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==Conflict==
==Conflict==


As a country with a highly homogeneous population, Denmark, like most nations in the globalized world, is dealing with the presence of a substantial and visible minority. As first and second generation immigrants, many drawn from the ranks of refugees, some Muslim groups in Denmark have failed to achieve the economic and political power proportional to their population. For example, they remain over-represented among the unemployed, and under-represented in higher education, and among permanent residents holding citizenship and the right to vote. They also remain over-represented among prison populations.{{Citation needed|date=March 2010}}
As a country with a highly homogeneous population, Denmark, like most nations in the world, is dealing with the presence of a substantial and visible minority. As first and second generation immigrants, many drawn from the ranks of refugees, some Muslim groups in Denmark have failed to achieve the economic and political power proportional to their population. For example, they remain over-represented among the unemployed, and under-represented in higher education, and among permanent residents holding citizenship and the right to vote. They also remain over-represented among prison populations.

Such disenfranchisement is typical of minority groups immigrating to new nations, as is evident in the United States and Western Europe. Scandinavian immigrants do not always fully assimilate into other cultures. For example, Solvang, a town in California, is a mostly Danish community that has not fully assimilated after a few generations of immigration<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solvang,_California</ref>, however there have been no restrictions on construction of traditional Danish buildings or practicing Danish culture. Similarly, there was an influx of Scandinavian immigrants to the Unites States, particularly Minnesota, Wisconsin, and North Dakota due to famine conditions and over population in Scandinavia in the mid 1800s<ref>http://ocp.hul.harvard.edu/immigration/themes-scandinavian.html</ref>. Scandinavian ethinic groups had a high rate of intermarriage -- they did not marry and assimilate with the established American population or other new immigrant groups. Instead, each national group married within their own group.<ref>http://www.jstor.org/pss/2769182</ref> There were stereotypes of "dumb Swedes" as depicted by the fictional character "Yon Yonson" <ref>http://www.augustana.edu/x16607.xml</ref> and some Americans were critical of some of the new inhabitants' cuisine, such lye-cooked fish, known as lutefisk. In the 1980s, actress Betty White portrayed a naive and obtuse n<sup>th</sup> generation Scandinavian immigrant, Rose Nylund from St Olaf, Minnesota.<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betty_White</ref> After over 100 years in the United States, many American Scandinavians have persisted their cultural practices of consuming lutefisk<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lutefisk</ref>.

Pride and nationalism amongst Scandinavians is well documented, as well as divisiveness between Danes, Swedes, and Norwegians, both in Europe and America. For example, the stereotype of the drunken Swede vs drunken Dane, which has roots in various religious temperance movements in Scandinavia<ref>http://www.staff.hum.ku.dk/sidsel/drunken.htm</ref>. Furthermore, the homogeneity of individual Scandinavian nations creates a common culture which gives rise to nationalist movements.<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiculturalism</ref> This may explain the unwillingness to give up certain customs even after over 100 years of immigration in the United States as well as the resistance to multiculturalism.


Some ethnic Danes feel threatened by aspects of Muslim culture, setting the stage for conflict. Partly as a reaction to this situation, recent years have seen the rise of a political party (the [[Danish People's Party]]) with nationalistic and anti-immigration policies. This party currently supports the ruling centre-right [[Venstre (Denmark)|Liberal]]-[[Conservative People's Party (Denmark)|Conservative]] coalition which has implemented stricter policies to reduce the number of immigrants&mdash;particularly by enforcing stricter criteria permanent residence status to mixed couples where one of the spouses has not previously resided in Denmark. This is known as the ''[[24 year rule]]'', since it applies to persons younger than 24 years only. Other policies have aimed at promoting competence of the Danish language.
Some ethnic Danes feel threatened by aspects of Muslim culture, setting the stage for conflict. Partly as a reaction to this situation, recent years have seen the rise of a political party (the [[Danish People's Party]]) with nationalistic and anti-immigration policies. This party currently supports the ruling centre-right [[Venstre (Denmark)|Liberal]]-[[Conservative People's Party (Denmark)|Conservative]] coalition which has implemented stricter policies to reduce the number of immigrants&mdash;particularly by enforcing stricter criteria permanent residence status to mixed couples where one of the spouses has not previously resided in Denmark. This is known as the ''[[24 year rule]]'', since it applies to persons younger than 24 years only. Other policies have aimed at promoting competence of the Danish language.

