Six out of ten Muslim women in Germany feel discriminated against at least once a month. This is the result of a study of the national discrimination and racism monitor. The share of black people was equally high.
In more than four of the five cases, they estimate that they were disadvantaged because of their skin color. The survey was about experiences in daily life. For comparison: only every third person who, according to his own assessment, is not seen as a member of ethnic minorities, feels discriminated against at least once a month – for example because of gender, age or other characteristics.
The perception ‘Not German’ usually calls respondents the cause of discrimination. According to the federal statistical office, those people have a migration background that had no German citizenship at birth or at least one parent to which this applies.
Too many demands?
Another result of the study: almost every fourth respondents believe that ethnic and religious minorities make too many demands on equality. More than every fifth person of the 9,500 respondents is also of the opinion that minorities have benefited more economically in recent years than they are entitled.
From the perspective of the Turkish community in Germany (TGD), cohesion in society in the election campaign of the Bundestag is badly damaged. “For people with a history of migration, it is permanently negative discourse about migration and diversity, driven by extremists of right -wing aim, the largest stress test in recent history,” said it.
Those who feel affected by racist discrimination usually have less faith in state institutions such as the police. Moreover, young people with immigration history are less likely to be politically active as their peers without. The Council of Experts for Integration and Migration (SVR) recently discovered this.
Source: Krone

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