Sunday, February 01, 2009

Martyrs, Hand Grenades, and Austrian Religious Education

Anas Schakfeh

Last week we posted about the active failure of Turks in Germany to assimilate to their host culture. On Friday our Austrian correspondent ESW reported on an alarming opinion survey of teachers of Islam in Austrian public schools. It turns out that those charged with the religious education of Muslim children have a disquietingly high incidence of radical thinking.

The blowback from the teacher survey continues to ripple through Austria’s public discussion. A prominent figure in the current controversy is Anas Schakfeh, the head of Austria’s Islamic Faith Community.

ESW has translated some more German-language material on the topic, beginning with this op-ed by Michael Fleischhacker from Die Presse:

Schakfeh is acting like the FPÖ

From Mouhanad Khorchide’s study emerges that every fifth Islamic teacher in Austria one way or another has a problem with democracy, and that is alarming. Alarming not only for itself, but also for the Islamic Faith Community which is responsible for the hiring of these teachers. But most disconcerting of all is the reaction of the president of this faith community, Anas Schakfeh.

It is precisely this mixture of false or simulated awareness of the problem, a culture of blame, and a mentality of brushing off those problems, that has been shaping the relationship between the official Austria and the official Islam for years, while out there in real life many problems are continuously accumulating:

  • Schakfeh admits, using a slight euphemism, that the results of the study are “definitely not pleasant”. But “similarly unpleasant” is the “scandal-mongering way some media are reacting to the study”, which “the majority of the public” knows about “only in small detail”. What does that mean? The data presented is clear, and it is alarming. Whoever denounces the news coverage as “scandal-mongering” argues that media are constructing a non-existent scandal. This allegation is absurd.
  • Anas Schakfeh is also concerned about “the negative stereotyping and fears about Muslims” nourishing “serious ramifications for social problems in Austria”. Is the president of the Islamic Faith Community seriously claiming that it is not the insufficient identification of the Islamic teachers that is a problem for Austrian society, but rather the open discussion about this fact?
  • Schakfeh’s comment about the “respect that we have for the freedom of science” and the resulting inability “to interfere in the way those questions were formulated” is almost scandalous. There were some “irritating phrases”, which called for “suggestive answers”, and that “cannot have been the purpose of a well-founded study”. Schakfeh would have asked the following question: “Are democracy and Islam compatible?”, and would have gotten the desired 100% agreement instead of 78%. However, asking a question like that is not representative as every freshman sociologist knows. The president of the Islamic Faith Community is saying that it was a mistake to respect the scientific approach because “well-founded” results can only be guaranteed if the institutional sponsor intervenes in the way questions are asked.

This is unacceptable. It also shows that the official Islam, even if it not legitimized its members, is playing a double game: In the official “Dialogue of Cultures and Religions” there are discussions about the compatibility of Islam and European-democratic culture. But in everyday political life these discussions, even if well-founded, are killed by accusing the bearer of the bad news of hate speech against Islam. The FPÖ reacts in a similar way regarding its proximity to right-wing extremism.

This doubly problematic: It confirms the existing preconception about Austrian Muslims officially professing allegiance to human rights, democracy and the rule of law, while on the inside waiting for the possibility to implement their own visions of Sharia. And it weakens those who have been working on a theological basis on something like a “European Islam”, like the Institute of Islamic Education at the University of Vienna.
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Unfortunately, Schakfeh has congenial partners in official Austria for his strategy of actively doing nothing: Chancellor [Werner] Faymann leaves it at saying nothing by saying “We should not discuss new law paragraphs”, while the minister in charge, Claudia Schmied, wants “clear picture about the situation on the ground”. If she is saying that until now she has not had a clear picture of reality, it is perhaps not surprising, but also not very encouraging.

Next, an op-ed by Peter Rabl from Kurier:

Turks refusing integration

The critical discussion about Turkish immigrants is long overdue

It’s good news that integration is becoming a central political issue and that sweet-talking these obvious problems with immigrants has finally come to an end. The bad news is that the awareness gained from this objective approach is that many Turkish immigrants refuse integration and are living in questionable parallel societies.

This discussion about immigration problems, which should not be left to the xenophobic political right-wingers, is long overdue. Problems and facts remain problems and facts even if they are politically abused by people like Strache [FPÖ leader].

Last week a German study revealed that Turkish immigrants have the least interest in integration. The distressing results of this study are also valid for Turks in Austria, especially in Vienna.

