NPR: “Muslims in Austria Say Islamophobia Is Growing”

From National Public Radio

Across the street from Vienna’s iconic Ferris wheel, the Schura Mosque is packed each Friday with Muslims who come to pray.

It’s one of some 300 mosques and prayer rooms serving 700,000 Muslims who live in Austria and who’ve enjoyed the same rights as Christians and Jews since Islam was made an official religion there in 1912.

A few mosques, like Vienna’s Islamic Center, even have a minaret. But they are silent these days, a metaphor of sorts for the low profile many Muslims are keeping because they no longer feel welcome in Austria. One of the worshipers at Schura Mosque on a recent Friday was Viennese Councilman Omar al-Rawi. He said Muslim asylum-seekers are especially afraid to enter mosques nowadays.

“They say, ‘We won’t go to pray because maybe they will think we are radicals so it’s better not to pray'” until their refugee status is approved, he explains.

Much of the Muslim discomfort in Austria is linked to its new government that was sworn on Dec. 18. One of its factions is the far-right Freedom Party, which has Nazi roots and which has joined its bigger partner — the center-right People’s Party — in taking a hard line against Muslims. Critics charge that even before they took office, these parties changed the political discourse in Austria by playing on people’s fears. A majority of voters embraced their message of keeping Austria safe from terror attacks carried out by Muslim extremists elsewhere in Europe, as well as curbing asylum and immigration.

“These factors stir up uneasiness and fears and makes the Muslim to be seen as ‘the other,'” says Carla Amina Baghajati, 51, who is spokeswoman for the Islamic Religious Community in Austria. That “other,” she adds, is perceived as a threat to the Austrian norms.

In recent months, Austria adopted a face-veil ban and, a couple of years before that, banned Islamic institutions from raising funds abroad, even though no such prohibition exists on Christian or Jewish institutions. Baghajati says even the new chancellor, Sebastian Kurz, who used to play an active role in bringing Muslims and the government closer when he was integration minister in 2011, is now distancing himself and no longer attends Islamic holiday events.

Farid Hafez, an Austrian author and researcher in the department of sociology and political science at the University of Salzburg, predicted that life will be worse for Muslims now than the last time this governing coalition was in power in Austria from 2000-2005. That’s because the Freedom Party has changed its “scapegoat from the Jew to the Muslim,” he explains.

During its first term, the far-right group was accused of anti-Semitism and the European Union issued diplomatic sanctions against the Austrian government for a short time over its inclusion of the Freedom Party. But the leadership changed and the nationalist faction began forging a closer relationship with Israeli hardliners. Today, the party even has a Jewish parliamentarian.

For its part, the new Austrian government denies it is ostracizing Muslims. Among its stated goals are to improve security in Austria and better integrate refugees and other immigrants who already live there. For example, Herwig Mahr, a regional lawmaker for the Freedom Party in Upper Austria, is pushing for a German-language-only rule for students while they are at school, even during recess. He said if students don’t learn German, they can’t function well in Austrian society or at work.

“We have the problem that, in some areas, some 84 percent of the people are not native German speakers,” Mahr explains, adding that politicians there are fighting against the creation of a “ghetto education” where children don’t learn German properly. “It’s a given that if I were to enter a mosque, I would take off my shoes like everyone else. So I expect young people who come to us to adopt our customs as well,” he says.

But Hafez says defining Austrian norms that way fails to recognize that the society here is diverse.

“Whenever people say you have to integrate, the question is integrate into what?” he explains. “This is a part of the racist game. It’s not really about the reality that is going on in our everyday life, but it’s very much a racist discourse that is used to keep people outside [and] from having the same rights.”

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