the more than 800,000 new asylum seekers expected in Germany this year, some 80 percent are Muslims, according to the Central Council of Muslims in Germany (ZMD).

More than 161,000 Syrians now live in Germany and the number is expected to grow further, making it the largest Syrian community in Europe.

Integration

Opening Germany’s gates to refugees, Chancellor Angela Merkel has repeatedly reminded refugees to respect the principles of a free society and the rule of law.

Germany will continue to be defined by “the constitution, the social market economy, the freedoms of religion and expression,” she said in a newspaper interview Monday.

“To the people who come here, we make clear from day one that we have laws and rules that govern communal life which they must follow. Only in this way can Germany be a safe haven to them”.

In Berlin, in the 12 asylum homes run by the Workers Welfare (AWO) aid organization, no religious practice is allowed, a rule meant to preempt potential problems.

“We tell those who ask where there are mosques nearby but we do not authorise any prayers over our loudspeakers,” said its chairman Manfred Nowak.

For Khorchide, of Munster University, the major challenge will be the social integration of young refugees.

“If we leave them on the margins of society, if we do not quickly give them the feeling that they are wanted in Germany, then the danger is great that they turn to Salafist and radical movements,” he said.

The risk is however diminished by the fact that many have just fled from radical Islamists in Syria or Iraq, said El-Menouar.

Khorchide shared a similar opinion.

“Those who lived through the atrocities of the Assad regime or the Islamic State do not want to hear talk of Islamic fighters,” he said, using the term to reference ISIL fighters. ONISLAM


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