Islam not a threat to secularism: French Orientalist

Islam does not pose a threat to secularism and French Muslims are taking initiatives in coping with the country’s secular laws, French orientalist Bruno Etienne maintained. Speaking to IslamOnline.net, he said that France’s five million Muslims, a recognized minority, are expected to comply with the country’s secularism, which is rather a positive challenge for them.

“Etienne praised moderate Muslim youths and activists, like Tareq Ramadan, ‘for their earnest efforts in understanding and explaining true Islam, which will definitely play a key role in drawing up the future picture of Islam in Europe’.”

Islam Online, 30 September 2003

The Devil and Daniel Pipes

“Pipes has repeatedly demonstrated hostility toward Arabs and toward Islam as a religion,” says Mitchell Plitnick, co-director of the San Francisco-based Jewish Voice for Peace, one of several Jewish organizations that have mobilized against him. “Of equal concern is that Pipes has often espoused the view that force is the most appropriate solution to the problems in the Middle East and the Muslim world.”

In These Times, 8 September 2003

The battle of the veil

Laurent Levy, a Paris lawyer who describes himself as an atheist, has become a champion for the freedom of religious expression since Lila, 18, and Alma, 16, were barred from their lycée in the northern suburb of Aubervilliers.

The girls – whose mother is a non-observant Algerian – were told the manner in which they wore the headscarf was “ostentatious” and unsuitable for sports lessons. The school authorities also accused them of taking part in a demonstration in their defence by around a hundred fellow students.

AFP, 1 October 2003

See also BBC News, 1 October 2003