Germany Adds Lessons in Islam to Better Blend Its Melting Pot
FRANKFURT
— For the first time, German public schools are offering classes in
Islam to primary school students using state-trained teachers and
specially written textbooks, as officials try to better integrate the
nation’s large Muslim minority and counter the growing influence of
radical religious thinking.
The
classes offered in Hesse State are part of a growing consensus that
Germany, after decades of neglect, should do more to acknowledge and
serve its Muslim population if it is to foster social harmony, overcome
its aging demographics and head off a potential domestic security
threat.
The
need, many here say, is ever more urgent. According to German security
officials and widespread reports in the German news media, this past
semester at least two young Germans in Hesse — one thought to be just 16
— were killed in Syria after heeding the call for jihad and apparently
being recruited by hard-line Salafist preachers in Frankfurt.
Such
cases have stirred alarm not only that some young Germans are
increasingly feeling alienated and vulnerable to recruitment, but also
that they will eventually bring their fight home, along with new skills
in the use of weapons and explosives gained on distant battlefields.
Other parts of Europe with expanding Muslim minorities — including
France, Britain, Spain and Scandinavian countries — are facing similar
challenges of integration and radicalization.
The
Hesse curriculum effectively places Islamic instruction on equal
footing with similarly state-approved ethics training in the Protestant
and Catholic faiths. By offering young Muslims a basic introduction to
Islam as early as first grade, emphasizing its teachings on tolerance
and acceptance, the authorities hope to inoculate young people against
more extreme religious views while also signaling state acceptance of
their faith.
Parents
have the option to enroll their children in the religious education
classes offered in the district. Nurguel Altuntas, who helped develop
the Hesse program at the state’s Ministry of Education, said the sign-up
for 29 classes in immigrant-heavy districts was enthusiastic.
For
German authorities, countering the expansion of more radical religious
thinking has presented a vexing problem. For now, the domestic
intelligence service keeps close watch on a growing number, with 4,500
Salafists under observation in 2011 and 5,500 in 2012, according to an
annual government report. The figures for 2013 are not yet available,
but “we are reckoning with another increase, whether sharp or gradual I
cannot say,” said a security official, speaking on the condition of
anonymity.
Increasingly,
attention has turned to education and ways to nurture greater inclusion
for Germany’s approximately four million Muslims, a number that has
steadily increased since German industry recruited the first Turks as
“guest workers” in the 1960s. How to integrate that minority has long
been a source of tension in a country of more than 80 million that has
also struggled with — and even resisted — absorbing Christian and
European outsiders into the fabric of German life.
One
answer, officials in Hesse hope, is being put in effect in classes
where young children are guided by a state-trained teacher working from a
state-approved curriculum.
In
one class, Timur Kumlu recently asked his 19 6-year-old students each
to take a strand from a large wool ball. He then instructed the children
— whose parents hailed from Muslim countries as varied as Afghanistan,
Albania, Morocco and Turkey — to examine how, like the threads, they,
too, were woven together.
It
was a simple lesson containing a gentle message filled with symbolism —
that they were linked by their Islamic faith and practices of prayer.
“We
are now all bound together — you come from different countries, and so
do your parents,” said Mr. Kumlu, who reminded the children that while
their parents came from Afghanistan or Albania, they were born in
Germany.scroll down for the rest of the article
His
generally well-behaved pupils squirmed a bit, but listened attentively.
“They come here with such different backgrounds,” Mr. Kumlu said after
the lesson. “We must educate so that they develop a personality with
common roots,” in Germany and in Islam.
Suspicion of radical Islam mounted when a Hamburg-based cell of Arabs was involved in the Sept. 11 attacks. The so-called Sauerland cell, which targeted Germans in 2007, and a foiled bombing of the Bonn railway station in December 2012 both involved German citizens.
Enduring
battles over whether any public servant can wear a head scarf also
underscore the persistent gap between non-Muslim Germans and Muslims who
are nonetheless an ever larger part of each other’s lives.
For
many teachers, German officials and, not least, Germany’s Muslims,
wider instruction in Islam is a belated effort to redress decades of
exclusion from the mainstream. Those years of marginalization, they say,
meant many of Germany’s Muslims learned their faith by rote teaching at
Quran schools, or from the hard-line musings over the Internet or in
the courtyard mosques of immigrant neighborhoods in major cities like
Hamburg or Berlin.
“I
think it’s clear now that for years we made the mistake of alienating
people,” said Nicola Beer, who as education minister in Hesse was one of
several politicians, professors and teachers who pushed for the Islamic
instruction. Now, she said, Germans recognize that “we are here
together, we work together, and we educate our children together.”
In
the broadest terms, the curriculum in Hesse attempts to counter the
strident proselytizing of more hard-line strains of Islam. But while
offering instruction in Islam is part of the equal treatment craved by
many of Germany’s Muslims, it is also no straightforward task in
legalistic and federal Germany.
Each
of the 16 states determines its own education system and how
noncompulsory religion, or ethics, instruction is offered. Islamic
instruction in some form is available in all former West German states,
though none of the eastern ones, where there are historically few Muslim
immigrants. What makes Hesse special is that the state developed a
university program and has taken charge of training teachers.
In
other places, such as Berlin, instruction in Islam has already been
offered for several years, but teachers have been provided by
organizations like the Islamic Federation, a community group, which also
helps to decide the curriculum.
Fazil
Altin, 34, a lawyer who is president of the Islamic Federation, said
Muslims and the city authorities in Berlin had wasted 20 years while
they battled in court about whether Islam could be taught. Then, Mr.
Altin said, the federation had to overcome suspicions about
indoctrination — and all for 40 minutes’ instruction per week, which he
called “pretty paltry.”
In
his view, it will take more than formal state instruction in Islam to
bridge the cultural gap between observant Muslims and a highly secular
German society. “It is difficult to be a Muslim in Germany,” said Mr.
Altin, who said he had been denied access to clients in jails because of
his faith. “The fact is, we are seen as a danger.”
The
Jens Nydahl school, in Berlin’s heavily Turkish and Arab Kreuzberg
district, is a prime example of the challenge of integration.
During
an open house intended to attract new parents, the only visitors — a
native German man and his wife — got a heavy sell from the deputy
principal, who assured them that if they could recruit four or five
other parents, the school would never split up the resulting nucleus of
German-speaking children.
Sabine
Achour, a German lecturer and educator in Berlin who is married to a
Moroccan lawyer, said that even German parents who live in multicultural
districts like Kreuzberg draw the line at too many immigrants in their
children’s schools.
Ms.
Achour voiced doubts about Germans’ willingness to meet Muslims
halfway. “Teachers here have a feeling that something doesn’t fit with
Islam and democracy,” Ms. Achour said. Even where Islamic law, or
Shariah, fits with German practices, it is not applied because, she
said, “Shariah is seen as something very traditional and even
contemptuous of human beings.”
It is not clear that other German states will shift toward the version of Islamic instruction pioneered by Hesse.
Mr.
Kumlu, 31, the first-grade teacher, had to undergo 240 hours of extra
schooling at Giessen University to be accepted as one of Hesse’s first
18 teachers of Islam.
He
said he was motivated by his own ignorance about Islam when confronted
with prejudice as he grew up. “I wanted to clear this up,” he said. His
pupils now are third- to fifth-generation German, he noted, “and they
should be on an equal basis with other religions.”
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