‘Islamic’ kindergartens irk far-rights in Austria

‘Islamic’ kindergartens irk far-rights in Austria
Austrian Muslims pose near a mosque in Vienna on Friday. (AFP)
Updated 16 April 2017
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‘Islamic’ kindergartens irk far-rights in Austria

‘Islamic’ kindergartens irk far-rights in Austria

VIENNA: A debate is raging in Austria after a study suggested that Islamic kindergartens in Vienna were helping to create “parallel societies” or even produce “the dangerous homegrown radicals of the future.”
According to its author, Ednan Aslan, a Turkish-born Austrian professor at Vienna University, some 10,000 children aged two to six attend around 150 Muslim preschools.
“Parents are sending their kids to establishments that ensure they are in a Muslim setting,” Aslan, a respected researcher into Islamic education, told AFP.
“But they are unaware that they are shutting them off from a multicultural society,” he said.
The study, published last year, has been jumped on by critics of immigration — not least the far-right Freedom Party — in the wake of attacks such as Paris and Brussels perpetrated by Muslims who grew up in Europe. But many reject Aslan’s findings, questioning its methodology.
The magazine Biber, which writes for and about minorities, sent a veiled Muslim reporter undercover, posing as a mother looking for a place for her son at 14 Muslim kindergartens. She found no evidence to back up Aslan’s suggestions.
Vienna City Hall has since sought to calm the situation by commissioning an in-depth study involving a six-strong research team which will be published later this year.
But the first problem is establishing how many Islamic kindergartens are there in the country. Vienna has 842 registered kindergartens, 100 of them Catholic-run and 13 Protestant, but the number of Muslim ones is not known.
Part of the reason is that there has been an explosion in the number that are privately run, stretching the ability of the authorities to keep tabs and allowing some to operate under the radar.
Vienna is home to 1.8 million people, half of whom have a parent born abroad or who were born abroad themselves. Ever since it was the capital of a vast empire, it has been a magnet for outsiders, not all of them always welcome.
“But what is new in recent years has been the religious aspect of the debate about integration,” said Thomas Schmidinger, political scientist and religious expert at Vienna University.
Austria, a nation of 8.7 million people, has received more than 130,000 asylum applications since 2015 following the onset of the EU’s biggest migration crisis since World War II.
The Freedom Party is riding high in the polls. Surveys suggest that public attitudes to Muslims have hardened. Attacks on migrant shelters soared last year.
The ruling centrist coalition has moved to the right with plans to ban full-face veils in public and oblige migrants to sign an “integration contract.”
Organizations representing Austria’s 700,000-strong Muslim population say that in this context, Aslan’s flawed report has only fanned the flames.
“This study feeds populism and forces Muslims to justify themselves constantly,” said Murat Gurol from newly-created pressure group, the Muslim Civil Society Network.
The 45-year-old IT worker said he sent his own son to a Muslim kindergarten in order to learn “the values of solidarity, humanity and responsibility.”
As a child, he went to a Christian preschool, and “I don’t see why that should be allowed for one religion and not for another,” he told AFP.