In the best case, 75% of second and third-generation Turks are graduates of compulsory education; many leave school without proper language skills and reading abilities. Only 4% graduate from high school. Every third girl stays at home after finishing school. The career plan: Housewife and mother.

This results in an unemployment rate among Turkish immigrants of more than 12%, three times as high as that of indigenous Austrians. With the proportion of Turks who are seeking a full-time job versus those who have one, the situation is even worse.

Wrong immigration policies

What is today an almost unsolvable problem has its roots in the completely failed immigration policies of the past decades. Cheap laborers — illiterates from Anatolia — were hired for the worst and most menial jobs. And under the title of “family reunion” many women and children followed.

Because of their illiteracy, the first generation was unable to encourage its children to seek proper education. Instead, these families secluded themselves in their archaic patriarchal family structures and, increasingly, in Islamic religiosity and in Turkish nationalism.

There are tens of thousands of immigrant Turks who live in a parallel world between mosques and Turkish satellite TV programs in their homes. Their chances of integrating fail because of their own reluctance and their insufficient German language skills, which have been passed on to many small children. Their chances for low-paying jobs, jobs for which they alone are qualified, are sinking rapidly in the wake of the [economic] crisis. A sort of sub-proletariat is now being formed, dependent on welfare payments.

One must start considering whether those unwilling to integrate should be sent back to their home countries, perhaps with the help of financial incentives.

For their own good and that of the host country.

Finally, what may the death-knell for Anas Schakfeh’s public career, from Wien-Heute:

Scandal: Religious education book shows martyr with gun and hand grenade

[See the image at the top of this post]

The news magazine Profil reports in its latest issue about a book used in Islamic religious education. This book was edited by the president of the Islamic Faith Community, Anas Schakfeh. The book shows a “martyr” who is dying on the battlefield. The caption reads: “A Muslim who dies in Allah’s path and in defense of his home country is a martyr (shahid). He will be rewarded by Allah with entry into paradise, just as Allah promised in the Quran.” The picture shows a soldier holding a gun and a hand grenade.

This school book is used for third and fourth graders. Says Schakfeh: “I know this looks really bad, but I had simply forgotten about the existence of this picture. But we are currently working on changing these books.” He adds that this picture in no way wants to glorify martyrdom. Martyrs are part of Christian and Islamic culture, and the picture shows the siege of the city of Medina, the first Islamic community.

“A president of a religious faith group whose religion is determined by martyrs holding a gun and hand grenades must resign immediately. We don’t need Islamic religious warriors in Austria and in our schools and school books, “ says Martin Strutz, secretary general of BZÖ.

In addition, Schakfeh’s confession today about a well-known radical Islamist, member of a well-known Islamist party, who was not only a school coordinator, but now also works as a teacher, show that Schakfeh is not a moderate, but a wolf in sheep’s clothing.

Commentary from ESW:

Schakfeh is in real trouble. The Green party has now added its weight into the discussion calling for Schakfeh’s resignation. The Greens have always been vocal supporters of anything Muslim. This study, alongside the troubling German study about the lack of integration among Turkish immigrants, is causing the Muslims a lot of heartache. The pressure is increasing. It’s a pleasure watching these events unfold. Taqiyya is failing them!

6 comments:

Profitsbeard said...

Islam: the theocratic equivalent of the Cuckoo's Egg.

Watch your nests!

Charlemagne said...

I went to graduate school in Vienna in 1999 at the Vienna School of Business and Economics (Wirtschaftsuniversitat Wien) and lived in a district near the amusement park (Der Prater) and the Danube (Donau) which was also a heavily Turkish neighborhood.
This was long before I became aware of the Islamization taking place and long before I discovered blogging. Frankly I was wary and suspicious of them and quite startled by their large numbers. I had never encountered women with their heads covered. The young men struck me as thuggish hoodlums always dressed as if they were on their way to a nightclub with their tight pants and shirts and their greasy, slicked back hair. They reminded me of Hispanic gang members here in the US.
I didn't notice much commingling between Austrians and Turks. I didn't think much of it at the time but now that distance may have been the same feeling we Americans have when we encounter whtt we know, or assume, to be an illegal alien in Home Depot speaking Spanish.
After grad school I went to work for FedEx, again, before blogging, and was surprised by the large number of Turks working for FedEx. They were casually referred to as the "Turkish Mafia" because of how close they were with one another.
The Turkish women at FedEx were to a woman quite attractive, even sexy. One married an American and I don't think either one converted to the other's religion. I believe they were even married in Turkey. Another Turkish woman married one of our Russian colleagues.
When I contrast this with the Austrian encounter I assume we do a better job of assimilation. But also our doors aren't wide open to Muslims so a better contrast might be with Mexican immigrants to the US.

