Den private religion: Fortolkninger af muslimske børns religiøse tilhørsforhold i en dansk folkeskole
Author(s) -
Marianne Holm Pedersen
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
scandinavian journal of islamic studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1901-9580
DOI - 10.7146/tifo.v8i2.25336
Subject(s) - danish , negotiation , sociology , christianity , gender studies , islam , pedagogy , religious studies , social science , theology , philosophy , linguistics
While the teaching of religion in the Danish folkeskole is a widely debated issue, there is little knowledge about how parents of Muslim background relate to the role of religion in the children’s daily school life. This article explores the meanings that teachers and parents at a school in the Danish province attribute to Muslim children’s religious backgrounds. Based on interviews with school leadership, teachers, parents and children, it particularly examines how they interpret the course ‘knowledge of Christianity’ and how they view the division of responsibility for teaching children about religion. It argues that while both parents and teachers understand religious belonging as a private matter that does not concern the school, they have different understandings of what this means and what it should imply for the children’s participation in school activities. The article further argues that the so-called encounter between ‘Muslim practices’ and ‘Danish values’ rather constitutes yet another example of negotiations that have always taken place in modern Danish society between the institutions of family and school.
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