This is whats happening in Europe
On July 2, the podcast “Kaffee extra Schwarz” (Coffee extra Black) on the German radio station BR discussed the topic of Islamism in German primary schools. Journalist Oliver Mayer-Rüth reports that a German girl at a primary school in the Hamburg district of Steilshoop was told by Muslim classmates to wear a headscarf because uncovered hair is ‘haram’.
Mayer-Rüth runs the podcast together with Islam critic Ahmed Mansour. One mother told the journalist that her child was told by classmates that she did not belong at school because she had blonde hair. He had also been beaten up several times. The mother also reported that many parents and some teachers had glorified the Hamas massacre of Israeli civilians on October 7, 2023. An Afghan father had praised the Taliban regime at a school event.
Mansour comments on these and similar incidents with one word: ‘infiltration’. In the name of ‘political correctness and anti-racism’, the teachers and pupils concerned were ignored. Mansour’s aim is not to criminalise the children, but to win them over to the German social order. In his experience, there has been an increasing decline in the willingness of teachers to deal with such problems, especially since 2018.
This is because their own school should not be perceived as a problem school. However, even Muslims who are against such practices would adapt in part due to social pressure. In the ‘Lower Saxony Survey 2022’, 67.8 per cent of the pupils surveyed stated that the rules of the Koran were more important to them than the laws of Germany. 45.8 per cent agreed with the statement that an Islamic theocracy is the best form of government.
Ahmed Mansour pointed out that the accusation of anti-Muslim racism is intended to stifle debates about such problems. At the same time, he pointed out that the accusations were only directed against Islamists and not against all Muslims. In fact, the podcast was accused of ‘anti-Muslim racism’ on the basis of this programme from July 2. BR journalist Fatemeh K. wrote on LinkedIn: ‘I often wonder how long this publicly funded podcast will get away with stigmatisation and anti-Muslim racism.’
She wrote to several people hoping that they could “help” and “ask you to use your say”. Among others, the Development Minister Reem Alabali-Radovan and the Federal Anti-Discrimination Agency were chosen as well as the New German Media Makers. It remains to be seen whether these people will join the debate. The newspaper Hamburger Morgenpost reported that non-Muslim schoolgirls were labelled ‘pig eaters’ . Muslim schoolgirls who do not wear headscarves have also been admonished by classmates.
apollo-news.net
On July 2, the podcast “Kaffee extra Schwarz” (Coffee extra Black) on the German radio station BR discussed the topic of Islamism in German primary schools. Journalist Oliver Mayer-Rüth reports that a German girl at a primary school in the Hamburg district of Steilshoop was told by Muslim classmates to wear a headscarf because uncovered hair is ‘haram’.
Mayer-Rüth runs the podcast together with Islam critic Ahmed Mansour. One mother told the journalist that her child was told by classmates that she did not belong at school because she had blonde hair. He had also been beaten up several times. The mother also reported that many parents and some teachers had glorified the Hamas massacre of Israeli civilians on October 7, 2023. An Afghan father had praised the Taliban regime at a school event.
Mansour comments on these and similar incidents with one word: ‘infiltration’. In the name of ‘political correctness and anti-racism’, the teachers and pupils concerned were ignored. Mansour’s aim is not to criminalise the children, but to win them over to the German social order. In his experience, there has been an increasing decline in the willingness of teachers to deal with such problems, especially since 2018.
This is because their own school should not be perceived as a problem school. However, even Muslims who are against such practices would adapt in part due to social pressure. In the ‘Lower Saxony Survey 2022’, 67.8 per cent of the pupils surveyed stated that the rules of the Koran were more important to them than the laws of Germany. 45.8 per cent agreed with the statement that an Islamic theocracy is the best form of government.
Ahmed Mansour pointed out that the accusation of anti-Muslim racism is intended to stifle debates about such problems. At the same time, he pointed out that the accusations were only directed against Islamists and not against all Muslims. In fact, the podcast was accused of ‘anti-Muslim racism’ on the basis of this programme from July 2. BR journalist Fatemeh K. wrote on LinkedIn: ‘I often wonder how long this publicly funded podcast will get away with stigmatisation and anti-Muslim racism.’
She wrote to several people hoping that they could “help” and “ask you to use your say”. Among others, the Development Minister Reem Alabali-Radovan and the Federal Anti-Discrimination Agency were chosen as well as the New German Media Makers. It remains to be seen whether these people will join the debate. The newspaper Hamburger Morgenpost reported that non-Muslim schoolgirls were labelled ‘pig eaters’ . Muslim schoolgirls who do not wear headscarves have also been admonished by classmates.

Hamburg: Muslimische Schüler fordern deutsche Schülerin auf, Kopftuch zu tragen
In Hamburg forderten muslimische Schüler eine deutsche Mitschülerin auf, ein Kopftuch tragen, weil unbedeckte Haare „haram“ seien.
