Schoolchildren are converting to Islam in German schools as Christian students feel like outsiders and are desperate to try and fit in, a new study has warned.
‘More and more parents of German children are turning to counselling centres because the Christian children want to convert so that they are no longer outsiders at school,’ a state security officer told German tabloid Bild.
A study by the Criminal Research Institute of Lower Saxony found that 67.8 per cent of the surveyed students believe that the Koran is ‘more important’ than the laws in Germany.
Nearly half of them (45.6 per cent) think that ‘Islamic Theocracy is the best form of government’.
In several schools in large cities like Berlin or Frankfurt, Muslim children make up more than 80 per cent of the student body, which the expert claims is due to the strong immigration in the last eight years.
They said that in addition, many of these Muslim students come from strictly religious families from ‘very archaic cultures’ in Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq, where people live according to the morals and laws laid out by the Koran.
‘When girls at school behave too westernised in the eyes of Muslim young people, don’t wear a headscarf or meet boys, the male students think they have to defend their honour and warn the girls to behave like a devout Muslim,’ the state security officer said.
‘In addition, there is also peer pressure: you want to belong.’
They added that the male Muslim students can ‘appear very threatening and sometimes violent’ in their pursuit to ensure girls abide by the rules of the Koran.
Due to this, ‘parallel societies’ can be seen emerging in schools as the Muslim students assume a dominant role.
‘And if a lot of refugee children come to school again in the summer, the situation will become even more explosive,’ the expert said.