Salafist Muslims have been handing out free Korans across Germany in recent weeks. But the group’s radicalism has many politicians concerned — as does a recent video posted on YouTube that allegedly threatened journalists who wrote critical reports on the religious offensive.
At first glance, the project appears relatively harmless. A Muslim group in Germany has set as its goal the distribution of millions of free Korans, so that the holy book of Islam finds its place in “every household in Germany, Austria and Switzerland,” as the project website (German language only) states.
For months — though most noticeably during the recent Easter holidays — followers of the Salafist imam Ibrahim Abou Nagie have been handing out copies at information stands in city centers across Germany. The group, which calls itself “The True Religion,” claims that 300,000 copies have already been distributed.
Increasingly, though, skepticism of the project is mounting among leading politicians in Germany, not least because of Nagie’s own radical interpretation of Islam. Indeed, last autumn Nagie was indicted for public incitement to commit criminal offenses and for disturbing the religious peace.
And on Thursday, daily Die Welt reports that a video made a brief appearance on YouTube this week apparently targeting journalists that reported critically on the Koran distribution project. “We now have detailed information on the monkeys and pigs who published false reports about the (Frankfurt Salafist group) DawaFFM and many other brothers and sisters,” the video, which has since been taken down, intoned, according to Die Welt.
“We possess a lot of information, for example, we know where you live, we know what football team you root for, we have your mobile phone numbers,” it continues. The video names reporters from the dailies Frankfurter Rundschau andTagesspiegel. Die Welt reports that the producer of the video has worked for Nagie in the past.
The move was a reaction to the growing political debate in Germany focused on the Koran distributions. Although the Salafist info-stands have been making appearances in pedestrian zones of German towns for months, it is only now that politicians of all stripes have begun addressing Nagie’s mission.
In particular, as many make clear, it is the Salafist movement itself that most find objectionable. Germany’s Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV), the country’s domestic intelligence agency, estimates that there are between 3,000 and 5,000 Salafists in Germany. The Berlin office of the BfV warns that the Salafist ideology is almost identical to that of the al-Qaida terrorist network. More concerning, the group has a growing number of followers in Germany. Furthermore, Arid U., the man who was sentenced to life in prison in February for shooting to death two American servicemen at Frankfurt Airport in 2011, reportedly had ties to Salafism.
Spiegel has the full article