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by Stefan Frank • November 18,
2017 at 5:00 am
- "While outside
the mosque there is constant talk of integration, the opposite
is preached inside. Only in rare instances are parts of the
sermon -- or even more rarely, all of the sermon -- translated
into German... [fostering] social integration into an internal
ethnic environment, and thus ethnic segmentation." —
Constantin Schreiber, author of Inside Islam: What Is Being
Preached in Germany's Mosques.
- "Politicians
who repeatedly emphasize their intention of cooperating with
the mosques, who invite them to conferences on Islam, have no
idea who is preaching what there." — Necla Kelek, human
rights activist and critic of Islam, human rights activist, in
the Allgemeine Zeitung.
The
Islamic Center of Vienna. (Image source: Zairon/Wikimedia Commons)
In the debate on migrants in Germany and Austria, no
other term is used more often than "integration." But the
institution that is most important for many Muslim migrants does
not generally contribute much to this effort — and often actively
fights it: the mosque. That is the finding of an official Austrian
study as well as private research conducted by a German journalist.
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