There are two books on a bookshelf in Naser Khader's office in the Danish parliament. One is a beautiful hardcover with a crimson jacket and the title "The Adoption and Confirmation of the Constitution, 1915". Inside is a large photograph from the parliament the day when the constitution was enacted. The book to its side has a large jacket: Atlas of Palestine, 1948.
On the wall above the bookshelf hangs a pigeonhole box with sticky notes. A subject for every compartment: gang crime, asylum, finance law, group meetings and Ny Alliance.
"I haven't gotten to changing it to "Liberal Alliance," he grins. Khader has other things to see to these weeks - and big ambitions.
Recently he was invited to a group of internally known critics of Islamism, Islam's political version, and in the meeting in France the group created a for-now secret association to fight extreme Islam. For the group and Naser Khader, Copenhagen and Denmark have a central place in this struggle. Read more ...
On the wall above the bookshelf hangs a pigeonhole box with sticky notes. A subject for every compartment: gang crime, asylum, finance law, group meetings and Ny Alliance.
"I haven't gotten to changing it to "Liberal Alliance," he grins. Khader has other things to see to these weeks - and big ambitions.
Recently he was invited to a group of internally known critics of Islamism, Islam's political version, and in the meeting in France the group created a for-now secret association to fight extreme Islam. For the group and Naser Khader, Copenhagen and Denmark have a central place in this struggle. Read more ...
Source: Weekendavisen
H/T: Islam in Europe