
The At Home in Europe Project currently focuses on the situation of Muslims in 11 cities across Europe.
Amsterdam
Muslims of Turkish, Moroccan, and Surinamese descent comprise approximately 40 percent of the population of Amsterdam.
Antwerp
Demand for labor in Belgium during the last century fueled an influx of workers from countries including Morocco and Turkey.
Berlin
Immigration has always played an important role in shaping the face of Berlin, which continues to attract migrants from all over the world.
Copenhagen
The largest immigrant groups recently arriving in Denmark come from predominantly Muslim countries in the Middle East and Africa, as well as Bosnians who fled ethnic cleansing in the Balkans.
Hamburg
Islam is the third largest religion in the city of Hamburg.
Leicester
Leicester has one of the most diverse populations of ethnic minorities in the UK outside of London and is predicted to become the UK’s first plural city within the next few years.
Marseille
Islam is the second most practiced religion in Marseille, where the Muslim population is estimated at 30 percent.
Paris
Paris, home to a varied population of more than two million people, is a city of immigrants, at least 50 percent of whom are Muslim.
Rotterdam
While no official statistics are available on religious affiliation of the people of The Netherlands, the number of Muslims in Rotterdam is estimated at around 13 percent of the city’s population.
Stockholm
Approximately 50 percent of all Muslims in Sweden live in Stockholm, which is the intellectual and theological center of Islam in that country.
London
The London borough of Waltham Forest has one of the largest concentrations of Muslims in the UK and the third largest Muslim community in London.