My apologies for the rambling. I had a long drive this evening.

And I hope everyone in the US has read about the FBI severing all ties with CAIR and a letter being circulated on Capitol Hill advising all members of Congress to not do business with CAIR. Victory!

Czechmade said...

"Stereotyping muslims" comes again and again. We should slowly write down an encyclopaedia of muslim excuses:

Muslims stereotype themselves by taking Mohammad as ultimate model.
Look at him and you get the "perfect" stereotype.

Accidently we want a muslim to be just opposite of Mo stereotype and we would like very much to call him then a "good muslim".

This logical lapsus cannot work and we should take a stance to it once for ever.

Unknown said...

Charlemagne,

Assimilation of Muslims is a myth. It does not happen. Probably the Turkish immigrants you encountered at home in the US were secular Turks from the Kemalist cities in Rumelia.

The Turkish immigrants to Austria are "illiterates from Anatolia" (i.e. Islamic country bumpkins) where Ataturk's state suppression of Islam was never accepted.

Zenster said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Dymphna said...

zenster--

An apology for a comment well over 800 words doesn't cut it...long comments morph into diatribes and become more and more uncivil the longer they go on.

So here is Zenster, abridged:

…Schakfeh should be more concerned about how Muslims exhibit a consistent pattern of non-assimilation and violent opposition or predation upon host cultures.

And it weakens those who have been working on a theological basis on something like a “European Islam…

And well it should. History has shown just how infrequently there has been any significant modification of Islam during its inexorable spread.

There will be no "European Islam", just as there will be no "American Islam". There will be only "Islam" and it will come with all its usual uncivilized, barbaric practices.

There are tens of thousands of immigrant Turks who live in a parallel world between mosques and Turkish satellite TV programs in their homes.

Block those "Turkish satellite TV programs" that inhibit assimilation.

One must start considering whether those unwilling to integrate should be sent back to their home countries, perhaps with the help of financial incentives.

Some legislation regarding linguistic fluency might form the basis for legitimate ejection by host cultures beset with non-assimilating immigrants.

“A Muslim who dies in Allah’s path and in defense of his home country is a martyr (shahid). He will be rewarded by Allah with entry into paradise, just as Allah promised in the Quran.”

So long as Muslims continue clinging to their notions of martyrdom and paradise, it only increases the West's urgency to permanently discredit the imputed infallability of Allah.

…. Says Schakfeh: “I know this looks really bad, but I had simply forgotten about the existence of this picture. But we are currently working on changing these books.” He adds that this picture in no way wants to glorify martyrdom. Martyrs are part of Christian and Islamic culture, and the picture shows the siege of the city of Medina, the first Islamic community.

This is pure and undiluted taqiyya.

WHY DID A CHILDREN'S TEXTBOOK CONTAIN THAT PICTURE IN THE FIRST PLACE?

Furthermore, there can be no equating of Christian martyrdom and its Islamic counterpart. Christian martyrs die rather than rejecting their faith. Muslims kill those who refuse to adopt their odious creed.

Finally, Medina's siege predated the invention of guns and hand grenades by some dozen centuries. The picture is clearly pro-terrorist propaganda and nothing else.

We don’t need Islamic religious warriors in Austria and in our schools and school books, “ says Martin Strutz, secretary general of BZÖ.

Better the ugly truth than a beautiful lie. Despite all PC and MC blathering to the contrary.

This study, alongside the troubling German study about the lack of integration among Turkish immigrants, is causing the Muslims a lot of heartache. The pressure is increasing. It’s a pleasure watching these events unfold. Taqiyya is failing them!

[I]t it is not so much a matter of taqiyya "failing them" as the supremacy of civilized conduct properly asserting itself. Moreover, taqiyya is not just a failing of Islam. It single-handedly damns Islam and Muslims irretrievably by its very existence.
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BTW, Zenster, "nuke Mecca" is not on the list of civil suggestions...cut it out.