Undercover Social Worker
Post Office Undercover
My Family and Alzheimer’s
Inside Britain’s Israel Lobby
undercover debt collector
mum, dad,
alzheimers and me
how to rob
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undercover mosque:
the return
banatyne takes on
big tobacco
iraq's lost
generation
afghanistan:
lifting the veil
undercover mother
afghanistan unveiled
charles: the
meddling prince
undercover mosque
monkeys, rats and
me: animal testing
burma's secret war
britain's rubbish
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re-opening
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my friend
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kids in care
third class post
the best for
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islam unveiled
iran undercover
the child sex trade
blood and revenge
truth and lies
in baghdad
lifting the veil:
zarmina's story
secrets of the
saudi state
down the tube
unholy war
beneath the veil
looking for ricky
party crashers
bloody foreigners
children of the
secret state
prime suspects &
witness to murder

Undercover Mosque: The Return

A year and a half after the critically-acclaimed film, Undercover Mosque, was first screened, Dispatches goes undercover again to see if promises to remove extremist theology and teaching materials in key British Muslim institutions have been honoured. The film also investigates the role of the Saudi Arabian religious establishment in spreading hardline fundamentalist Islamic ideology in the UK - the very ideology the Government claims to be tackling.

A female reporter - 'Sara' - attends prayer meetings in Regent's Park Mosque - one of the most important mosques in the country, which claims to be dedicated to moderation and dialogue with other faiths. She secretly films shocking sermons given to the women-only congregation in which female preachers recite extremist and intolerant beliefs. As hundreds of women and children come to pray, the leading preacher calls for adulterers, homosexuals, women who act like men and Muslim converts to other faiths to be killed. "Kill him, kill him. You have to kill him, you understand. This is Islam."

Worshippers are told they must lead separate lives from non-believers and not tolerate other religions, describing Christian teachings as 'vile and disgusting, an abomination.' And at private invite-only prayer meetings linked to the mosque, the reporter films the same preacher issuing strict dictats on women's personal freedoms - decreeing they must not travel far without a male member of the family to escort them, and instructing them not to integrate with British society or work in a non-Islamic environment.

In the same mosque, the reporter visits the bookshop and discovers extremist books and DVDs still on sale, promoting anti-Semitic, misogynistic and intolerant messages. Unbelievers ('kuffaar') are "evil, wicked, mischievous people - you can see the evil in their face" The Jews "have abominated, filthy, disgusting gross belief - their time will come like every other evil person's time will come." Moderate Muslims in the programme reject these teachings, and blame their presence in British mosques on the Saudis.

 

 

 

 
 

Undercover Mosque: The Return
A Dispatches Investigation for Channel 4
First Broadcast: Monday 1 September 2008 08:00 PM

 

Dispatches traces the links between the teachings and materials at the mosque and the Saudi Arabia religious establishment and examines the extent to which the Kingdom exports Wahhabi teachings around the world by ploughing billions of dollars into schools, mosques and charities.

In the UK, the film shows the huge impact Saudi money has on supporting mosques and imams and the provision of fundamentalist teaching materials for faith schools. Dispatches interviews a former teacher at one such school who describes how the official hardline Saudi educational curriculum was taught in the school. He also shows Dispatches official Saudi textbooks that were used in Islamic studies courses last year which featured anti-Semitic and anti-Christian teachings.

The undercover reporter also films inside a Saudi-funded key Muslim organisation - the Muslim World League - which claims to promote interfaith tolerance yet distributes extremist literature and according to one employee distributes Saudi money to other Muslim organisations.

The government claims Saudi Arabia is its partner in tackling extremism but Denis MacShane, former Foreign Office Minister, tells Dispatches he believes the Government should take a stronger line.

The film also features interviews with Islamic academics who condemn these messages of intolerance and segregation and warn of the impact this version of Islam is having on British society. Dr Admani, imam at London Metropolitan University, accuses the Saudi religious establishment of the, "distortion of Islam itself, the abuse and misuse of this great faith of mine and not only mine but of my children as well."

 

 

 
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