The recent rise in Danish nationalism has targeted many other groups such as Jews, Sri Lankans, and Asians. Soren Krarup, a member of the Danish Parliament states that:

<blockquote>
It is absolutely grotesque that people from Somalia, Sri Lanka and the Far East should be able to call themselves refugees in Denmark.<ref>http://onlyindenmark.wordpress.com/category/letter/</ref>
</blockquote>

The DPP also have revealed themselves as anti-semetic and willing to absorb neo-Nazis into their political party, so long as they tone down their rhetoric:

<blockquote>
In August 2006 undercover journalists of the tabloid Ekstra Bladet contacted 18 local districts of the DPP, saying that they were members of Dansk Front and wanted to join the DPP. Dansk Front, or "Danish Front", is a now-defunct extreme-right network which among other things advocated the banning of Islam, and was accused by the Danish secret police of close cooperation with neo-Nazi groups such as Blood & Honour and Combat 18. Half of the Dansk Folkeparti district chairmen turned the request down, whereas the other half said party membership was OK, provided any extreme-right views were kept private. When the tabloid published the story, this caused a scandal, following which the latter nine district chairmen were excluded from the party.[10]"<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danish_People's_Party</ref>
</blockquote>

<blockquote>
"Langballe, a Danish Lutheran priest, has earlier made his theological position on Jews clear when he wrote, in the "Kristeligt Dagblad" newspaper November 3rd, 1999 that "I have scientifically documented that the Old Testament is not Judaism's book" and that "Judaism with its denial of Christ's teachings is apostasy and blasphemy"[13]"<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danish_People's_Party</ref>
</blockquote>

As Danish immigrants are given some time to integrate into society, the demographic data presents some evidence that the immigrants can hold jobs more effectively than ethnic Danes. Recent data shows that there has been a higher increase in unemployment among ethnic Danes (84%) than immigrants (20%), which is attributed to the hard working nature of immigrants:

<blockquote>
"Integration consultant Hans Lassen told public broadcaster DR that immigrant workers were ‘highly motivated’ to enter the labour market and hang on to their jobs, and it was something other Danish workers could learn from. ‘Here we have some people [non-ethnic Danes] who want it and want to hang on to it. There’s no doubt that it could maybe inspire some ethnic Danes,’ he said." <ref>http://www.cphpost.dk/business/119-business/48260-higher-unemployment-among-ethnic-danes.html</ref>.
</blockquote>

The Danish People's Party is accused of generating propaganda, and this claim is well substantiated. An advertisement promoting policy to curtail construction of mosques featured a digitally altered photograph of the Blue Mosque in Istanbul. The image was altered to include two crossed swords at the top of the dome<ref>http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_U54NM9QE5VY/Sqdnjlm_0rI/AAAAAAAAH8I/Nf2mPgSs-ZI/s400/Dansk_Folkeparti_an_193964e.jpg</ref>, where no such objects exist<ref>http://students.ou.edu/C/Hannah.E.Clay-1/blue-mosque.jpg</ref>. Daniel Pipes, an American academic, has provided fabricated data in slanted position papers such as "Muslim Extremism: Denmark's had Enough" which Danish MPs have claimed contains fabricated data, as the Danish government simply does not collect statistics on religion:

<blockquote>
The authors claim that 40% of Danish welfare expenses are consumed by Muslim immigrants. Denmark has a much broader spectrum of welfare costs than countries in North America. We include not only unemployment benefits and social security but also substantial allocations to housing, transport, homecare, early retirement, protected workplaces, daycare and other smaller schemes. Muslim immigrants do not receive 40% of those allocations even though they represent a substantial part of the clients. The main reason being: It is hard to compete on a job market not interested in employing immigrants.

The further assumption that more than half of all rapists in Denmark are Muslims is without any basis in fact, as criminal registers do not record religion.<ref>http://www.danielpipes.org/450/something-rotten-in-denmark</ref>
</blockquote>

Daniel Pipes rebuts this assertion, by quoting a study with no citations and then a "secret" unpublished study which has no citations and no explanation as to how the data was gathered. For example, we have no idea where Daniel Pipes found this data (note the absence of a citation):

<blockquote>
Statistics Denmark does, however [sic], produce numbers on immigrants from Third World countries and their descendants, which it reports makes up 5% of the population; and it is known that Muslims make up four-fifths of this element. The latest police figures show that 76.5% of convicted rapists in Copenhagen belong to that 5% of the population, and from that we drew our understated conclusion.<ref>http://www.danielpipes.org/450/something-rotten-in-denmark</ref>
</blockquote>

