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by Yves Mamou • August 25, 2018
at 5:00 am
- The first
legislative rider abolished the obligation of religious
associations to declare themselves as lobbying groups -- a
measure that clearly opens the way for entities such as Muslim
Brotherhood to lobby Members of Parliament without leaving a
trace.
- Is it, however, the
business of the secular State of France to organize
Muslims and train "republican" imams?
- The tradition in
France ever since the 1905 secularism law -- one accepted by
all religions except Islam -- is that religion may not to impose
its rules on secular society. Now it is France that must adapt
to Islam.
- The big question is:
Who will be heading and managing this new framework? Will it
be the Muslim Brotherhood, the most powerful organization,
which controls more than 2,000 mosques in France? Or a young
guard of Muslim technocrats close to the president but with no
ties to mosques, imams and the organized Muslim community in
general?
The Grand
Mosque of Paris. (Image source: LPLT/Wikimedia Commons)
In a confessional book, "A President Shouldn't
Say That...", published in 2016, a few months before the 2017
French presidential election, France's then President François
Hollande admitted that France has "a problem with Islam. No
one doubts it," he wrote. He wrote as well that France has a
problem with veiled women in public and with mass immigration. Then
he added: "How can one avoid a partition? Because that is
still what is happening: a partition".
The "partition" about which Hollande was
talking was the partition of France -- one part for Muslims and
another for non-Muslims.
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