Jumat 30 Aug 2013 12:37 WIB

Govt plans to send Muslim soldiers to schools to counter Islamophobia

British soldiers serve in war in Afghanistan in May 2007. British government plans to send serving Muslim soldiers into schools around the country to counter Islamaphobia. The program includes British soldiers who have served in Afghanistan and Iraq. (file photo)
Foto: en.wikipedia.org
British soldiers serve in war in Afghanistan in May 2007. British government plans to send serving Muslim soldiers into schools around the country to counter Islamaphobia. The program includes British soldiers who have served in Afghanistan and Iraq. (file photo)

REPUBLIKA.CO.ID, LONDON - British government plans to send serving Muslim soldiers into schools around the country to counter Islamaphobia in the wake of the killing of Lee Rigby, according the Independent repot on August 25, 2013.

Those Muslim servicemen and women will be asked to address school assemblies alongside their Christian colleagues in parts of the country that have seen a significant rise in religious hate crimes. They are likely to include past and present Muslim soldiers who have served in Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as some who were injured.

Around 650 Muslim soldiers are currently serving across the armed forces, including many in frontline roles. Sayeeda Warsi, minister for Faith and Communities, is understood to be assessing two proposals to co-ordinate the visits.

One is being led by the Army under the new Civilian Chaplain to the Military, Imam Ali Omar, and another is being proposed by the independent Curzon Institute. The schemes will be match-funded by the Department of Communities and Local Government.

The Independent reported, a senior government source said that the idea was to dispel myths from far-right organisations such as the EDL and from radical Islamic preachers that being Muslim was somehow incompatible with being a patriotic British citizen.

“This is an opportunity for men and women in uniform today – Muslim and non-Muslim – to go into schools and show that people of all faiths are serving alongside each other in our armed forces,” they said as quoted by the newspaper.

Reports of anti-Muslim attacks and abuse increased eight-fold in the wake of the death of Fusilier Rigby in Woolwich, south-east London. A month later they were still running at 36 per week.

Earlier this month David Cameron visited a mosque in Manchester. A young white Muslim convert described how attitudes to her had changed as a soon as she covered her head with a veil. 

She told the prime minister of the hostility she felt from people in the street and in shops, which she had never encountered when she was uncovered. Another woman said she and her friends sometimes “avoided” going into town for fear of abuse over the way they dressed.

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