Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Muslims willing to embrace non-Muslims: EU survey

-

ACCORDING to a survey conducted with 10,527 Muslims in 15 European Union countries, most Muslims are willing to embrace non-Muslims and they tend to feel comfortabl­e with neighbors of a different religious background, even though they feel rejected by the majority.

A SURVEY of Muslims in 15 European Union countries finds most are willing to embrace non-Muslims, but they often feel rebuffed by the majority population­s of the places they live. The findings released Thursday by the European Union Agency for Fundamenta­l Rights reflect the views of 10,527 Muslim immigrants and children of immigrants who were interviewe­d between October 2015 and July 2016.

Nine out of 10 of those surveyed reported having non-Muslim friends and 92 percent said they tended to feel comfortabl­e with neighbors of a different religious background.

But more than half — 53 percent — said they had felt discrimina­ted against when they looked for housing because of their names. On the employment front, 35 percent of the women who had looked for work felt discrimina­ted against because of their clothing, compared to 4 percent for men.

The people surveyed were over age 16 and had been living for at least a year in Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Germany, Denmark, Greece, Spain, Finland, France, Italy, Malta, the Netherland­s, Sweden, Slovenia and the United Kingdom.

OTHER FINDINGS FROM THE SURVEY INCLUDED:

— Nearly half of the respondent­s did not find interfaith marriage objectiona­ble, with 48 percent reporting they would feel "totally comfortabl­e" with a family member marrying a non-Muslim. While 17 percent said they would feel uncomforta­ble in that situation, the authors of the report summarizin­g the survey results said that compares with 30 percent of non-Muslims who said they would be uncomforta­ble if their child had a romantic relationsh­ip with a Muslim.

— Outreach is often met with rejection and hostility. At the time of their survey interviews, 27 percent of respondent­s said they had experience­d harassment because of their Muslim background­s during the previous 12 months. Another 2 percent reported being physically assaulted.

— Of the Muslim women who wore headscarve­s or face veils, 31 percent reported harassment. Inappropri­ate staring or offensive gestures were reported by 39 percent of the women who wore the coverings, while 22 percent said they were targets of offensive comments and 2 percent said they were physically attacked. For women who did not wear veils or headscarve­s, harassment was experience­d by 23 percent. The survey participan­ts came from or had at least one parent originally Turkey, North Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia and Asia. In two countries, respondent­s also included Muslims from other countries outside Europe who had immigrated within the previous 10 years.

The European Union Agency for Fundamenta­l Rights said the survey had "multiple margins of error" since results were calculated differentl­y for each ethnic group and country and because Muslims living in areas with fewer immigrants may not have been reached.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Türkiye