Ramm, Christoph (2010). The Muslim-Makers: How Germany ‘Islamizes’ Turkish Immigrants. Interventions. International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, 12(2), pp. 183-197. Taylor & Francis 10.1080/1369801X.2010.489692
Text
THE_MUSLIM_MAKERS.pdf - Published Version Restricted to registered users only Available under License Publisher holds Copyright. Download (244kB) |
At the beginning of 2006 the German state of Baden-Württemberg introduced a
test especially for Muslim citizenship applicants in an attempt to determine their
attitude to the German constitution and to ‘western values’. While this so-called
‘Muslim test’ attracted a lot of criticism from all sides for its contradictory and
openly racist approach, the underlying profile of Muslims was only questioned
by a minority of the critics, the whole debate soon being integrated into the
escalating conflict over the cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed. This essay
argues that both the test and the ensuing political and media debate reflect a
significant shift in the public perception of immigrants and particularly of the
large Turkish community in Germany. The image of Turkish immigrants is
increasingly ‘Islamized’, thereby taking up and reshaping older discourses which
focused on their ethnic and cultural ‘otherness’ as foreigners or on the vision of
a second generation ‘caught between two cultures’. Growing diversification of
lifestyles and hybrid identifications among Turkish-Germans are reduced to the
imagination of a Muslim collective living in ‘parallel societies’, attributing social
exclusion, educational shortcomings and forms of patriarchal violence (e.g.
forced marriages or ‘honour killings’) to the immigrants’ Islamic origin. The
imaginary separation of Muslim/Turkish and Western/German social spheres
and value systems is characteristic of a re-evaluated German integrationism
which makes allegiance to ‘our values’ a necessary precondition for belonging.
As an essential part of this integrationism the public ‘Islamization’ of immigrants
is predominantly pushed and reinforced by politicians of different camps,
together with the mass media and some academic ‘Islam experts’, uniting
conservatives seeking to modernize traditional German anti-immigration policies
with some former liberal and left adherents of an essentialist multiculturalism in
an effort to conceptualize democratic and secular German identity against a
vision of Islam untouched by the Enlightenment and liberal emancipation.
Item Type: |
Journal Article (Original Article) |
---|---|
Division/Institute: |
06 Faculty of Humanities > Department of Art and Cultural Studies > Institut für Studien zum Nahen Osten und zu muslimischen Gesellschaften |
UniBE Contributor: |
Ramm, Christoph |
Subjects: |
200 Religion > 290 Other religions 300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology 900 History > 940 History of Europe |
ISSN: |
1369-801X |
Publisher: |
Taylor & Francis |
Language: |
English |
Submitter: |
Christoph Ramm |
Date Deposited: |
21 Feb 2024 08:16 |
Last Modified: |
21 Feb 2024 08:16 |
Publisher DOI: |
10.1080/1369801X.2010.489692 |
BORIS DOI: |
10.48350/193066 |
URI: |
https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/193066 |