The Pew Global Attitudes Reseach Project surveyed 14 thousand people in 13 nations, such as Egypt, Indonesia, Jordan and Turkey, the UK, France, Germany and Spain and US.
Published 2 years, 2 months agoMuslim countries with fairly strong ties to the United States — said, for example, that they did not believe that Arabs had carried out the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in the United States.
large Islamic populations in Britain, France, Germany and Spain, broadly blamed the West for the bad relations, while Westerners tended to blame Muslims.
Muslims in the Middle East and Asia depicted Westerners as immoral and selfish, while Westerners saw Muslims as fanatical.
Support for terrorism declined in some of the Muslim countries surveyed, dropping sharply in Jordan
majorities in the United States and in countries in Europe, Asia, Africa and the Middle East (to) describe relations between Muslims and people in Western countries as generally badTwo-thirds of the French people surveyed expressed positive views of Muslims, and even larger majorities of French Muslims felt favorable toward Christians and Jews.
non-Muslims in the West view Muslims as lacking respect, the survey indicated, while Muslims outside Europe say the same of Westerners.
In the West….big majorities saw Muslims as not respectful of women.European Muslims surveyed were more likely to view Westerners as respectful of women, in some places by wide margins.
majorities in every country surveyed except Pakistan expressed pessimism about Muslim-Western relations, with Germany most strongly viewing the situation as bad (70 percent), followed by France (66 percent), Turkey (64 percent), Spain and Britain (61 percent), and Egypt (58 percent).

You are currently browsing the Bene Diction Blogs On weblog archives.
For blog design, Wordpress or MovableType coding or blog consulting, see cre8d design.