Germany: Islamists Infiltrating Schools in Hamburg
The document warns that increasing numbers of students in Hamburg are being influenced by Islamist propaganda and are embracing radical Islam and idolizing jihadist fighters in Syria.The problems in Hamburg are drawing renewed attention to the alarming growth of Salafism in Germany. Salafists openly state that they want to replace democracy in Germany (and the rest of the world) with a Sunni Islamic government based on sharia law.
Muslim radicals are imposing
Islamic norms and values in primary and secondary public schools in
Hamburg, the second-largest city in Germany, say school officials, who
are asking for stepped-up monitoring of the Salafist groups thought to
be behind the Islamization efforts.
At least 25 schools across
Hamburg are believed to have been infiltrated by Salafists and other
fundamentalist Muslim groups, according to German media reports. But
local politicians from the ruling Social Democratic Party (SPD)—a party
committed to enforcing multiculturalism in Hamburg—have refused to
disclose precisely which schools are affected.
Now, for the first time, a confidential report leaked to the German newspaper Bild
identifies seven of the problem schools by name. The schools where
Islamist fanatics are “waging a religious war” against non-Muslim
teachers and classmates are located in districts across the city, the
document says, but the situation in Mümmelmannsberg in eastern Hamburg
is “particularly appalling” and “the focus of an organized strategy” by
Islamists to recruit new followers.
Teachers and school
administrators say that efforts by Muslim fundamentalists to run the
schools “according to their own rules” have increased in recent months,
and speculation is rife that the document was leaked by someone seeking
to force city officials into taking more forceful action.
School principals are being
pressured, among other demands, into setting up special prayer rooms for
Muslim children, who are increasingly gathering for prayers and
shouting Islamist slogans on school playgrounds. Girls are requesting
exemptions from gym classes and swimming lessons, and are being harassed
if they fail to dress according to Islamic norms.
Teachers at the Öjendorf
District School and the An der Glinder Au primary school say that some
Muslim parents are being asked by other Muslims to ensure their
daughters are dressing according to Islamic standards. The pressure to
conform to Islamic norms has been “especially great” at the
Mümmelmannsberg District School, where teachers have observed gender
discrimination, coercion on clothing issues and cases of religiously
motivated violence.
Teachers
at the An der Glinder Au primary school say that some Muslim parents
are being asked by other Muslims to ensure their daughters are dressing
according to Islamic standards.
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Muslim students at the
Bergedorf District School in southeastern Hamburg frequently provoke
“aggressive verbal confrontations” that have a clear “Salafist
orientation and influence,” according to the report. Similar incidents
have been reported at schools in the Hamm and Stellingen districts.
The latest allegations mirror
those contained in a separate document—entitled “Religiously Colored
Conflict Situations in Hamburg Schools” [Religiös gefärbte Konfliktlagen
an Hamburger Schulen] and dated December 2013—that was leaked to a
German newspaper in February 2014.
The document was produced by the Landesinstituts für Lehrerbildung, an official training institute for teachers. Although Hamburg officials are refusing to make the document available to the general public, excerpts of it were published by the Hamburger Morgenpost on February 17.
The document warns that
increasing numbers of students in Hamburg are being influenced by
Islamist propaganda and are embracing radical Islam and idolizing
jihadist fighters in Syria. The report—which is said to paint a
frightening picture of what is taking place in schools across the
city—says that school principals are alarmed and confused and are
seeking help from state authorities.
According to the Hamburger Morgenpost,
Islamists are pressuring female students to wear headscarves and skip
swimming lessons. Teachers are being subjected to religiously motivated
threats of violence and constant trouble over “eating, physical
education and prayer opportunities in schools,” as well as the content
of religious education.
Girls are “not allowed to dance
or play” and are “prohibited from going on school trips.” Teachers have
found the notebooks of some students to be filled with “particularly
radical Salafist propaganda.” The report describes the case of an Alevi
[a sect within Shia Islam] student who was bullied so much by Sunni
classmates that his parents took him out of school.
