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Europe
Top German Cardinal: Christianity Needs Special Status in Europe
2007-06-22
Germany's highest-ranking cardinal has warned against indifference and uncritical tolerance which he says could lead to Islam enjoying equal standing with Christianity in the country.

Cardinal Karl Lehmann, who is head of the German conference of bishops, expressed concern about religious freedom leading to all faiths being treated equally regardless of the size of their flock and their history.

Germany's constitution obliges the state to maintain strict religious neutrality. But Lehmann pointed to Christianity's role in shaping European history and even its legal culture. "The deep cultural connection between Christianity and our legal state, that goes back to the Middle Ages and before, cannot simply be ignored," Lehmann said in a speech in Karlsruhe.

Germany continues to struggle to integrate its 3.2 million Muslims, over half of whom are of Turkish origin, primarily "guest workers" who came to work during the country's postwar economic boom, and their children.

Integration problems

The government has been concerned about the potential radicalization of disillusioned young Muslims and organized an Islam Conference last year to try to help Muslims mesh with mainstream society. Germany has western Europe's second-biggest Muslim population after France.

The conference has made little progress so far on sensitive issues such as religion lessons, girls' participation in sports and the legal status of a new Islamic grouping.

Lehmann's comments come amid a sensitive time for Muslim-Christian relations in Germany. The construction of a large mosque in the western city of Cologne has set off a wave of intense opposition among many local residents.

"I don't want to say I am worried, but I have an uneasy feeling," Cardinal Joachim Meisner of Cologne said of the mosque in an interview with Deutschlandfunk radio on Wednesday.

Meisner, who last year banned Catholic children from praying with Muslim classmates, said a real test of religious tolerance would be whether Christians could build churches and worship freely in Turkey, as Muslims can in Germany.

Chancellor Angela Merkel, the daughter of a Protestant pastor, said in April she expected Turkey to take action to show it was tolerant of Christianity after the killing of three people, including a German, at a Turkish Bible publishing house.

Mixed reactions from politicians

Ronald Pofalla, the general secretary of Merkel's conservative Christian Democratic Union party, said Lehmann was right to say Islam could not be afforded the same legal standing in Germany as Christianity, although he added no one should prevent Muslims from practicing their religion in the country. "Unlike Christianity, Islam is not in Europe's cultural center and is not reflected in everyday life in the same way," Pofalla said in a statement.

"Only those who are conscious of their cultural and social roots can freely and openly stand up for the rights of people of different faiths," he added.

The leader of the Green party's parliamentary group, Volker Beck, said Germany's constitution required Islam be treated the same as Christianity. "The Cardinal is wrong if he concludes that Europe's or Germany's undoubtedly Christian character infers a legal discrimination of other religious communities," he said.

Lale Akgün, a Social Democratic parliamentarian in charge of Islam issues, said Lehmann was not looking clearly at the reality of life in Germany.

"Whoever says that Islam cannot be put on an equal legal footing (as other religions) is stoking social unrest," she said.
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International-UN-NGOs
Vatican-Muslim dialogue back to square one: cardinal
2006-10-05
PARIS - Vatican relations with the Islamic world must be restarted from square one because Muslims insist on misinterpreting Pope Benedict’s recent comments on Islam, Germany’s top Catholic cardinal said in an article on Wednesday. Cardinal Karl Lehmann, head of the German Catholic Bishops Conference, accused Muslim critics of running a campaign against the Pope and said the Pontiff had nothing to apologise for.
Good. Keep saying that.
The blunt comments from Lehmann, whose rich and influential church has close ties to the German-born Pope, seem to have been sparked by an unusual call from the 56-nation Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC) for him to retract his words.
“These open or hidden threats have to stop ... The Catholic Church ... will not be bullied.”
“These open or hidden threats have to stop,” Lehmann said in the weekly newspaper of his Mainz diocese. “Obviously we have to start at square one because we’re not talking here about important contents of a necessary dialogue, but about the fundamental requirements for one to succeed.

