Ed Husain: How Britain's Mosques foster extremism

Today, there are between 1,200 and 1,600 mosques in Britain – no definite figure exists. Yesterday, the Charity Commission sought to gloss over the malaise in them by publishing figures on attendance, but not inquiring into difficult areas. At Quilliam, Britain’s first counter-extremism think-tank, we commissioned a poll of more than 1,000 mosques in 2008, during Ramadan when mosques are busiest. Despite employing Urdu and Bengali-speaking researchers, we could poll only just over 500. Most British mosques don’t maintain a reception or service to answer questions, and not every one we did reach was willing to answer.

Quilliam’s report, Mosques Made in Britain, reveals the true extent of the mess. We found that 97 per cent of imams, or leaders, were from overseas and 92 per cent were educated abroad, mostly in Pakistan or Bangladesh. Almost all mosques are controlled by first-generation immigrant men, leaving most British Muslims – women and young people – out of the management structure.

This is not new. Quilliam has merely found evidence of a problem that has been known among Muslims for more than two decades.

Read it all.

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, * International News & Commentary, * Religion News & Commentary, England / UK, Islam, Other Faiths, Religion & Culture

3 comments on “Ed Husain: How Britain's Mosques foster extremism

  1. Katherine says:

    I hope all British people, Muslim or otherwise, will read this column. And I’d like to know if anyone is doing similar research on U.S. mosques. Whose money built the mosque? Where does the imam come from? Where did he train? What does he preach? Are there radical pamphlets in the lobby? It’s possible that we’d find that American mosques are not as radical as British ones, but we won’t know until we send investigators to find out.

  2. libraryjim says:

    Just FYI, can’t attest to the truth of this but, it does give one pause to think

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CcJ_hhe1ip4

  3. jaroke says:

    …two decades, try eight or nine centuries.