Radicalized parents are
“demanding prayer opportunities in classrooms,” and youth are
“organizing spontaneous group prayers at central locations within
schools with the express intention of provoking confrontation.” Efforts
to halt such prayers are fruitless because Muslim students say they have
a “constitutional right to religious freedom.”
The document says that children
from disadvantaged backgrounds are particularly vulnerable to
radicalization, and that the war in Syria is fueling religious fervor in
schools to such an extent that jihadists are being idolized. One school
says the “tension and concern is palpable,” and has asked German
authorities for help.
An article published by another Hamburg newspaper, the Hamburger Abendblatt,
provides an in-depth look at the pressure tactics used by Islamists in
Hamburg schools. The article says there are many indications that the
problem is much bigger than currently known, partly because many
teachers and school administrators are afraid to report incidents of
intimidation, harassment, threats and abuse.
At one school, a teacher wanted
to organize a parent-teacher conference after he was threatened by
radical Muslim students. But two colleagues who were also threatened
backed out of the event at the last minute because they were afraid of
the students. As a result, disciplinary actions were abandoned. The
teacher was also told that the school board’s Violence Prevention Unit
was unable to help him. “The threat potential is large, the system is
helpless,” he said. “There must be clear rules and safeguards.”
At another school located on
the other side of Hamburg, a veteran teacher says that lately he has
observed that many of the female students have adopted an Islamic dress
code. “Their behavior has also changed” he says, “and they look similar
to ‘black widows’ [female suicide bombers in the Caucasus].”
Hamburg authorities—who concluded a “historic treaty”
with the city’s 200,000-strong Muslim community in November 2012—have
downplayed the problems, describing them as “isolated incidents.”
Hamburg Senator Ties Rabe, who is responsible for the city’s schools,
issued a statement
on February 21 saying that Salafism is not welcome in the classroom and
problem students could be expelled from school. But he also put the
responsibility on teachers to “ensure a peaceful coexistence on the
school grounds.”
The problems in Hamburg are
drawing renewed attention to the alarming growth of Salafism in Germany.
Salafists, who trace their roots to Saudi Arabia, openly state that
they want to replace democracy in Germany (and the rest of the world)
with a Sunni Islamic government based on Sharia law.
According to German intelligence, the number of committed Salafists in Germany
now exceeds 5,500, up from 4,500 in 2012 and 3,800 in 2011. Around 70%
are Germans and 30% are non-Germans, coming from a variety of nations
including Turkey, Morocco and Bosnia. About a quarter of the Salafists
in Germany are Muslim converts.
Although Salafists make up only
a fraction of the estimated 4.3 million Muslims in Germany, authorities
are concerned that most of those attracted to Salafi ideology are
impressionable young Muslims who are especially susceptible to
committing suicide attacks in the name of Islam.
Germany has banned several
Salafist Muslim groups—”DawaFFM,” “Islamische Audios,” “An-Nusrah,”
“Millatu Ibrahim,” “Hizb ut-Tahrir”—that it says wants to “overturn
democracy and install a system based on Islamic Sharia law.”
“Salafism … is incompatible
with our free democratic order,” former German Interior Minister
Hans-Peter Friedrich said in March 2013. “The groups aim to change our
society in an aggressive, belligerent way so that democracy would be
replaced by a Salafist system, and the rule of law replaced by Sharia
law.”
Hans-Georg Maaßen, the head of Germany’s domestic intelligence agency, the Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz (BfV), says
the Salafist threat to Germany is rising and warns that unless the
government “takes decisive action against violent Islamists,” the
Salafist groups “will continue to grow and the threat of violence will
increase.”
A recent exposé by the Hamburger Abendblatt
shows that Salafism is alive and well in Germany. The number of its
adherents is swelling in all parts of the country, due in part to young
Muslims who are becoming radicalized by the war in Syria. German
Salafists are also raising considerable amounts of money for the more
than 300 German jihadists currently fighting the Syrian government.
Soeren Kern is a Senior Fellow at the New York-based Gatestone Institute. He is also Senior Fellow for European Politics at the Madrid-based Grupo de Estudios Estratégicos / Strategic Studies Group. Follow him on Facebook and on Twitter.
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