I found this article interested so decided to share. I got its link from google adds on HC. Its web address is http://www.europeancourier.org/26.htm
Just thirty years ago, Muslims living in the member states of the European Union were not a real political force. With few educated leaders, and many without the full rights of citizens, European Muslims were barely noticed in the corridors of power. Today, most Muslims in France, Great Britain, the Netherlands and other countries with large Muslim populations in Western Europe, not only have full citizenship rights, but sufficient organization and sophistication to actively take part in political debate. Domestic politicians might continue to ignore their voices, as Tony Blair’s government did when it joined the military intervention in Iraq. But European leaders now need to be aware that hundreds of thousands of Muslims may protest in the streets, as in London in 2003. European Muslims are getting better organized, and are forming a cohesive interest group capable of entering into strategic alliances with other political groups. European Muslims are also growing in numbers, exerting significant influence on Western European policy in the Middle East, and on transatlantic relations. Currently the European Muslim community participates in policy making indirectly, by joining and shaping the general debate on social and political issues in the countries they live in. Muslim organizations successfully lobby for their interests with the national authorities. In the future their lobbying skills will improve, and the growing number of Muslims in Europe will lend demographic weight to these efforts. What will be the effect of Muslim public assertiveness and lobbying on EU foreign policy and transatlantic relations? These are some of the questions this essay will try to answer. But first, let us briefly look at who the current European Muslims are.
MUSLIM CITIZENS OF EUROPE
There are some 15 million Muslims living in Western Europe, making up one of the most diverse religious minorities on the continent. For example, the nearly one million Muslims in the Netherlands include people from, or descended from immigrants from, the Middle East (Turkey), North Africa (Morocco), South America (Surinam) and South East Asia (Indonesia). Similar internal diversity exists in the countries with the most populous Muslim minorities: France (5 million), Germany (3.5 million) and Great Britain (1.8 million). Each of the aforementioned geographical areas has a different history of contact with Islam, and its inhabitants practice Islam in different ways. The largest Muslim groups in each country, with their particular ways of following Islam, determine, to a certain extent, the character of the whole Muslim population. In France, Islam has a visibly North African character, shaped by the long anti-colonial struggle in Algeria. In Germany, Islam has a Middle Eastern flavor, influenced by the secular policies of Kemal Ataturk. While in Great Britain it has a South Asian character significantly influenced by Sufism. The different forms of Islam brought to European soil from around the globe have undergone rapid changes, as acculturation and integration have created a new, European Islam, and distinctly European ways of practicing this religion.
The second largest religion in Europe is also characterized by its rapid growth, mainly due to the high fertility rate among Muslim families. According to demographic projections, the exceptionally young Muslim population, which in Europe presently approaches 24 million (including Albania, Kosovo and Bosnia-Herzegovina, where Muslims are the majority), will grow significantly in the coming decades. If these projections are true, by 2015 Europe’s Muslim population will have doubled; while by 2050 it will have jumped from 5% of the continent’s population today to 20%. Even now we meet Muslims not only in pubs, restaurants and cafes, but in the health care industry, the media, schools, entertainment and other branches of the economy. In almost every major hospital in Western Europe there are at least several Muslim doctors and many Muslim nurses. Muslim scholars lecture at prestigious European universities, and Muslim journalists prepare materials for the BBC, France Télévisions or Belgium’s RTBF and elsewhere. Muslim soccer players amaze European soccer fans, while Muslim politicians represent their minority’s interests before local authorities and in national parliaments. In contrast to the U.S., where only this year has a Muslim congressman being sworn in with a Koran, this has been happening in Europe for years. There are six Muslim members in the British Parliament, while nearly 300 Muslim serve on local councils. In civil rights and their improving political skills, lies the power of the Muslim minority in Europe. In contrast to the majority of Muslim believers in the world, European Muslims possess a political voice which can make itself heard in elections.