<blockquote>
As for the numbers involved, former Socialist spokeswoman for immigration and integration Ritt Bjerregaard has leaked figures from an unpublished study showing that in 1999, the 5% of the Danish population made up of Third World [sic] immigrants received 35% of all welfare payments (Danish: kontanthjaelp). This percentage is higher today and therefore we wrote that that 5% consumes "upwards of 40% of the welfare spending."
<ref>http://www.danielpipes.org/450/something-rotten-in-denmark</ref>
</blockquote>

Daniel Pipes has also contended that 85% of Muslims are "Islamists", a term which he does not define and is quantified on anecdotal evidence:

<blockquote>
During a speech at the State Department last year, an audience member asked Pipes what his methodology was in deriving the figure "80-85%" to describe the proportion of American Muslim institutions that are "Islamist". Pipes responded, "anecdotal evidence".

January 30, 2002, Secretary's Open Forum, US Dept. of State

The credibility of Pipes's account is weakened by his uncritical reliance on anecdotal and often partisan claims (chiefly by Israeli and Turkish sources), while dismissing the more measured State Department conclusion that there is no evidence of direct Syrian involvement in terrorist activities since 1986 (p. 98).<ref>http://www.mpac.org/article.php?id=72</ref>
</blockquote>

In American popular culture, Daniel Pipes is considered a fraud that buys into crypto-fascist ideas:

<blockquote>
A writer for The Criterion in Toledo, OH, described the scene this way:

'On "Politically Incorrect" with Bill Maher, Pipes also made outlandish claims. He even went on an attack rampage attacking another guest, Dr. Maher Hathout of Muslim Political Affairs Council. He claimed that Dr. Hathout had supported terrorism. He offered to provide evidence and whipped out a quote from Dr. Hathout saying that the attacks on the Sudanese Aspirin factory were "immoral and illegal."

"To this, Bill Maher and Alec Baldwin responded by chastising Pipes for his meager attempt to distort the truth and cast Dr. Hathout in a negative light."

"Pipes even had the audacity to say that President Bush should not be meeting with "characters like him" and pointed to Dr. Hathout. Host Bill Maher and the other guests quickly argued that Pipes is the one that needs to be controlled and kept out of the public stage. Even they noticed his outright hatred and anti-Muslim sentiments. You could faintly hear an audience member shout out 'Pipe down Pipes!'"

"Pipes arguments were laughable at best. Actor Alec Baldwin at one point said to Pipes, 'You seem to be in support of every crypto fascist idea.'" <ref>http://www.mpac.org/article.php?id=72</ref>
</blockquote>

There are many parallels between the propaganda used against Muslims and the propaganda used against Jews in 1930s Europe:

<blockquote>
Julius Streicher, Nazi Propagandist, in 1925:

»Jewish values and rules of conduct permit and even necessitate that which is forbidden for the non-Jew because of his Christian belief. The Jew must reproduce, deceive, bear false witness and when expedient, he may even kill people«

Pia Kjaersgaard, leader of the Danish People's Party, in 2000:

»The Quran teaches Muslims it is acceptable for them to lie and deceive, cheat and swindle as much as they like«

Hermann Esser, Nazi writer on Jews, in 1939:

»They come as 'foreigners,' as 'beggars', slinking and groveling, with false humility and dishonest respect. Once they have swindled their way to something, they become thieves and bloodsuckers«

Mogens Camre, MEP for the Danish People's Party, in 1999:

»Muslims come with a beggar's staff in their hand, but as soon as they're in from the cold it becomes a stick to beat us with«<ref>http://www.panhumanism.com/letter_to_obama.php</ref>
</blockquote>

The DPP are not the only growing hate group in Denmark. There are numerous neo-Nazi street gangs that are part of Scandinavian Black Metal (Satanic Death Metal) culture, who commit crimes, yet seem to escape the scrutiny of the DPP's propaganda machine. Much like the DPP, they do not approve of any people other than white Scandinavians and engage in crime and abuse of immigrants, which may explain the tight clusters of immigrant groups in Scandinavia. The DPP and Black Metal culture share a common link -- the notorious neo-Nazi organization known as Combat 18.<ref>http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/intelligence-report/browse-all-issues/2000/fall/darker-than-black/from-satan-to-hitler</ref><ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danish_People's_Party</ref>


