BERLIN,
November 18 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – A suggestion for
a holiday at the end of the Muslims’ holy fasting month of Ramadan
by veteran left-winger Hans-Christian Stroebele has been met with
fierce opposition by all sides of the German political spectrum.
Stroebele's
proposal was given the cold shoulder even by his own Green party, a
partner in Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder’s ruling coalition, reported
Agence France-Presse (AFP) Wednesday, November 17.
The
Greens' Marieluise Beck, the government's representative on
integration issues, dismissed the proposal as "not very
intelligent" and said "there is a not single region of
Germany which has a Muslim majority".
On
Tuesday, November 16, Stroebele suggested introducing a holiday at the
end of Ramadan.
"Gestures
like this are necessary when you see the attacks in the
Netherlands," he said.
Lampooned
Even
those who dared back the proposal were publically ridiculed.
Environment
Minister Juergen Trittin, a member of the Green party, was lampooned
by the top-selling tabloid Bild newspaper on Wednesday.
The
paper pictured Trittin on its front page with a white beard and a
turban, claiming he was "completely mad."
A
Muslim leader, however, said granting such a holiday would make
immigrants feel at home.
"If
you are placing importance on the rights of minorities, a Muslim
holiday is overdue," Askar Mahmut, the secretary-general of the
Union of Turkish-Islamic Cultural Associations in Europe, told Bild.
Language
Imposition
The
campaign came as Annette Schavan, the education minister of the region
of Baden-Wuerttemberg, suggested that prayers in mosques should be in
German instead of Arabic.
She
claimed Germany "could no longer accept that prayers in mosques
should be said in languages that cannot be understood outside the
Muslim community".
Schavan,
who is tipped for a regional role in a future conservative government,
argued that such a move would allow plainclothes policemen to listen
in to the prayers and take action against what she called
"preachers of hate."
Kenan
Kolat, the co-president of the 1.9 million-strong Turkish community in
Germany, lambasted the idea.
"This
is nonsense -- terror can be spread in any language," he said.
Integration
The
proposal came amid rising calls from politicians like the Green
Party's Volker Beck that moderate, young Muslims should be encouraged
to integrate.
"Social
exclusion and disintegration make young Muslims vulnerable to radical
ideologies and hatred," Beck was quoted by Deutsche Welle
as saying.
"The
way out of this dilemma is not to brand them as outlaws, but rather to
let them participate in German social life."
German
Interior Minister Otto Schily said the new immigration law, which
offers integration measures such as language classes to earlier as
well as current generations of immigrants, was an important step
towards cultural understanding.
There
are some 3.4 million Muslims in Germany, including 220,000 in Berlin.
The
national statistics office stated that in the first half of 2004, one
immigrant in five in Germany was unemployed compared with a national
average of one in ten.
The
northwestern state of Lower Saxony announced on Wednesday that it was
examining the possibility of offering lessons about the Islamic faith
to all 45,000 Muslim children in its state schools.
But
the message came mixed to the Muslim community.
On
Friday, November 12, the southern German state of Bavaria become the
latest of the country's federal states to ban hijab.
Members
of the Muslim community feel discriminated against as displaying
Christian and Jewish symbols will still be allowed in Bavaria.
Three
other German states - Lower Saxony, Baden-Wuerttemberg and Saarland -
already imposed similar bans.