Accessibility links

Breaking News

Hungarians Take Walking Tour to Overcome Fears of Muslims


Muslims pray in a small mosque at an apartment building as a group of Hungarians who take part in an organized tour to learn about Budapest's Muslim community, visit the mosque in Budapest, Hungary, Nov. 3, 2017.
Muslims pray in a small mosque at an apartment building as a group of Hungarians who take part in an organized tour to learn about Budapest's Muslim community, visit the mosque in Budapest, Hungary, Nov. 3, 2017.

A walking tour to learn about Budapest's Muslim community and its mosques has become popular with Hungarians as a way of overcoming fears and reservations amid a strident anti-immigrant campaign by the government.

Budapest-based tour operator Setamuhely (Budapest Walkshop) runs 30 different walks, taking visitors around the city's architectural and cultural sites and the Jewish and Muslim communities.

"I can say that this walk, 'Muslims who live among us,' is the most popular tour," said Anna Lenard who runs the business.

When the Muslim tour was set up three years ago, very few people were interested.

A group of Hungarians who take part in an organized tour to learn about Budapest's Muslim community walk out from a small mosque at an apartment building in Budapest, Hungary, Nov. 3, 2017.
A group of Hungarians who take part in an organized tour to learn about Budapest's Muslim community walk out from a small mosque at an apartment building in Budapest, Hungary, Nov. 3, 2017.

"Most people have never met a Muslim in their life and this ... together with what they hear every day in the media causes a lot of tension and stress in daily life. I think this is the main reason why people are coming now," Lenard said.

Most of the people on the four-hour walk have a college degree, and two-thirds are women, she said.

Hungary's Muslim community, estimated to number about 40,000, grew with the migration crisis of 2015, though most of them arrived earlier to study at Hungarian universities.

Though hundreds of thousands of migrants crossed into Hungary from the Balkans at the peak of the crisis, the majority went on to richer parts of western Europe.

A Muslim believer washes his feet at a mosque, showing religious customs to a group of Hungarians who visited the mosque as part of an organized tour to see Budapest's Muslim community, Budapest, Hungary, Nov. 3, 2017.
A Muslim believer washes his feet at a mosque, showing religious customs to a group of Hungarians who visited the mosque as part of an organized tour to see Budapest's Muslim community, Budapest, Hungary, Nov. 3, 2017.

Data from think tank Tarki shows the proportion of people deemed to be xenophobic and resentful of foreign immigrants shot up to 60 percent this year, rising 19 points from two years ago.

About 80 people go on the Muslim tour per month, the organizers said.

A typical group of around 30 people first goes to a small mosque hidden in an old apartment where Muslims come to pray at the time of the visit.

"I am very interested in everything multi-cultural and in cultures and religions that live among us," said Nauszika, a psychologist who did not want to give her full name.

Owners of a Syrian grocery shop pack foodstuffs as a group of Hungarians, on an organized tour to learn about Budapest's Muslim community, visit the shop in Budapest, Hungary, Nov. 3, 2017.
Owners of a Syrian grocery shop pack foodstuffs as a group of Hungarians, on an organized tour to learn about Budapest's Muslim community, visit the shop in Budapest, Hungary, Nov. 3, 2017.

"It is the best way to lose your fears if you start to ask the one who you [are] afraid of," added tour leader Marianna Karman, an Africa expert who converted to Islam herself.

"These people choose to come on these walks because they would like to talk about this problem. They want to fight against their fears."

Other points on the tour can include Muslim food shops and Budapest's largest mosque, located in a former office building.

  • 16x9 Image

    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

XS
SM
MD
LG