“There is freedom of religion and speech in our civilisation. The Pope can also be criticised. But there are elementary rules that apply for factual and fair contacts with each other and with clear statements,” he wrote. ”One cannot constantly repeat completely unfounded misunderstandings when the texts are so clear.”
The jihadis move forward by repeating unfounded nonsense.
Lehmann’s article echoed a statement last week by the bishops he leads complaining some critics had tried to escalate the dispute with “ever new charges, demands or even threats”. “The Catholic Church and many people in our country and around the world, who respect and defend the right of free speech, will not be bullied,” the bishops’ conference said after its meeting in Fulda last week.

The German bishops, an influential voice at the Vatican because of their church’s financial power and theological depth, also repeated Benedict’s frequent calls for Muslim countries to give their Christian minorities equal rights.
That's something that ought to be said louder and more often.
Meeting shortly after a Berlin theatre cancelled a Mozart opera for fear it might prompt Muslim protests, the bishops also expressed concern about self-censorship over religion. “We are concerned that fear of religiously motivated violence is spreading, not only in Germany, and leading to a direct or indirect limitation of free speech,” they said.
Figured the Church would notice that. Now we just need the various governments to notice.
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Europe
Germany: Honor Killing Rekindles Integration Debate
2006-04-19
The "honour killing" of a young Turkish woman by her brother and his subsequent trial and conviction have further plunged Germany into heated debate on the integration of Germany's seven million Muslim immigrants, Germany's Deutsche-Welle radio website reports. Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU) parliamentary group have demanded a "zero tolerance" policy for such murders, calling them "a shameful form of self-administered justice." Hatun Surucu, 23, was shot several times in the head at close range last year at a Berlin bus stop by her youngest brother Ayhan, 19. The murder caused revulsion in Germany, and led to street protests by Turkish women.

Ayhan, who a court last week sentenced to nine years and three months in prison, stated during his trial that he killed her for "bringing shame upon his family" by adopting a western lifestyle. She had returned to Germany after fleeing a forced marriage to her cousin in Turkey, and had chosen to bring up her small son alone. Two of Ayhan's other brothers were cleared of charges of conspiring to murder her.

The trial followed heightened debate on the German school system's ability to educate the children of immigrants after teachers in two violent inner-city schools in the capital, Berlin, said they feared they could not keep order in classrooms where 80 percent of pupils are the children of immigrants.

Germany's immigrant community forms nine percent of the country's population. Yet one-quarter of immigrants are unemployed and live on state benefits, half cannot speak German or speak it badly, and few have German citizenship.

Surucu's slaying and other high-profile incidents have increased concerns that the country mainly Turkish and Moroccan immigrants are becoming increasingly ghettoised and isolated from the rest of the country.

Politicians from across the German political spectrum have recently put forward proposals to better integrate immigrants, inclding compulsory language training and tests to ensure they share German society's basic social and cultural values, Deutsche Welle reports.

Some conservatives who claim that lax multicultural policies have led the authorities to turn a blind eye to abuses have said that immigrants guilty of serious breaches of German law should be deported.

Several prominent politicians from the CDU and also from the centre-left Social Democrat party, have called for the Surucu family to be deported. Cardinal Karl Lehmann, chair of the German Bishops's Conference, rejected calls for the expulsion of foreigners who prove unwilling to integrate in German society, terming such moves "acts of political desperation."

Lehmann however condemned practices such as arranged marriages and so-called honour killings, saying the German authorities should never tolerate parallel societies which seek to flout German law and traditions.

Surucu was the sixth victim of honour killings among Berlin's 200,000-strong Turkish community in as many months. The German police listed 45 cases between 1996 and 2004 - with 13 in Berlin.

Muslim leaders in Berlin have taken pains to stress that there is no basis for honour killings in the Koran. But they have also been criticised for not condeming such murders outright. Merkel has called for an integration summit involving some of Germany's Muslim leaders.

Successive German governments have been accused by many experts and critics of failing to develop policies to deal with the fact that millions of guest workers who entered the country in the 1960s and 1970s would settle permanently in Germany rather than returning home, Deutsche Welle said.
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