Poverty ’fueling’ tension

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Poverty ’fueling’ tension
Oluşturulma Tarihi: Mayıs 09, 2009 00:00

LONDON - Poverty and unemployment, not religious differences, are fueling Muslim tensions with the West, a report suggests. Non-Muslims have misunderstood the attitudes of most Muslims in the West, stifling attempts to promote understanding, the Gallup poll says. The global crisis may exacerbate integration with a race for the jobs, it adds

Joblessness and poverty are a more potent source of tension between Muslims and wider European and U.S. society than religious differences, according to a study - one of the first major studies of Muslim integration since the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks.

Attacks by Islamic extremists on the United States and European capitals such as Madrid and London have sparked debate on whether a failure of Muslims to integrate into Western society has fueled extremism.

But a study of around 30,000 people in 27 countries released Thursday by the Gallup polling company says non-Muslims - including the public and MPs - have misunderstood the attitudes of most Muslims in the West, stifling attempts to promote understanding. These Muslims are more patriotic, more tolerant and more likely to reject violence than the rest of Western society believes they are, the study suggests. It suggests most European Muslims are as happy as other Europeans to live alongside people of other faiths and ethnic backgrounds, and share broadly similar views with their neighbors.

The findings appear to contradict the impression created by angry protests across Europe following the 2005 publication in Denmark of 12 cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, and recent rallies in which small groups of British Muslims have disrupted homecoming parades for soldiers returning from Iraq. But Dalia Mogahed, executive director of the London and New York-based Gallup Center for Muslim Studies and a faith adviser to U.S. President Barack Obama, said the poll shows most Muslims welcome closer ties to the rest of society. The study focused chiefly on European Muslims, and the mistaken perceptions on their attitudes in wider European society.

"Many of the assumptions about Muslims and integration couldn't be more wide of the mark," she said. "European Muslims want to be part of the wider community and contribute to society." The study did not produce detailed data on attitudes of American Muslims on this subject. But Mogahed said that in the United States Muslims enjoy relatively good relations with the rest of society, and suffer less from economic inequality.

Integration problem

Despite their desire to belong, only a small number of Muslims questioned in Britain, for example - 10 percent - consider themselves integrated into British society. That compares to 46 percent of Muslims in France and 35 percent in Germany. The global economic crisis could exacerbate such issues, with competition for jobs and resources adding stress to race relations, the study said.

Researchers found 38 percent of British Muslims said they had a job, much lower than the figure for the British general public - 62 percent - and lower than Muslims in Germany or France, where 53 percent and 45 percent respectively said they were employed. No figures were compiled for the United States. "Economic integration may become more precarious in light of the current financial crisis affecting Europe," Mogahed said.

Muslims questioned by Gallup were pessimistic about their prospects. It found 71 percent of Britain's Muslims considered themselves to be struggling to get by, as did 56 percent of Muslims questioned in the United States. Research for the study was conducted in mid-2008, before the full impact of the current financial crisis hit.

"It's not about faith, it's not about ethnicity. The key thing that divides people is poverty and depravation," said Mohammed Shafiq, of the British Muslim organization the Ramadhan Foundation.
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