The survey found that extreme Islamistic ideology had a profound effect on a small number of Muslims across campuses across the country.
The survey results involve police chiefs, security agencies, and ministers that are radical in the Muslim community.
YouGov opinion polls were held at 12 universities (including Imperial College and King's College London) for the right wing think tank - social cohesion center. I also found it:
53% said it was unreasonable to kill with the name of religion, but by contrast, 94% of non-Muslims died and 32% said they did so. 4% said that killing may have reasons to "promote or protect religion", 28% said that if religion were attacked it would be accepted.
Similarly, some people think that militant Muslim soldiers should be allowed to opt out from Muslim countries. 57% agree
The author of the report said that the Islamic community on campus is operated under the banner of the student Islamic community alliance and has strong influence on many of the UK's 90,000 Muslim students I found out. One quarter of them belongs to the Islamic society and their views are often more extreme.
It is said that three-quarters of society's people kill by the name of religion is acceptable, but there was no reason for the same number of nonmember Muslims to do so. The security department judged that Islamic extremists in universities could become "entrances" to violent extremism. Some terrorists and empathizers began to implement militant careers on campus
The author of the report, "Islam on Campus" accuses Muslim students' extremists against the Hizb ut-Tahrir organization aiming to establish a global Islamic state.
YouGov has studied 600 Muslim students and 800 students other than Muslims at universities with many Muslims.
However, "It is more religious belief than other millenniums," said Glare, who contributed to the recent research of American Muslim population by the Pew Research Center. According to Pew, about two-thirds of Muslims under the age of 40 think that religion is very important in their lives compared to about a quarter of the millennium generation in the United States. These numbers highlight the notion that the identities of the United States and Muslims are not mutually exclusive. Indeed, many of the young Muslims I'm talking seem to be exploring their beliefs in a unique way in America. A 28-year old Muslim Mobashra Tazamal living in the northern part of Virginia told me that Muslims "reflect everyday in my life". Her parents did not know what to do. "I do not think there is anything, she worries if they are afraid," she said. "They are just confused in a neutral way"
About two-thirds (65%) of American Muslims believe that religion is very important in their lives. About six-sixths (59%) of the report prayed at least everyday and 43% said they are attending at least weekly religious ceremonies. Through some of these traditional measures, US Muslims are about the same as American Christians, but their religious beliefs are not as good as Muslims in many other countries. Regarding political and social views, Muslims tend to identify or prefer the Democratic Party (66%) rather than Republicans (13%) and prefer larger governments (67%) to provide more services Is called. A small government (25%) About half of US Muslims (52%) says that society should accept homosexuality. This is a significant increase from 2011 (39%) and 2007 (27%).
Two-thirds of Americans surveyed in this particular study stated that religion is an important part of their daily lives. Those who say that American Muslims are not loyal to the United States are more likely than people who believe that religion is an important part of their daily lives than those who believe that Muslims are loyal to religion (74% vs. 65%). In 2008, Gallup collected data from representative samples from Germany, France and the UK and focused on several issues related to the social and cultural integration of the Muslim communities of the three countries. Most adults in these countries agree that ethnic minorities have enriched their own cultural life, but a considerable minority of these respondents expressed fear of certain aspects of Muslim culture Did.