logo
German university bans Muslim society over gender-segregated meetings

German university bans Muslim society over gender-segregated meetings

Telegraph01-07-2025
A prestigious German university has banned a Muslim student society after it held a gender-segregated meeting in a lecture hall.
Charité, which dates back to the 18th century and is Europe's largest university hospital, says it has banned the group Medislam Collective (MSC) from using its premises in Berlin, in the interests of a 'discrimination-free' environment.
It comes after photographs of a MSC meeting, which showed male and female students sitting apart from each other in a lecture hall, were widely published by German media.
The students organised the meeting themselves and there is no suggestion that Charité university has started holding gender-segregated classes or lectures. The student group has not commented on the dispute.
A spokesman for Charité university said: 'Based on current information, and in the interests of a discrimination-free, integrative and values-based environment, the group is immediately prohibited from holding events and activities on the university grounds, until further notice.'
As of Tuesday morning, the university had also removed the MSC's society page from its official website.
MSC describes itself as a society for Muslim medical students and non-Muslim students with an interest in their faith. The group hosts quizzes, networking events and Iftar dinners, for the breaking of the fast of Ramadan, as well as study groups and discussions about preventing racism.
The video that caused the row was posted on Instagram, and features several brief clips showing female and male students sitting in two groups on each side of a lecture hall.
A caption on the video states: 'We began the new semester with a meaningful recital from the Quran, and exciting insights into the history and vision of MSC – perfect for new faces to arrive and feel welcome right away. We rounded off the evening with team games, tasty snacks and valuable discussions.'
Separate entrances
It follows a similar incident at Germany's Kiel University, where a Muslim student group reportedly held an event requiring men and women to use separate entrances and sit apart.
In 2017, the London School of Economics also came under fire for allowing gender segregation at an Islamic Society gala dinner, with tickets marked for 'brothers' and 'sisters'.
The university later conceded that the event was 'likely to fall foul of the Equality Act 2010 and be unlawful on the grounds of discrimination by gender due to the segregation'.
The far-Right Alternative für Germany party has claimed that the Chariŧé incident is a sign of the gradual 'Islamification of our universities'.
'These incidents show this is not about an academic debate, but about the politicisation of the freedom of our universities,' said Christoph Birghan, a member of the Bundestag.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

I tested all the supermarket cinnamon swirls – the tasty winner was £1.20 cheaper than M&S
I tested all the supermarket cinnamon swirls – the tasty winner was £1.20 cheaper than M&S

The Sun

time30 minutes ago

  • The Sun

I tested all the supermarket cinnamon swirls – the tasty winner was £1.20 cheaper than M&S

