Attempted arson on a mosque in Bochum that had been marked with a swastika, the door of a Muslim family in Saxony shot at by a right-wing extremist neighbour, a woman pushed onto train tracks in Berlin after being asked if she belonged to Hamas.
These are some of the record 1,926 anti-Muslim incidents registered in Germany last year by the CLAIM network of NGOs monitoring Islamophobia and anti-Muslim hatred. That marked a 114% rise in 2023, with incidents shooting up in particular after the events of 7 October.
Yet authorities are paying insufficient attention to this phenomenon, and even denying its existence, as mainstream parties take over policies of far-right, anti-Islam parties that have surged in popularity, Rima Hanano told a Berlin news conference on Monday to present the report.
The Alternative for Germany (AfD), which states in its programme that Islam does not belong to Germany, has jumped to second place in polls over the past year, prompting mainstream parties to talk tougher on migration.
"The streets, buses or mosques are no longer safe places for people who are Muslim or perceived as such," said Hanano. "Anti-Muslim racism was never as socially acceptable as today and it comes from the middle of society."
The incidents recorded, likely only a fraction of the total given a fear of coming forward and a lack of monitoring institutions, included 90 attacks on Islamic religious sites, cemeteries and other institutions, CLAIM wrote.
Most attacks on individuals consisted of verbal abuse and were aimed at women. There were also four attempted murders.
The Muslim population in Germany has been growing rapidly, especially since an influx of migrants in 2015-16, tallying 5.5 million in total or 6.6% of the overall population.
Islamophobic incidents soar
The CLAIM report tallies with a 140% increase in Islamophobic crimes last year recorded by the interior ministry, and a survey showing one in two Germans hold Islamophobic views.
Antisemitism also rose following Israel's devastating military incursion into the Gaza Strip after 7 October, according to the German government and NGOs.
In a country that is particularly sensitive about antisemitism due its responsibility for the Holocaust, German authorities have been more vocal denouncing that problem than anti-Muslim incidents.
Economy Minister Robert Habeck, in an emotive video, accused some Muslim community groups in Germany of being "too hesitant" in distancing themselves from the Palestinian group Hamas or "anti-Jewish" hatred.
The government last year published its first ever independent report on Islamophobia by experts it commissioned, with a series of recommendations for tackling discrimination.
Family Minister Lisa Paus has said the recent rise in both anti-Muslim and antisemitic incidents was "dramatic" and the government was trying to do prevention work from an early age by funding civil society projects working on the issue.
CLAIM's Hanano said, however, that insufficient action had been taken so far.
"Despite the fact ... that we have been warning about this situation for years, it is still barely acknowledged," she said. "What we really need is the political will to truly fight anti-Muslim racism."
(Reuters)