Much media attention has been focused on arranged marriages, practiced by some Muslims (as well as Hindus, Jews, and other cultures), and laws have been implemented trying to prevent this practice. The choice of some Muslim women in Denmark to wear or not to wear various traditional head covering, e.g. in the workplace, has also been the subject of debate and action. The Danish military has refused to allow Muslim women to wear a traditional head covering. In public schools, teaching is conducted in Danish, and the government opposes the use of immigrant children's native language in Danish primary schools. However, Muslim schools where Danish is not the primary teaching language do exist.
Much media attention has been focused on arranged marriages, practiced by some Muslims (as well as Hindus, Jews, and other cultures), and laws have been implemented trying to prevent this practice. The choice of some Muslim women in Denmark to wear or not to wear various traditional head covering, e.g. in the workplace, has also been the subject of debate and action. The Danish military has refused to allow Muslim women to wear a traditional head covering. In public schools, teaching is conducted in Danish, and the government opposes the use of immigrant children's native language in Danish primary schools. However, Muslim schools where Danish is not the primary teaching language do exist.


A Danish newspaper, [[Jyllands-Posten]] printed [[Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy|12 caricatures]] of the Islamic prophet Muhammad in September 2005. These cartoons sparked an international controversy, ultimately resulting in the scorching of two Danish diplomatic missions, a boycott of Danish goods in several countries, and a large number of protests around the world. The number of violent protests has caused increasing support for the anti-immigration Danish People's Party and, by some accounts, a more critical approach towards Islam in Denmark.<ref>http://www.panhumanism.com/letter_to_obama.php</ref>
A Danish newspaper, [[Jyllands-Posten]] printed [[Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy|12 caricatures]] of the Islamic prophet Muhammad in September 2005. These cartoons sparked an international controversy, ultimately resulting in the scorching of two Danish diplomatic missions, a boycott of Danish goods in several countries, and a large number of protests around the world. Some of the cartoons were exaggerated caricatures of Arab features, much like depictions of African Americans in the mid 1800s and Jews in the 1930s. The number of violent protests by a few extremists in a world population of 1 Billion Muslims has caused rising support for the anti-immigration Danish People's Party and, by some accounts, a more critical approach towards Islam in Denmark. However, the cartoons were criticized as insensitive by world leaders like G.W. Bush and the U.S. Ambassador to Denmark, James P. Cain, who remarked "Americans in some point of our history decided that it was more important to have an ordered, integrated, diverse, peaceful, secure, harmonious society – harmonious racially, harmonious from an ethnic perspective and harmonious religiously – than it was to each have the individual right to insult our neighbours, to incite violence, to draw offensive cartoons just for the heck of it."

Despite the worldwide outrage and admonishment from international leaders, the DPP hosted a summer camp for their youth group where admittedly inebriated Danish youth continued to ridicule another culture for the fun and amusement. Amongst the new, artistically-deficient and crudely drawn unpublished cartoons, was a scatological depiction of Mohammed as a multi-humped camel defecating. There was a panoply of the usual stereotypes -- bombs, camels, desert backdrops, beards, large noses, and extremely bushy eyebrows<ref>http://balder.org/muhammed/Danish-Peoples-Party-Youth-Muhammed-Cartoon-Contest.php</ref>, similar to depictions of African Americans with big lips, kinky hair and bugged-out eyes.<ref>http://www.fashion-res.com/EX/10-09-09/democrat-anti-negro-anti-republican-cartoon.jpg</ref>


== Organizations ==
== Organizations ==

Revision as of 20:18, 25 March 2010

A Mosque in Hvidovre outside Copenhagen run by the Ahmadiyya. Constructed in 1967, this was the first mosque in the Nordic countries, although some Islamic authorities consider the Ahmadiyya to be heretics.

Approximately 5% of the population in Denmark are Muslims.[1] Islam is the largest religious minority in Denmark.[2]

History and background

Religious freedom is guaranteed by law in Denmark, and as of 2005, nineteen different Muslim religious communities had status as officially recognized religious societies, which gives them certain tax benefits. However, unlike the majority of countries in the West, Denmark lacks separation of church and state, resulting in economic advantages for the Church of Denmark not shared by Muslim or other minority communities.[3] Although they are compensated by tax benefit.

The majority of the Muslims living in Denmark are first-generation immigrants from Muslim-majority countries.

There are three phases in the Muslim immigration to Denmark: the foreign workers, the asylum seekers and those coming through marriage.

During the early 1970s, many Muslims emigrated from Turkey, Pakistan, Morocco and Bosnia to look for work in Denmark. Denmark halted free immigration in 1973.