CINNAMON buns are rolling in the sweet taste of more success. Waitrose recently reported a surge of 381 per cent in online searches for them. 9 But if you don't want to pay over the odds for costly versions to go with your coffee in a shop, which supermarket 's version is best to enjoy at home? Laura Stott tucked into a selection and gives her verdict. Danish Cinnamon Whirl x 2 , Sainsbury's bakery, £1.75 SMELLING exactly as sweet and spiced as you want, sadly they are more like the Danish pastry part of their title than a traditional big bouncy bun. What you get is thinner and flatter puff pastry spirals with a brown sugar filling woven through. More cinnamon flavour would be welcome but what's there is evenly dispersed and the pastry is rich and buttery. Despite these positives, they seemed small compared to the others I tried and it is noticeable that they have no icing on top. Also very messy to eat as when you bite into it, the wheel shape quickly starts to unravel meaning your cake falls apart. Not very satisfying. Rating: 2/5 'You can spend just 1p in Lidl & get free food' savvy shopper says as she nabs a bakery treat without paying every time' The Cake Shop Cinnamon Buns x2, Morrisons, £2.39 VERY sweet and smothered with soft cheese icing. In fact, they are drizzled with so much topping, you can barely identify anything else. I like icing on top but this was too much for me. It was so abundant it had dripped all over the whole pastry as well as all over the packet. Not only did it make these exceedingly messy to eat but you could barely taste the cinnamon spice that should have been the star of the show. The bits of the cake I could taste were nice enough and they are a good size, raised in the middle with a very generous serving. But it was hard to get beyond the thick and gunky topping. Not cheap either, for supermarket own buns, these were noticeably pricey compared to others. Rating: 2/5 Cinnamon Buns x 2, Tesco, £1.80 VERY tasty buns from Tesco that are full of flavour. I thought they were just as enjoyable as anything you could buy from a fancy bakery. They are generous in size with lots of height and volume and covered in cream cheese icing. When you bite in they are soft, tasty and plump. There is also a visible amount of brown sugary cinnamon running throughout and plenty of topping – but it is not so much that the treats become sickly. They are very sweet but they look lovely and smell delicious. They are a great price, too. Impossible not to wolf down in one go. Perfect with a cup of coffee in the sunshine for the cafe experience without the inflated cost. Rating: 5/5 Cinnamon Buns x 2 Asda, £1.74 A LOVELY dark golden hue gives them that fresh bakery appeal that should start to make your mouth water. And when you tuck in, these are tasty, rich and generous with a generous portion of warming cinnamon filling, giving you a nice sugary hug for the ultimate comforting pick-me-up. Well balanced with a nice amount of icing which is plentiful enough to ensure the buns are sticky and gooey – and there was quite a lot of the icing still stuck to the packaging! I'd happily buy these again if I fancied something sweet. Very well priced too, these won't blow the budget. Rating: 4/5 Cinn-a-yum Buns x 6 M&S/ £3 I LIKED the tear-and-share style of these iced buns. They are smaller individually than others but they are designed to be bite-sized, it's not that you've been offered a stingy treat. The petite size makes them ideal for parties, or if you just want something sweet without indulging in a huge cake. The cinnamon gives a good hit of flavour and sweetness with the demerara sugar. But they were rather dry and not as sticky and gooey as I like. The icing wasn't great either, it felt like a bit of an afterthought that had been quickly added on top. Nice as a little treat, though, or for a change in place of a biscuit or pud. Rating: 2/5 The Daily Bakery Cinnamon Buns x2, Iceland, £1.50 REALLY well priced and they taste very good, too. If sweet and sticky is your idea of heaven, you will love these. Each one has loads of cinnamon powder sprinkled on top so you can really smell and taste the spice when you open the packet. Well-shaped buns that look very appetising and they don't disappoint. The pastry is rather dense but it is not to their detriment, it just makes them a bit more filling. Absolutely packed with cinnamon sugar filling too so you get your money's worth on the flavour and there was just enough icing to give the stickiness you want without being overwhelming and gunky. Very nice and extremely affordable. Rating: 4/5 Cinnamon Bun x 1, Lidl bakery, 79p DENSE and yeasty with plenty of appeal when you look at it too. Very sticky and a dark golden brown colour from a thick layer of cinnamon sugar which also gives a lovely fresh aroma. It tasted lovely and fresh, very treacly and rich with soft pastry and a crispy outer, alongside a plump bouncy feel in the mouth. Extremely generous in size with plenty of height and a very gooey and generous icing. This was probably the biggest bun of all the ones I tried so everything is amplified, from the amount of pastry on your plate to the cinnamon flavour in each bite. Perfect with a cuppa as a mid-afternoon pick me up. Rating: 4/5 Village Bakery Cinnamon Buns x 2, Aldi, £1.49 VERY bizarre buns. A bit different in style to most and I wasn't a huge fan of the change. They don't seem anything like traditional cinnamon buns – instead they resemble the soft wholemeal rolls you might make a cheese sarnie with. When you bite in, they are extremely sweet, heavily flavoured with cinnamon and a cream cheese American-style frosted filling. More like an iced bun, they are very sticky and sickly and I found the similarity to a brown bap a bit disconcerting. There's no textural notes either, everything is very mushy. Although they don't have the plate appeal, if it's just an affordable sticky sweet cinnamon treat you want, they'll do the job. Very filling, too.

Horse racing tips: Grand National-winning trainer lines up this very appealing 10-1 chance
Horse racing tips: Grand National-winning trainer lines up this very appealing 10-1 chance

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Horse racing tips: Grand National-winning trainer lines up this very appealing 10-1 chance

Attention, Our system has indicated that your user behaviour is potentially automated. News Group Newspapers Limited does not permit the access, collection, text or data mining of any content from our Service by any automated means whether directly or through an intermediary service. This is stated in our terms and conditions. This includes use of content for machine learning, artificial intelligence (AI) purposes, engineering large language models (LLMs) or related generative AI systems. If you would like to inquire about the commercial use of our content, please contact crawlpermission@

Reading deeper into Virginia Woolf's vicious diary entry
Reading deeper into Virginia Woolf's vicious diary entry

The Guardian

time3 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Reading deeper into Virginia Woolf's vicious diary entry

John Harris confuses Virginia Woolf's admittedly vicious diary entry about disabled people with her firmly held beliefs in referring to her 'grim ideas' and associating her with contemporary eugenics (Again and again, we are shocked by the treatment of learning-disabled people. Yet we never learn from the past, 20 July). Under the Mental Deficiency Act 1913, mentioned by Harris, Woolf could easily have been categorised as an 'imbecile' during her several breakdowns, and hallucinations occasioned by family deaths and sexual abuse by her half-brothers. Woolf's experiences of medical professionals who forced her to gain weight and forbade reading and writing (which made her life meaningful), and of private asylums, left her in no doubt of this possibility, which she illustrates so brilliantly in Mrs Dalloway. The diary entry is surely a defence mechanism and projection – caricaturing others' features to displace her personal HummVice-chair, Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain Have an opinion on anything you've read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store