The Atlantic

Should France Have Its Own Version of Islam?

With Marine Le Pen headed to the second round of elections, a top imam says he understands why some voters fear Muslims.
Source: Christian Hartmann / Reuters

With France’s first round of voting complete, far-right candidate Marine Le Pen is among the final two contenders for the presidency, along with centrist Emmanuel Macron. Given how often Le Pen invoked the specter of Islamic fundamentalism throughout her campaign, one might expect French Muslims to be worried about the potential for her to win the May 7 runoff.

But Tareq Oubrou, the popular imam of Bordeaux’s Grand Mosque and a prominent theologian, told me he is not concerned. Nor does he blame those elements in French society that harbor fears of Islam. The morning after the results were announced, he spoke about “legitimate fears” among the French, and seemed to put the burden on Muslims to make Islam more compatible with France and its strong flavor of state secularism, known as laïcité.

Oubrou, who was born in Morocco, is a leading advocate of progressive Islam. among France’s political elite, he in French as well as in Arabic, the veil or headscarf, that Islam is compatible with French ideals at the deepest level, and the death threats he gets from radicals.

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