“Migrants fleeing persecution and poverty settled with their children in the East End of London. As believers in one God they were devoted to their holy book, which contained strict religious laws, harsh penalties and gender inequality. Some of them established separate religious courts. The men wore dark clothes and had long beards; some women covered their hair. A royal commission warned of the grave dangers of self-segregation. Politicians said different religious dress was a sign of separation. Some migrants were members of extremist political groups. Others actively organised to overthrow the established western political order. Campaigners against the migrants carefully framed their arguments as objections to ‘alien extremists’ and not to a race or religion. A British cabinet minister said we were facing a clash about civilisation: this was about values; a battle between progress and ‘arrested development’. All this happened a hundred years ago to Jewish migrants seeking asylum in Britain.”
Maleiha Malik in the Guardian, 2 February 2007
Tory attacks on mainstream Muslim organisations are unfounded. Far from promoting separatism or sharia law, organisations such as the Muslim Council of Britain have worked hard to engage the Muslim community with the British political process.
“In the last few days, sharia has been much in the news; David Cameron accused Muslim groups who promote sharia law of being the ‘mirror image’ of the British National party and a poll by the Policy Exchange thinktank, which showed that 40% of young Muslims wanted to live under sharia law, was widely reported.