NPR Bemoans Danish Muslims are Being 'Beleaguered' By 'Nationalist Extremists'
On Tuesday's All Things Considered, NPR's Philip Reeves lamented the supposedly "anti-Muslim" climate in Denmark, noting that the country was once "considered a model of tolerance," but now, "men...[with] beards and traditional Islamic robes....are no longer entirely welcome, because some Danes want them to leave." Reeves quoted one imam who feared "a spiral, in which anti-immigration nationalist extremists fuel Islamist extremists and vice versa."
Host Robert Siegel wasting little time in setting a slanted tone in his introduction to the correspondent's report, which referenced the recent legal victory of Dutch politician Geert Wilders:
SIEGEL: We're going to Denmark now, where a debate is raging over Muslim immigration and religious tolerance. One Dutch politician, who compared Islam to Nazism, was acquitted last week of hate speech charges, and that verdict has horrified Muslims across Europe, who fear it will encourage more anti-Muslim sentiment. NPR's Philip Reeves recently visited Denmark, and he found that Muslims there are feeling beleaguered.
The British journalist first played audio of the atmosphere in a cafe in Copenhagen where his bearded men in "traditional Islamic robes" were having afternoon tea, and quickly noted that there was "no outward sign that in this nation, these men are no longer entirely welcome, because some Danes want them to leave." Reeves then highlighted how Kenneth Kristensen Berth and his Danish People's Party were liberal on "some issues...but not on Muslim immigration."
After playing a clip from Berth, who openly stated that he wanted to "exchange the 400,000 Muslims in Denmark for 400,000 Chinese....because they have no intention of integrating into Danish society," the NPR correspondent played two sound bites from Safia Aoude, a "lawyer who sometimes feels an outsider in her own country because of her background."
Interestingly, Reeves later chronicled how "relations between non-Muslims and the Muslim minority in Denmark took a downward turn with the cartoon crisis several years ago. Drawings of the Prophet Mohammed, published in the Danish press, enraged much of the Muslim world. Attacks by Islamist extremists that followed in Denmark cranked up the tension....The very concept of multiculturalism is now being called into question in much of Europe. Danish writer and journalist Helle Merete Blix is among those who think it's failed." He even acknowledged that "some Muslims in Europe are indeed opposed to secular democracy" and named Hizb ut-Tahrir, a group that "wants to turn the Muslim world into a caliphate," as an example.
However, near the end of his report, the journalist turned to his featured imam, Abdul Wahid Pedersen, who "converted to Islam nearly 30 years ago." Reeves first pointed out that Pedersen "works with many young Muslims, and he's worried about them." He then gave voice to his concerns about "anti-immigration nationalist extremists" and added, "Denmark's overwhelmingly moderate and tolerant majority needs to step in and bridge that gap, says Pedersen, before it's too late."
This isn't the first time in recent months that NPR has worried about Muslims in Europe. On two programs on April 11, 2011, correspondent Eleanor Beardsley forwarded the notion that the recent ban on the niqab in France fosters an "anti-Muslim climate" in the country, and labeled it "sinister."
The full transcript of Philip Reeves's report from Tuesday's All Things Considered:
ROBERT SIEGEL: We're going to Denmark now, where a debate is raging over Muslim immigration and religious tolerance. One Dutch politician, who compared Islam to Nazism, was acquitted last week of hate speech charges, and that verdict has horrified Muslims across Europe, who fear it will encourage more anti-Muslim sentiment.
NPR's Philip Reeves recently visited Denmark, and he found that Muslims there are feeling beleaguered.
PHILIP REEVES: In a cafe in Denmark's capital, Copenhagen, a group of men is taking afternoon tea. The men have beards and traditional Islamic robes. The mood's upbeat. There's no outward sign that in this nation, these men are no longer entirely welcome, because some Danes want them to leave.
KENNETH KRISTENSEN BERTH: My name is Kenneth Kristensen Berth, and I'm a member of the party committee since '99.
REEVES: He represents the Danish People's Party. It's the third largest in Denmark's parliament. On some issues, it's liberal, but not on Muslim immigration.
BERTH: Every day, I would like to exchange the 400,000 Muslims in Denmark for 400,000 Chinese. Every day of the week, I would like to do that, because we have a special problem with the people from Muslim countries because they have no intention of integrating into Danish society.
REEVES: A few years back, Denmark was considered a model of tolerance. Back then, you would never have heard a mainstream party talking of swapping out Muslims for Chinese, says Safia Aoude.
SAFIA AOUDE: Twenty years ago, nobody would say these kind of things. Some people I know, they're actually so scared of these kind of rhetoric and- they actually move away from Denmark. They move to Great Britain or America.
REEVES: Aoude is a lawyer, who sometimes feels an outsider in her own country because of her background.
AOUDE: Every time people ask me, where you come from? And I tell them it, doesn't matter where I come from because I define myself as a Muslim. I live in Denmark, and I have all the responsibilities like any other citizen has.
