|
|
Schaeuble said the new contract helps restore mutual confidence.
|
VIENNA – The central German city of Bonn plays host
in September to a conference bringing together German officials and
Muslim leaders at an initiative from the Interior Ministry to draw up a
"social contract" that helps boost Muslim integration into
society.
"The proposed social contract seeks to promote
mutual understanding between the German Muslims and the state as we
all live in one country," Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble
told the weekly Welt am Sonntag, which hit newsstands on Sunday, May
28.
He said the contract enhances cooperation between
the Muslim minority and the government, and helps restore mutual
confidence.
"The new contract stresses the importance of
respecting German constitution and the western democratic
values," added Schaeuble.
The minister noted that the document addresses some
problems facing Muslims vis-ŕ-vis practice of religion.
Schaeuble said the leaders of five leading Muslim
organizations in Germany and 10 prominent Muslim figures will be
invited to attend the conference along with 15 German officials.
Islam comes third in Germany after Protestant and
Catholic Christianity.
There are some 3.4 million Muslims in Germany, two
thirds of whom are of Turkish origin.
Spokesperson
A host of issues will be tackled during the
conference, chiefly the teaching of Islam in German in Muslim schools
under the state supervision.
Imam training as well as the role that can be
played by the Muslim minority in fighting extremist ideologies will
also top the meeting's agenda.
But Schaeuble hopes most that the conference would
name a spokesperson for the Muslim minority.
"I hope that the conference would name a
spokesman for the Muslim minority to become a partner in dialogue with
German authorities," the minister noted.
Three working groups are expected to be formed at
the end of the conference.
The Interior Ministry has sponsored a mobile
exhibition touring the country to draw the line between Islam as a
faith and the practices of some Muslims.
It aimed to distinguish between Islam as a religion
that preaches peace and tolerance and parties condoning violence in
the name of Islam.
Chancellor Angela Merkel said late April she
planned to meet Muslim leaders in the country in July as part of her
efforts to foster and facilitate integration of minorities into German
society.
Welcome
|
|
"The Muslim groups have long suffered because of government marginalization of Muslims," said Kizilkaya.
|
Muslim minority leaders have hailed the new German
initiative.
"It is a positive gesture from the government
I have to say," Ayman Mazik, Secretary General of the Higher
Muslim Council, told IOL.
He said the German government has not moved to
translate its pledges to the Muslim minority into action.
Ali Kizilkaya, chairman of the German Muslim
Council, said the German government at last started talking "to
not on" the Muslim minority.
"The government initiative encourages us to
support integration plans," he said in recent press statements.
Kizilkaya said the move will further facilitate the
work of Muslim groups in Germany.
"The Muslim groups have long suffered because
of government marginalization of Muslims."
Justice Minister Brigitte Zypries said on May 7
that the Muslim minority in Germany was suffering from a growing
religious discrimination with many Germans wrongly associating Islam
with terrorism.
A German intelligence report has revealed that only
one percent of Germany’s Muslim population are members of
organizations that pose serious threats to the country’s national
security.