In 2007 the German Interior Ministry published a study on the worldviews of “Muslims in Germany,” the most comprehensive of its kind to date, which confirmed this trend. According to the study, “anti-Semitic attitudes were found among young Muslims far more often than among non-Muslim immigrants or domestic non-Muslims.” The study cited examples of Muslim students to illustrate that this anti-Semitism cannot be dismissed as the product of an underdog attitude within marginalized social groups, but instead represents an ideological way of thinking. “The pervasiveness of sweeping anti-Semitic prejudices among Muslim students was also noticeable,” the study pointed out. “Such prejudices, expressed indirectly by slightly more than one-third and in extreme form by about 10 percent of students, are significantly more common than anti-Christian sentiments.” http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,553724,00.html
(achgut distanziert sich ausdrücklich von diesem islamophoben Beitrag und weist darauf hin, dass die darin geschilderten Fakten nichts mit dem Islam zu tun haben, sondern ihre Ursachen im Nahostkonflikt und in der Diskriminierung der Moslems in Deutschland zu finden sind.)