Current:Home > InvestGermany and Turkey agree to train imams who serve Germany’s Turkish immigrant community in Germany -SovereignWealth
Germany and Turkey agree to train imams who serve Germany’s Turkish immigrant community in Germany
View
Date:2025-04-19 06:06:47
BERLIN (AP) — Germany and Turkey agreed Thursday to gradually end the deployment of Turkish state-employed imams to Germany and to instead have imams trained in Germany to serve the country’s large Turkish immigrant community.
German authorities have sought for many years to increase the number of imams educated domestically to decrease the influence of foreign countries on its Muslim communities.
As part of the joint German-Turkish training initiative, 100 imams are to be educated in Germany annually starting next year, while the number of imams assigned from Turkey is to be gradually reduced by the same number.
German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser called the agreement “an important milestone for the integration and participation of Muslim communities in Germany.”
“We need preachers who speak our language, know our country and stand up for our values,” Faeser said. “We want imams to get involved in the dialogue between religions and discuss questions of faith in our society.”
About 5.5 million of Germany’s 83.2 million residents are Muslim, and almost 3 million people in the country are Turkish or have Turkish roots.
For many decades, the Turkish government has exercised influence on the large immigrant community through the Muslim religious leaders it sent to work in Germany.
Relations between Germany’s majority Christian population and the Muslim minority traditionally have been complicated. Extremist attacks committed in the name of the Islamic State group resulted in raids and bans of Muslim associations deemed radical.
Racism, hatred and sometimes violence against Muslims in Germany are widespread and often part of their everyday experience, according to a recent report.
The agreement on the new imam training came together after “lengthy negotiations” with Turkey’s Diyanet, or Presidency of Religious Affairs, and the union of Turkish-Islamic cultural organizations in Germany, known by its Turkish acronym DITIB, the German Interior Ministry said.
With around 900 mosque communities, DITIB is the largest Islamic association in Germany.
The agreement with Turkey calls for DITIB to be in charge of training the 100 imams in Germany each year, but the aim is to have the men supplement their religious educations with classes at the Islamic College Germany.
The Islamic College Germany, or Islamkolleg Deutschland, is based in Osnabrueck in northern Germany. It was founded by Muslim community associations, theologians and academics in 2019 to provide practical and theological training for German-speaking religious staff and imams for local communities.
The German government also wants to promote courses for future imams that include German language teaching and religious education, as well as classes about history, political issues and German values, German news agency dpa reported.
Turkish immigrants started coming in significant numbers more than 60 years ago, when West Germany recruited “guest workers” from Turkey and elsewhere to help the country advance economically.
The mostly young men were often employed in coal mining, steel production and the auto industry. Many who initially came as temporary workers decided to stay and bring their families, giving Berlin and other cities in western and southwestern Germany large immigrant communities.
veryGood! (53344)
Related
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
- African Union says its second phase of troop withdrawal from Somalia has started
- Horoscopes Today, September 16, 2023
- Australia tells dating apps to improve safety standards to protect users from sexual violence
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- 'The Care and Keeping of You,' American Girl's guide to puberty, turns 25
- UN experts say Ethiopia’s conflict and Tigray fighting left over 10,000 survivors of sexual violence
- Clinton Global Initiative will launch network to provide new humanitarian aid to Ukrainians
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- $6 billion in Iranian assets once frozen in South Korea now in Qatar, key for prisoner swap with US
Ranking
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Tacoma police investigate death of Washington teen doused in accelerant and set on fire
- Fantasy football sizzlers, fizzlers: Return of Raheem Must-start
- A truck-bus collision in northern South Africa leaves 20 dead, most of them miners going to work
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Mexican president defends inclusion of Russian military contingent in Independence parade
- Two arrested in fentanyl-exposure death of 1-year-old at Divino Niño daycare
- Want to retire in 2024? Here are 3 ways to know if you are ready
Recommendation
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
Republicans propose spending $614M in public funds on Milwaukee Brewers’ stadium upgrades
2 pilots killed after colliding upon landing at National Championship Air Races
Protesters demand that Japan save 1000s of trees by revising a design plan for a popular Tokyo park
Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
The Red Cross: Badly needed food, medicine shipped to Azerbaijan’s breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region
Mahsa Amini died in Iran police custody 1 year ago. What's changed since then — and what hasn't?
Want to retire in 2024? Here are 3 ways to know if you are ready