During the 1980s and 1990s a number of Muslim asylum seekers came to Denmark. In the 1980s mostly from Iran, Iraq, Gaza and the West Bank and in the 1990s mostly from Somalia and Bosnia. Some of those who sought asylum had been charged with terrorism in their home countries[4].

The asylum seekers comprise about 40% of the Danish Muslim population.[2]

Previously, the majority of Muslims who immigrated to Denmark did so as part of family reunification. The Danish parliament has passed a law in 2002 making family reunification harder. It was also implemented to counter forced marriages by ensuring that both parties are at least 24 years old and so considered old enough to enter a marriage without being forced to do so. The new law requires the couple to both be above the age of 24 and requires the resident spouse to show capacity to support both persons of the couple.

Religious issues

In 1967 the Nusrat Djahan Mosque[5] was built in Hvidovre, a Copenhagen suburb. This Mosque is used by adherents of the Muslim Ahmadi sect .

Other mosques exist but are not built for the explicit purpose. It is not forbidden to build mosques or any other religious buildings in Denmark but there are very strict zoning laws. One piece of land has been reserved for a grand mosque at Amager (near Copenhagen), but financing is not settled. Danish Muslims have not succeeded in cooperating on the financing of the project and do not agree on whether it should be financed with outside sources, such as Saudi money.[6] Advertisements by the Danish People's Party, which promote anti-mosque legislation, contend that Iran and Saudi Arabia are sources of funding. These are considered despotic regimes by the DPP.[7]

Seven Danish cemeteries have separate sections for Muslims. Most of the Danish Muslims are buried in those cemeteries, with about 70 being flown abroad for burial in their countries of origin. A separate Muslim cemetery was opened in Brøndby near Copenhagen in September 2006.[8]

Schools

The first Muslim private school was founded in 1978 - Den Islamisk Arabiske Skole (the Islamic Arabic School) in Helsingør and accepted students from any country. Today there are about 20 Muslim schools, most of which are located in the major cities. The Muslim schools are big enough today to enable catering to students according to their country of origin. In the 1980s, schools for Pakistani, Turkish and Arabic speakers were founded. Furthermore, Somali, Palestinian and Iraqi schools were founded in the 1990s. Today 6 or 7 nationalities dominate the Muslim schools.

The biggest school is Dia Privatskole in Nørrebro with about 410 students. Two Pakistani schools teach in Urdu as mother tongue and several Turkish schools have Turkish instruction. Most other schools cater to Arabic speaking students.[9].

Conflict

As a country with a highly homogeneous population, Denmark, like most nations in the world, is dealing with the presence of a substantial and visible minority. As first and second generation immigrants, many drawn from the ranks of refugees, some Muslim groups in Denmark have failed to achieve the economic and political power proportional to their population. For example, they remain over-represented among the unemployed, and under-represented in higher education, and among permanent residents holding citizenship and the right to vote. They also remain over-represented among prison populations.

Such disenfranchisement is typical of minority groups immigrating to new nations, as is evident in the United States and Western Europe. Scandinavian immigrants do not always fully assimilate into other cultures. For example, Solvang, a town in California, is a mostly Danish community that has not fully assimilated after a few generations of immigration[10], however there have been no restrictions on construction of traditional Danish buildings or practicing Danish culture. Similarly, there was an influx of Scandinavian immigrants to the Unites States, particularly Minnesota, Wisconsin, and North Dakota due to famine conditions and over population in Scandinavia in the mid 1800s[11]. Scandinavian ethinic groups had a high rate of intermarriage -- they did not marry and assimilate with the established American population or other new immigrant groups. Instead, each national group married within their own group.[12] There were stereotypes of "dumb Swedes" as depicted by the fictional character "Yon Yonson" [13] and some Americans were critical of some of the new inhabitants' cuisine, such lye-cooked fish, known as lutefisk. In the 1980s, actress Betty White portrayed a naive and obtuse nth generation Scandinavian immigrant, Rose Nylund from St Olaf, Minnesota.[14] After over 100 years in the United States, many American Scandinavians have persisted their cultural practices of consuming lutefisk[15].

Pride and nationalism amongst Scandinavians is well documented, as well as divisiveness between Danes, Swedes, and Norwegians, both in Europe and America. For example, the stereotype of the drunken Swede vs drunken Dane, which has roots in various religious temperance movements in Scandinavia[16]. Furthermore, the homogeneity of individual Scandinavian nations creates a common culture which gives rise to nationalist movements.[17] This may explain the unwillingness to give up certain customs even after over 100 years of immigration in the United States as well as the resistance to multiculturalism.

