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ANKARA: Racism in Germany has reached a desperate level

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  • ANKARA: Racism in Germany has reached a desperate level

    Daily Sabah, Turkey
    Jan 6 2015


    Racism in Germany has reached a desperate level

    OZAN CEYHUN @ozanceyhun
    Published19 hours ago


    When taking into consideration the question of racism in Germany, I
    think it should not be compared with racist parties or movements in
    other countries such as Golden Dawn in Greece and the National Front
    Party in France.

    There is a saying in German: "Bevor wir andere kritisieren, sollten
    wir erst einmal vor der eigenen Tür kehren," which translates as, "We
    should first clean our own doorway before criticizing others." And
    Germany urgently needs to take its own advice.

    Now, when certain groups with close relations with the Armenian
    diaspora, and groups who are against Turkey in Germany were preparing
    to stage demonstrations against Turkey in May, Prime Minister Ahmet
    DavutoÄ?lu met the representatives of the non-Muslim minority
    communities at a lunch in Istanbul. Ecumenical Orthodox Patriarch
    Bartholomew, Deputy Patriarch of the Greek Orthodox Church Peter
    Stefanos, Vicar-General of the Chaldean Catholic community of Turkey
    Francois Yakan, Patriarchal Vicar of the Syriac Orthodox Church Yusuf
    Çetin, Turkish ambassador to the Vatican Mehmet Paçacı, Patriarchal
    Vicar of the Syrian Catholic Church in Turkey Yusuf SaÄ?, Apostolic
    Administrator of the Armenian Catholic Archbishop Levan Zekiyan, Chief
    Rabbi Ä°shak Haleva and Archbishop of the Armenian Apostolic Church
    Aram AteÅ?yan attended.

    During the meeting, it was decided to construct a new church in
    Istanbul's YeÅ?ilköy neighborhood, and a fact that some circles in the
    EU insist on ignoring was once again underlined ` non-Muslims living
    in Turkey are content with the new Turkey.

    However, Muslims living in Germany are anxious.

    The members of a new German "intellectual," racist organization, the
    Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the Occident (PEGIDA),
    gather every Monday and march against Islam. And they have recently
    drawn swastikas and written racist slogans such as "down with Islam,"
    "Turks will be killed" and "swine Turks" on the walls of Burg Primary
    School, Leibniz High School and other buildings located in
    Schüztenplatz Square in the town of Dormagen, which is 593 kilometers
    from Dresden where almost no Muslims live.

    This is not the first ugly attack in Dormagen. On Dec. 21, 2014, at
    around 4:20 a.m., the Dormagen Ditib Mosque was the target of a racist
    attack. The Police launched an investigation into the attack, in which
    racist and hateful words were written on the walls and the minaret of
    the mosque. The Düsseldorf Prosecutor's Office, coordinating the
    investigation, announced a reward of 1,500 euros in order to identify
    the offenders and shed light on the incident.

    According to 2013 statistics, 62,521 people (30,730 male and 30,791
    female) live in Dormagen. It is quite a small town. And the total
    number of foreigners living in Dormagen is 6,623. In Dormagen, which
    has 25 churches including 14 Catholic, nine Protestant and two other
    churches, there are only four mosques, and one of them is under
    construction. Seemingly these mosques have annoyed someone.

    The investigation launched after the Dec. 21 attack in Dormagen
    seemingly could not yield tangible results. Roughly two weeks later,
    the skinheads of Dormagen made their second move.

    Dormagen is only one instance. If racists and neo-Nazis could
    comfortably act in a small town like Dormagen, then what is the
    general picture in Germany overall, whose population is 82 million?

    Muslims living Germany are rightfully anxious. Between August and
    December 2014, a total of 15 attacks were organized in Germany, 11 of
    them targeting mosques.

    Turkish-origin Muslims in Germany still anxiously read the writing on
    the backs of members of the neo-Nazi group, the National Socialist
    Underground (NSU), which is notorious for the murders publicly known
    as "döner killings," which are not yet solved.

    The situation is also grave in other parts of the EU. According to the
    latest report by the Turkish Parliament's Human Rights Commission, "in
    2014, 38 attacks were organized in Germany, eight attacks were made in
    Austria, seven in Bulgaria, two in Belgium, Netherlands and Swede, and
    one in France."

    Racism and xenophobia in Europe have evolved into Islamophobia in recent years.

    Formerly, racists and neo-Nazis used to write "Turks, get out!" and
    now they are writing slogans such as "down with Islam" or "get out,
    Muslims!"

    Calling innocent Muslims peacefully living in EU countries to account
    for the deeds of the terrorist organization, the Islamic State of Iraq
    and al-Sham (ISIS), is the greatest harm that could be done to them.
    But unfortunately, this is the current case.

    As PEGIDA emerged in Dresden, the assaults against Muslims and mosques
    have increased in Germany.

    All EU countries, particularly Germany, should not keep their heads in
    the sand, but must realise the level Islamophobia has reached. Not
    acknowledging racism will not make it go away.

    Not only the EU Commission and the European Parliament, but also the
    governments and parliaments of all EU member countries must decide on
    urgent measures and immediately implement them.

    The counter-protests staged by thousands of people against PEGIDA and
    racism raise hopes. However, an increase in effective police measures
    is critical. Just like the ongoing determined fight against ISIS, a
    determined fight is also required against the racist terrorists and
    their proponents who adopt violence as a fighting technique.

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