REEVES: Relations between non-Muslims and the Muslim minority in Denmark took a downward turn with the cartoon crisis several years ago. Drawings of the Prophet Mohammed, published in the Danish press, enraged much of the Muslim world. Attacks by Islamist extremists that followed in Denmark cranked up the tension. So, generally, have the conflicts in the Middle East.
Yet, another big trend is at work. Barriers are going up. In recent years, Denmark's toughened its immigration laws. Fearing an influx of refugees because of the Arab Spring, it's also tightening border controls, despite the Schengen Agreement guaranteeing free movement in most of the EU.
The very concept of multiculturalism is now being called into question in much of Europe. Danish writer and journalist Helle Merete Blix is among those who think it's failed.
HELLE MERETE BLIX: Because multiculturalism does not produce more pluralism. What it produces is parallel societies. There has to be a main culture that you sort of integrate into, and if too many people suddenly speak out, they want Sharia law, they do not want democracy, that is a major problem in every European country.
REEVES: Some Muslims in Europe are indeed opposed to secular democracy. Take Hizb ut-Tahrir, a radical Islamic organization. It wants to turn the Muslim world into a caliphate. Accused of anti-Semitism and inciting violence, it's banned in parts of Europe, though not in Denmark, where Chadi Freigeh is its spokesman.
CHADI FREIGEH, HIZB UT-TAHRIR: My problem, when you talk about integration- integration is actually a cover-up for assimilation. They want Muslims to give up their Islamic values, their Islamic identity, their Islamic way of life, and adopt the Western secular way of life.
REEVES: But Hizb ut-Tahrir is a fringe group. Abdul Wahid Pedersen converted to Islam nearly 30 years ago. He serves as the imam in a Copenhagen mosque. He works with many young Muslims, and he's worried about them.
ABDUL WAHID PEDERSEN: They feel that they're not being allowed to share the Danish dream because they're not being treated as Danes, and even if they go to their parents' country of origin, they're not being treated as Pakistanis or Turks either.
REEVES: Pedersen sees a spiral, in which anti-immigration nationalist extremists fuel Islamist extremists and vice versa. Denmark's overwhelmingly moderate and tolerant majority needs to step in and bridge that gap, says Pedersen, before it's too late. Philip Reeves, NPR News, London.
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Comments
NPR's spotty history
Submitted by HockeyKid on Wed, 06/29/2011 - 7:52pm.
seems to forget what many Danes remember: Their Dutch neighbor Theo Van Gogh's body, shot multiple times, partially decapitated, and with a five-page Muslim screed stuck to his chest with one of two knives left in his body.
That's tolerance, Mohammed-style.
"Beauty is only skin deep, but liberal's to the bone." - me
Damm!
Submitted by HelenS on Wed, 06/29/2011 - 7:54pm.
Let me guess: they didn't do anything to bring it on, either!
Can you imagine the audacity of Danes wanting a more Danish Denmark?
It seems Moslem Extremists just can't get any sympathy.
Me - "The libs/dems of today are the Quislings of former years - the cowards who would vote a fraud into office in exchange for handouts from the devil."
Oh, and P.S.
Submitted by HelenS on Wed, 06/29/2011 - 7:56pm.
WAAAAAAaaaaa!!!!
Me - "The libs/dems of today are the Quislings of former years - the cowards who would vote a fraud into office in exchange for handouts from the devil."
Has NPR ever done a story on
Submitted by Onepersonsopinion on Wed, 06/29/2011 - 8:43pm.
Has NPR ever done a story on the plight of the Coptic Christians in Egypt or Christians in any part of the Muslim world? I'm sure they are maligned and victimized.
Yeah, how dare those Danes seek to prevent their country...
Submitted by Dave. on Wed, 06/29/2011 - 8:47pm.
...from being taken over by a growing horde of illiterate, 7th Century-throwback, murderous barbarians.
How positively intolerant of them.
-Dave
Vote for the American in November
Even better
Submitted by Unsane on Wed, 06/29/2011 - 9:36pm.
Here's betting NPR knew better than to tell its audience why there are Muslim immigrants in Denmark to begin with!
Hint: it isn't Danish enlightenment.
"CONSUMED DEMOCRACY RETURNS A SOCIALIST REGIME" - Slayer, "Fictional Reality", from Divine Intervention (1994)
I'm watching Beck right now
Submitted by Dan The Man 2 on Thu, 06/30/2011 - 2:23am.
I'm watching Beck right now and he is making a good case for the Middle East uprisings and Nazism. Beck is growing on me, but he is still hard to take except in small doses.
Yeah, I'm wondering how that
Submitted by killa37 on Wed, 06/29/2011 - 9:01pm.
Yeah, I'm wondering how that 'multi-culteralism' is working out for those Europeans...........kind of like our own 'hoax and chains' crap, huh???
