Excerpt:
Europe's economic crisis has subordinated its other epochal problem — shaping a future life with Muslim immigrants and Islam — into a place where there's a temptation to pretend it's vanished.
There are no headlines around Europe these days like the front-page one in New York last weekend, reporting that minorities are hardest hit by real estate foreclosures in the city.
Here, instead, it's low-level, reflexively standard stuff: a story or two, depending on a newspaper's basic political take, pointing to encroachments on traditional national habit by Muslim immigrants, or suggesting the state may be over-responding (giving in, according to what you read) to demands for what's often cast as their separate but equal status parallel to the mainstream.