Why do European youth join Daesh? Integration policies (5)
European
states followed three strategies in dealing with Muslim migrants. These
strategies included full integration, the obliteration of the identity of the
migrants, and allowing the migrants considerable freedom in expressing their
cultural and political identity.
Identity obliteration makes it
necessary for governments to unify the whole country, something that turns this
country into a melting pot for all the identities it combines. The same
governments have to prevent any expression of cultural diversity. This model
results in the presence of a different perception of secularism as a way of
life. In the case of this model, secularism turns into a total separation
between religion and politics.
European
states, especially France, approved the model of political capital makers who
do not play any political role. The same model is approved in some Arab states,
such as Tunisia. These states do not allow the founding of political parties
against a religious background.
Cultural
diversity, on the other hand, gives the opportunity for minorities to express
their cultural peculiarities freely. It gives them the chance to practice their
religious rites and express their cultural identity openly. Cultural diversity
is based on the assumption that democracy is an environment conducive to
diversity, one that gives people the right to express their differences freely.
This model gives states the chance to adopt a type of secularism that allows
people to express their religious identities. This is the case in the UK and
the US.
In the
UK, the authorities work to create mechanisms that open the door for the
presence of a smooth relationship between all religious, ethnic and cultural
minorities. They encourage the construction of schools that teach and preserve
the original identities of the minorities. They allow organizations and
societies affiliated to those minorities to function freely.
The
authorities also oversee the introduction of educational curricula to the
minorities and offer the necessary financial support in this regard. Nonetheless,
the number of schools teaching Arabic culture and Islam is still very limited
in the UK.
One
reason for this is that these schools usually adopt an isolationist policy.
They turn most of the time into cultural ghettos. Their contribution to public
life is also always limited compared to state-run schools in the UK. Only 13% of
the graduates of these schools join universities (22).
However,
the same policies are proving a failure. Most of the Muslims living in the UK
suffer poverty. They are either unemployed or in the prisons (23).
Some
other European states follow different policies. These states include Germany,
Austria and Scandinavia. The main point in these policies is that these states
work to raise and improve the living conditions of the migrants. These states
also enforce policies that integrate the migrants in the local society (24).