Britain must be confident in Christian identity says top Muslim peer

Baroness Warsi with BBC head of religion and ethics Aaqil Ahmed and former Labour cabinet minister John Denham. British Future

Muslims will be much happier in a Britain that is confident about its Christian heritage, Britain's former faith minister has said.

Baroness Sayeeda Warsi warned that people in government still see religious belief as little more than belief in "fairies, goblins and imaginary friends".

She called on Prime Minister Theresa May to reinstate the position of faith minister.

She was speaking at a "Very English Islam" garden party organised by the think tank British Future, which addresses issues of identity, integration and migration.

"I've always described Islam as like a river, which takes its colour from the bed over which it flows – and my Islam flows over Yorkshire and over England," said Warsi, talking to former Labour cabinet minister John Denham and BBC head of religion and ethics Aaqil Ahmed.

"Therefore it's quite right that over time, as Islam takes the colour of the space in which it finds itself, it will start to reflect a very clear Englishness."

For that to happen, the majority needs to have a clear sense of its own identity, she said.

"The river bed must know what it represents. If the bed is a slightly murky grey and doesn't really know what it stands for, then my Islam is going to be just as confused and murky grey. For minority faiths to feel truly comfortable about who they are, the majority has got to be sure about who it is."

She added: "A Europe that is sure about its Christian heritage is a much easier place to be a Muslim."

Dr Timothy Winter, Shaykh Zayed lecturer of Islamic Studies at Cambridge University, said Englishness and Islam could reach accommodation.

He said: "A local British Islam, or a range of British Islams, is religiously authentic and even mandatory.

"The classical sharia manuals tell us that local custom and precedent may be incorporated into Muslim life, unless they evidently flaunt a scriptural truth. Only fundamentalism of the Wahhabi type discounts this Muslim normativity."

British Future described the garden party as in "a quintessentially English setting" with the band and choir of the local Woking High School entertaining guests who included representatives of the local council and Woking Mosque, the oldest purpose-built mosque in the country.

News
Over 320,000 people sign petition opposing Macron's '21st century mark' on Notre-Dame
Over 320,000 people sign petition opposing Macron's '21st century mark' on Notre-Dame

Over 323,000 people have signed a petition in opposition to new stained-glass window designs for Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris.

Nicki Minaj says she has rekindled her relationship with God
Nicki Minaj says she has rekindled her relationship with God

Rapper Nicki Minaj opened up about her recently reignited relationship with God and what inspired her to speak out for persecuted Christians, suggesting that her rise in the music industry made it more challenging to maintain the spirituality of her youth. 

Legal action launched challenge to civil service participation in LGBT Pride events
Legal action launched challenge to civil service participation in LGBT Pride events

The Christian Institute has initiated legal proceedings against Keir Starmer in a bid to end civil service participation in controversial Pride marches. 

National Lottery Heritage Fund awards £7.3m to historic churches
National Lottery Heritage Fund awards £7.3m to historic churches

The National Lottery Heritage Fund has awarded more than £7.3 million to help maintain four historic churches.