Some ethnic Danes feel threatened by aspects of Muslim culture, setting the stage for conflict. Partly as a reaction to this situation, recent years have seen the rise of a political party (the Danish People's Party) with nationalistic and anti-immigration policies. This party currently supports the ruling centre-right Liberal-Conservative coalition which has implemented stricter policies to reduce the number of immigrants—particularly by enforcing stricter criteria permanent residence status to mixed couples where one of the spouses has not previously resided in Denmark. This is known as the 24 year rule, since it applies to persons younger than 24 years only. Other policies have aimed at promoting competence of the Danish language.

The recent rise in Danish nationalism has targeted many other groups such as Jews, Sri Lankans, and Asians. Soren Krarup, a member of the Danish Parliament states that:

It is absolutely grotesque that people from Somalia, Sri Lanka and the Far East should be able to call themselves refugees in Denmark.[18]

The DPP also have revealed themselves as anti-semetic and willing to absorb neo-Nazis into their political party, so long as they tone down their rhetoric:

In August 2006 undercover journalists of the tabloid Ekstra Bladet contacted 18 local districts of the DPP, saying that they were members of Dansk Front and wanted to join the DPP. Dansk Front, or "Danish Front", is a now-defunct extreme-right network which among other things advocated the banning of Islam, and was accused by the Danish secret police of close cooperation with neo-Nazi groups such as Blood & Honour and Combat 18. Half of the Dansk Folkeparti district chairmen turned the request down, whereas the other half said party membership was OK, provided any extreme-right views were kept private. When the tabloid published the story, this caused a scandal, following which the latter nine district chairmen were excluded from the party.[10]"[19]

"Langballe, a Danish Lutheran priest, has earlier made his theological position on Jews clear when he wrote, in the "Kristeligt Dagblad" newspaper November 3rd, 1999 that "I have scientifically documented that the Old Testament is not Judaism's book" and that "Judaism with its denial of Christ's teachings is apostasy and blasphemy"[13]"[20]

As Danish immigrants are given some time to integrate into society, the demographic data presents some evidence that the immigrants can hold jobs more effectively than ethnic Danes. Recent data shows that there has been a higher increase in unemployment among ethnic Danes (84%) than immigrants (20%), which is attributed to the hard working nature of immigrants:

"Integration consultant Hans Lassen told public broadcaster DR that immigrant workers were ‘highly motivated’ to enter the labour market and hang on to their jobs, and it was something other Danish workers could learn from. ‘Here we have some people [non-ethnic Danes] who want it and want to hang on to it. There’s no doubt that it could maybe inspire some ethnic Danes,’ he said." [21].

The Danish People's Party is accused of generating propaganda, and this claim is well substantiated. An advertisement promoting policy to curtail construction of mosques featured a digitally altered photograph of the Blue Mosque in Istanbul. The image was altered to include two crossed swords at the top of the dome[22], where no such objects exist[23]. Daniel Pipes, an American academic, has provided fabricated data in slanted position papers such as "Muslim Extremism: Denmark's had Enough" which Danish MPs have claimed contains fabricated data, as the Danish government simply does not collect statistics on religion:

The authors claim that 40% of Danish welfare expenses are consumed by Muslim immigrants. Denmark has a much broader spectrum of welfare costs than countries in North America. We include not only unemployment benefits and social security but also substantial allocations to housing, transport, homecare, early retirement, protected workplaces, daycare and other smaller schemes. Muslim immigrants do not receive 40% of those allocations even though they represent a substantial part of the clients. The main reason being: It is hard to compete on a job market not interested in employing immigrants.

The further assumption that more than half of all rapists in Denmark are Muslims is without any basis in fact, as criminal registers do not record religion.[24]

Daniel Pipes rebuts this assertion, by quoting a study with no citations and then a "secret" unpublished study which has no citations and no explanation as to how the data was gathered. For example, we have no idea where Daniel Pipes found this data (note the absence of a citation):

Statistics Denmark does, however [sic], produce numbers on immigrants from Third World countries and their descendants, which it reports makes up 5% of the population; and it is known that Muslims make up four-fifths of this element. The latest police figures show that 76.5% of convicted rapists in Copenhagen belong to that 5% of the population, and from that we drew our understated conclusion.[25]

As for the numbers involved, former Socialist spokeswoman for immigration and integration Ritt Bjerregaard has leaked figures from an unpublished study showing that in 1999, the 5% of the Danish population made up of Third World [sic] immigrants received 35% of all welfare payments (Danish: kontanthjaelp). This percentage is higher today and therefore we wrote that that 5% consumes "upwards of 40% of the welfare spending." [26]

Daniel Pipes has also contended that 85% of Muslims are "Islamists", a term which he does not define and is quantified on anecdotal evidence:

During a speech at the State Department last year, an audience member asked Pipes what his methodology was in deriving the figure "80-85%" to describe the proportion of American Muslim institutions that are "Islamist". Pipes responded, "anecdotal evidence".