I had a young man working for me a while ago..........he was half Tahitian and half French, but did his schooling in France. He said there are areas where the POLICE won't even go into, because of the Mooooooooooooooooooooooslems. And he was in school quite a few years ago............so I'm guessing that it's gotten better, right????
Oh...........I guess a 'national extremist' is some kind of new PC buzzword for somebody who was actually born and raised in their own county, beleives in the values and tenants of that country, and may actually be of the same nationality of most of his (or her) countrymen............although I'm sure that there are 'national extremists' who may have come from somwhere else, but BELIEVE in the same things as the REAL 'national extremists' do!!!
This is shocking.
Submitted by hbnolikeee on Wed, 06/29/2011 - 10:08pm.
I cannot imagine why the Danish would behave this way.
Maybe they don't want to see this stat in Copenhagen..
Submitted by mrt721 on Wed, 06/29/2011 - 10:13pm.
or maybe they already have.
"Let us take a hard look at Norway. Rarely does a statistic stand out as jarringly as this: a study by Norwegian police has shown that over the past five years 100% of rapes in the capital of Oslo were committed by Muslim immigrants."
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/2726786/posts
It doesn't make sense.You go
Submitted by well99 on Wed, 06/29/2011 - 10:30pm.
It doesn't make sense.You go to another country and you expect them to change to the culture you left.Why leave in the first place?
Happens all the time here
Submitted by GW on Thu, 06/30/2011 - 2:21pm.
in South Florida. So much so that there used to be a popular bumper sticker that read, "We don't care how you do things up north."
GW
Submitted by well99 on Thu, 06/30/2011 - 2:43pm.
I understand believe me.We need one for Californians.I am tired of "Why isn't it more like California".If you liked it so much why the flock didn't you stay.We didn't ask for you to move up here.
What does NPR know about foreign countries, anyways?
Submitted by Tenebrous on Wed, 06/29/2011 - 10:55pm.
Maybe when they can figure out how to report American events accurately, they can try their hand at the overseas stuff. I tire of their third-grade approach to everything -- "Ooh, look at these men who have beards. They look different. People dislike them because they look different." Yes, NPR. It's all about how people look. It's not like Muslims DO anything that causes problems, you know. *facepalm*
Visions and Principles blog
Well, they're only being
Submitted by killa37 on Wed, 06/29/2011 - 11:40pm.
Well, they're only being be-leaguered.........................their victims are being be-headed!!!!!
Be Fair To NPR They Get Perfectly Good Money
Submitted by Avitar on Thu, 06/30/2011 - 12:21am.
When we set up NPR in the sixties we should have made it clear that they couldn't turn tricks for other Johns. The Saudi have been paying NPR perfectly good money for professional services and we have to let them finish before we can throw them out. I cannot explain why the Danes are so tolerant especially after the Germans came through and moved into their daughter's bedrooms in the forties but they were and now that they are throwing the now accounts out of the house we have to expect that the other international ladies of the evneing likr NPR will object. It will cut into their income.
Why are they surprised?
Submitted by BTW Biological ... on Fri, 07/01/2011 - 12:16am.
Why is NPR surprised to see that Denmark isn't that opened minded. I dont think it is fair to say that Muslim resentment started when that cartoon was published. The cause had to become before and intolerance of their religion also had to come before that cartoon. The cartoon was just the tipping point. It is one thing to say you are tolerant, but that doesn't mean that you are. Funny considering that America is suppose to be the intolerant country.
She says it plainly...
Submitted by uhohshortsonthe... on Thu, 06/30/2011 - 7:14am.
AOUDE: "Every time people ask me, where you come from? And I tell them it, doesn't matter where I come from because I define myself as a Muslim."
And that explicitly defines the point, which this supposedly educated woman doesn't seem to get. We have the same problem in the USA, and if we don't get smart and stop the PC BS, things will get much worse soon.
and another misinformed yahoo...
Submitted by uhohshortsonthe... on Thu, 06/30/2011 - 7:19am.
CHADI FREIGEH, HIZB UT-TAHRIR: "My problem, when you talk about integration- integration is actually a cover-up for assimilation. They want Muslims to give up their Islamic values, their Islamic identity, their Islamic way of life, and adopt the Western secular way of life."
No one in Europe has ever said this. No one in America has ever even implied this. Are Jewish and Catholics immigrants asked to give up their religious identities? No! But they are asked to learn the language, obey the laws, and send their children to school. Nothing different is expected of Muslims in either Europe or America, but they seem to feel they are being persecuted. Their main problem is they want to have their cake and eat it too.
Talk about dense
Submitted by Radical1979 on Thu, 06/30/2011 - 10:38pm.
If Denmark was open to muslims in the past, and over the past 10 or 20 years has become unwelcoming, then maybe, just maybe, it's because of the actions of the muslims.
NPR, ignoring the obvious since it's inception.