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Italy aims to integrate Muslims and shape 'Italian Islam'

AFP/The Local
AFP/The Local - [email protected]
Italy aims to integrate Muslims and shape 'Italian Islam'
People pray during a celebration of Eid al-Fitr marking the end of the fasting month of Ramadan in a gymnasium in Saluzzo, near Turin in July last year. Photo: Marco Bertorello/AFP

Italy's Interior Minister Angelino Alfano on Tuesday established a council for relations with the country's Muslims, an advisory body the government hopes will help the minority to better integrate.

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The council, made up of academics and experts in Islamic culture and religion, will be tasked with coming up with proposals and recommendations on integration issues based on "respect and cooperation", the ministry said in a statement.

Alfano said he wanted "a community with all those who - while from different countries, cultures, religions and traditions - intend to contribute to the peaceful development and prosperity of our country, in full compliance with our laws and our Christian and humanistic tradition."

The body will keep the government in the loop on Islamic issues in Italy and help shape "Italian Islam," the statement added.

Experts put the number of Muslims in Italy at over one million, most of whom are immigrants, plus a small number of converts.

Some of those converts are already striving to better integrate Muslims, with an Italian businessman talking to The Local last year about his challenges in trying to create what would be Europe’s first Islamic University in Lecce, a city in the heart of Puglia’s Salento region.

Read more: How Islamic college plan has split Italian town

Alfano, head of the New Centre Right (NCD) party, sparked controversy following the deadly attacks in Paris last November by saying the government would crack down on illegal Muslim places of worship in the fight against terrorism.

Such places are often set up because Muslim communities find it exceptionally difficult to establish authorised places of worship in Italy, a country with only four official mosques.

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