January 30, 2002, Secretary's Open Forum, US Dept. of State

The credibility of Pipes's account is weakened by his uncritical reliance on anecdotal and often partisan claims (chiefly by Israeli and Turkish sources), while dismissing the more measured State Department conclusion that there is no evidence of direct Syrian involvement in terrorist activities since 1986 (p. 98).[27]

In American popular culture, Daniel Pipes is considered a fraud that buys into crypto-fascist ideas:

A writer for The Criterion in Toledo, OH, described the scene this way:

'On "Politically Incorrect" with Bill Maher, Pipes also made outlandish claims. He even went on an attack rampage attacking another guest, Dr. Maher Hathout of Muslim Political Affairs Council. He claimed that Dr. Hathout had supported terrorism. He offered to provide evidence and whipped out a quote from Dr. Hathout saying that the attacks on the Sudanese Aspirin factory were "immoral and illegal."

"To this, Bill Maher and Alec Baldwin responded by chastising Pipes for his meager attempt to distort the truth and cast Dr. Hathout in a negative light."

"Pipes even had the audacity to say that President Bush should not be meeting with "characters like him" and pointed to Dr. Hathout. Host Bill Maher and the other guests quickly argued that Pipes is the one that needs to be controlled and kept out of the public stage. Even they noticed his outright hatred and anti-Muslim sentiments. You could faintly hear an audience member shout out 'Pipe down Pipes!'"

"Pipes arguments were laughable at best. Actor Alec Baldwin at one point said to Pipes, 'You seem to be in support of every crypto fascist idea.'" [28]

There are many parallels between the propaganda used against Muslims and the propaganda used against Jews in 1930s Europe:

Julius Streicher, Nazi Propagandist, in 1925:

»Jewish values and rules of conduct permit and even necessitate that which is forbidden for the non-Jew because of his Christian belief. The Jew must reproduce, deceive, bear false witness and when expedient, he may even kill people« 

Pia Kjaersgaard, leader of the Danish People's Party, in 2000:

»The Quran teaches Muslims it is acceptable for them to lie and deceive, cheat and swindle as much as they like« 

Hermann Esser, Nazi writer on Jews, in 1939:

»They come as 'foreigners,' as 'beggars', slinking and groveling, with false humility and dishonest respect. Once they have swindled their way to something, they become thieves and bloodsuckers« 

Mogens Camre, MEP for the Danish People's Party, in 1999:

»Muslims come with a beggar's staff in their hand, but as soon as they're in from the cold it becomes a stick to beat us with«[29]

The DPP are not the only growing hate group in Denmark. There are numerous neo-Nazi street gangs that are part of Scandinavian Black Metal (Satanic Death Metal) culture, who commit crimes, yet seem to escape the scrutiny of the DPP's propaganda machine. Much like the DPP, they do not approve of any people other than white Scandinavians and engage in crime and abuse of immigrants, which may explain the tight clusters of immigrant groups in Scandinavia. The DPP and Black Metal culture share a common link -- the notorious neo-Nazi organization known as Combat 18.[30][31]

Much media attention has been focused on arranged marriages, practiced by some Muslims (as well as Hindus, Jews, and other cultures), and laws have been implemented trying to prevent this practice. The choice of some Muslim women in Denmark to wear or not to wear various traditional head covering, e.g. in the workplace, has also been the subject of debate and action. The Danish military has refused to allow Muslim women to wear a traditional head covering. In public schools, teaching is conducted in Danish, and the government opposes the use of immigrant children's native language in Danish primary schools. However, Muslim schools where Danish is not the primary teaching language do exist.

