the aziz foundation supports un international day to combat islamophobia

20 May 2023

UN Day to combat Islamophobia

The Aziz Foundation has launched a major campaign to enshrine the International Day to Combat Islamophobia – March 15 – into UK law.

According to the UN, the International Day to Combat Islamophobia seeks to expand efforts to create a dialogue that promotes tolerance and respect for all religions and beliefs. The date was chosen to commemorate the 2019 Christchurch mosque shootings, in which 51 people were killed and 40 others injured in an Islamophobic attack.

By enshrining the Day in law, the Aziz Foundation hopes to encourage the Government to make more resources available to teach understanding and religious tolerance and to celebrate the enormous contribution the British Muslim community brings to the UK. The campaign has already begun to reach out to other faith bodies.

Asif Aziz, the Founder of The Aziz Foundation, said:

“Islamophobia is a type of racism. That should be an obvious thing to understand but to many it isn’t.  The UN resolution in 2022 was the first welcome step, but to root out religious intolerance in all its forms we need to educate our children that Islamophobia cannot be allowed to grow unchallenged. Having the government acknowledging the UN day will allow us to begin peeling back the layers of misunderstanding and mistrust that have built up over the years, so we can teach our children not only to be  respectful of each other, but to celebrate our differences.”

MP Naz Shah said:

“I am fully supportive of this hugely important campaign, and I look forward to working with the Foundation and my parliamentary colleagues from across the House to achieve this goal. Greater understanding and tolerance are the cornerstones of a truly multicultural society, and I am pleased to be supporting the Aziz Foundation in achieving this.”

Between 2021 and 2022, religious hate crimes in the UK increased by 37% to 8,730 offences. Over two in five (42%) of these were targeted against Muslims. The date was chosen to commemorate the 2019 Christchurch mosque shootings, in which 51 people were killed and 40 others injured in an Islamophobic attack. The UK was one of 140 nations to sign the UN resolution.

The Foundation’s support of the UN International Day to Combat Islamophobia has been featured in the Mirror.

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