Do you happen to have any information on how common this sort of thing is? How prevalent is it among Muslims? Are there some kind of percentage figures? I'm not taking a stance either way, I'm just curious if there are any hard numbers to this sort of thing.Because of the mosques and how they strengthen division.
German public television produced a "mosque report", with the goal to understand what is happening in normal German mosques.
What I got out of it so far: Mosques are the forge of a distinct Islamic identity which positions itself as opposed to the mainstream. People are directly discouraged to befriend Christians, Christianity / the western lifestyle are badmouthed etc, while at the same the gatherings in the Mosques build up a group identity, spiced with a sense of victim hood and marginalization. This leads to an us-vs-them-mentality. The practice of their Islamic heritage binds people together and keeps them to themselves.
To me mosques look like the powerful engine of a parallel society whose very identity breaths non-integration, but rather exclusivity and counter-culture.
Moreover: That kind of community-forging has no real counterpart in the German society. So this offers also something people can not get anywhere else even if they would want to, while welding a power alien to how German society works.
Not so much Islam itself, but this cherishing of being different and viewing the mainstream as something hostile and lesser is what differentiates Muslims from other immigrants. And I think this is an important reasons why Germany has little problems with Poles or Vietnamese, while a lot with immigrants from Islamic countries.
It also does not help that those mosques tend to be quit conservative. Apparently Syrians who recently came to Germany where taken by surprise how conservative they are.
So yeah, Islam is a problem for integration. That seems crystal-clear to me.