Reports unveils secret training for radical preachers in UK
Young imams are being trained in a network of Islamic schools across the UK that have been accused of promoting intolerance and misogyny, a secret Government report has warned.
The report claims preachers emerging from some
of the dozens of Darul Uloom madrasas scattered across Britain have views as
extreme as those held by radical clerics who move to the UK from Islamic
countries – and may spread them to worshippers.
The Mail on Sunday has identified 48 Darul
Ulooms – which can be translated as House of Knowledge – that follow a strict
syllabus called Dars-E-Nizami.
It espouses the literal following of the Koran
and is used by the hardline Islamic movement Deobandism, whose training schools
produced the Taliban in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
The ban on music is similar to the one imposed
by Islamic State, which carried out public floggings on those who broke the
rule.
Last night, a source familiar with the report
said: ‘UK-based training provided by Darul Ulooms results in the development of
extremist views because the institutions are highly conservative and often fail
to address the challenge facing Muslims in modern Britain. It means imams
trained in Britain will be no better equipped than foreign-born imams in
providing satisfactory support to British Muslims.’
The madrasas operate in many cities, including
London, Manchester, Glasgow and Leicester, but the report cites the Darul Uloom
High School in Birmingham as an example of an ‘extremist madrasa’.
Four years ago, it was investigated by Ofsted
after leaflets stating that music and dancing were ‘acts of the devil’ were
found on its premises. The school, which has around 175 pupils, was also
exposed by a Channel 4 investigation in 2011 that found pupils being taught to
hate Jews, Christians and Hindus.