A Danish newspaper, Jyllands-Posten printed 12 caricatures of the Islamic prophet Muhammad in September 2005. These cartoons sparked an international controversy, ultimately resulting in the scorching of two Danish diplomatic missions, a boycott of Danish goods in several countries, and a large number of protests around the world. Some of the cartoons were exaggerated caricatures of Arab features, much like depictions of African Americans in the mid 1800s and Jews in the 1930s. The number of violent protests by a few extremists in a world population of 1 Billion Muslims has caused rising support for the anti-immigration Danish People's Party and, by some accounts, a more critical approach towards Islam in Denmark. However, the cartoons were criticized as insensitive by world leaders like G.W. Bush and the U.S. Ambassador to Denmark, James P. Cain, who remarked "Americans in some point of our history decided that it was more important to have an ordered, integrated, diverse, peaceful, secure, harmonious society – harmonious racially, harmonious from an ethnic perspective and harmonious religiously – than it was to each have the individual right to insult our neighbours, to incite violence, to draw offensive cartoons just for the heck of it."

Despite the worldwide outrage and admonishment from international leaders, the DPP hosted a summer camp for their youth group where admittedly inebriated Danish youth continued to ridicule another culture for the fun and amusement. Amongst the new, artistically-deficient and crudely drawn unpublished cartoons, was a scatological depiction of Mohammed as a multi-humped camel defecating. There was a panoply of the usual stereotypes -- bombs, camels, desert backdrops, beards, large noses, and extremely bushy eyebrows[32], similar to depictions of African Americans with big lips, kinky hair and bugged-out eyes.[33]

Organizations

Noted Danish-Muslims

See also

References

  1. ^ "Muslims in Europe: Country guide". BBC News. Retrieved 2009-11-27.
  2. ^ a b "Visiting Denmark". islam.dk. Retrieved 24 August 2009.
  3. ^ "Denmark : International Religious Freedom Report 2005". U.S. Department of State. 2005. Retrieved 24 August 2009.
  4. ^ Jihad in Denmark, Danish Institute for International Studies
  5. ^ "Kirker i Danmark - en billeddatabase". Retrieved 2008-01-22.
  6. ^ http://www.humanityinaction.org/docs/Goldberg__Krasner,_2001.pdf Making a Mosque, Realizing a Community], Helene Hemme Goldberg and Abigail Krasner (PDF)
  7. ^ http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_U54NM9QE5VY/Sqdnjlm_0rI/AAAAAAAAH8I/Nf2mPgSs-ZI/s400/Dansk_Folkeparti_an_193964e.jpg
  8. ^ After 15 years of wrangling, Muslims get their own burial grounds in Brøndby, Copenhagen Post.
  9. ^ Historien om de muslimske friskoler, Danmarks Radio.
  10. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solvang,_California
  11. ^ http://ocp.hul.harvard.edu/immigration/themes-scandinavian.html
  12. ^ http://www.jstor.org/pss/2769182
  13. ^ http://www.augustana.edu/x16607.xml
  14. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betty_White
  15. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lutefisk
  16. ^ http://www.staff.hum.ku.dk/sidsel/drunken.htm
  17. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiculturalism
  18. ^ http://onlyindenmark.wordpress.com/category/letter/
  19. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danish_People's_Party
  20. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danish_People's_Party
  21. ^ http://www.cphpost.dk/business/119-business/48260-higher-unemployment-among-ethnic-danes.html
  22. ^ http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_U54NM9QE5VY/Sqdnjlm_0rI/AAAAAAAAH8I/Nf2mPgSs-ZI/s400/Dansk_Folkeparti_an_193964e.jpg
  23. ^ http://students.ou.edu/C/Hannah.E.Clay-1/blue-mosque.jpg
  24. ^ http://www.danielpipes.org/450/something-rotten-in-denmark
  25. ^ http://www.danielpipes.org/450/something-rotten-in-denmark
  26. ^ http://www.danielpipes.org/450/something-rotten-in-denmark
  27. ^ http://www.mpac.org/article.php?id=72
  28. ^ http://www.mpac.org/article.php?id=72
  29. ^ http://www.panhumanism.com/letter_to_obama.php
  30. ^ http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/intelligence-report/browse-all-issues/2000/fall/darker-than-black/from-satan-to-hitler
  31. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danish_People's_Party
  32. ^ http://balder.org/muhammed/Danish-Peoples-Party-Youth-Muhammed-Cartoon-Contest.php
  33. ^ http://www.fashion-res.com/EX/10-09-09/democrat-anti-negro-anti-republican-cartoon.jpg
  34. ^ Muslimer i Dialog
  35. ^ "Salam - Foreningen for unge muslimske kvinder". Retrieved 2008-03-18.
  36. ^ "unge muslimer gruppens officielle hjemmeside". Retrieved 2008-03-18.