Present or Past
Introduction
Multiple questions opens Chapter 1 (Present and Past) – and while
this uses Muslims as test-case, they obviously refer to any immigrants,
any source country. Do Muslims who have chosen to emigrate to the West
pose a (considerable? long-term?) threat to the West? Should they be
required legally to undergo citizenship and loyalty tuition? Can or will
the majority of Muslims in the West willingly integrate and assimilate?
Can current ‘ghetto-isation’ (including the more educated Muslim
communities in the USA) and ‘voluntary segregation’ (apparent in both
USA and Europe) be dissolved? Should it be demanded – in the interest of
Muslim and host locality – that all Muslims undergo English tuition
compulsorily and quickly after arrival? Does the case for using Shari’ah
law warrant legislated part-introduction (one or more of its five
categories) in Western countries? Or should Muslims unhesitatingly
accept Western law – though with understanding that Muslim leaders may
work democratically for modifications? How unfair are accusations,
criticisms by Western sources that, in this modern age, ‘Islam’ in many
parts of the world engages in uncompassionate rule, law and behaviour,
at worst medieval even barbaric? (It is conceded that ‘the West’ can be
criticised in many instances just as heavily). Can moderate Muslim
leadership and members be at all effective in helping to dissolve the
unacceptable threat of violent extremism ‘in Islam’s name’?
Present |
Past
print page |
reload page | reload site