Milan, Italy – At Milan’s Cesare Beccaria juvenile detention center, a stark and unsettling statistic is forcing national reflection: approximately 70% of detained minors are Muslim, according to Italian authorities. The majority are second-generation immigrants—born in Italy to foreign parents, yet deeply alienated from Italian society, culture, and values.
This figure, confirmed by local officials and reported on July 22, 2025, underscores what many have long warned: Italy is facing a full-blown integration failure, with a growing underclass of disenfranchised youth, many of whom are increasingly drawn into criminal activity and vulnerable to Islamist radicalization.
A Generation Left Behind
The crimes most commonly committed by Muslim minors include robbery, drug trafficking, and violent assaults. Officials describe a disturbing pattern—young men from families with weak ties to Italian civic life, low educational achievement, and hostility toward Western norms. These are not newly arrived refugees or recent immigrants, but the children of immigrants, raised within Italy’s borders yet fundamentally disconnected from its identity.
Authorities now fear this alienation is not only contributing to crime but creating fertile ground for Islam to take root in Italy’s urban peripheries.
Controversial Solutions: Imams in Jail?
In a controversial response, the Italian government has considered introducing Muslim religious leaders (imams) into juvenile rehabilitation programs, with the stated goal of offering “spiritual guidance.” However, this move has sparked a political backlash.
Riccardo De Corato, a Member of Parliament from the ruling Fratelli d’Italia (Brothers of Italy) party, has spoken out strongly against the idea. De Corato warned that involving imams could entrench, rather than dismantle, extremist mindsets, especially if the religious instruction reinforces cultural separatism rather than fostering integration into Italian civic life.
“Rehabilitation should focus on Italian values, not deepen the ideological divides that contributed to these crimes in the first place,” De Corato argued.
A Broader European Pattern
Italy’s struggle mirrors similar crises across Europe, where second-generation Muslim youth dominate prison populations far out of proportion to their demographic numbers. In France, Belgium, Germany, and Sweden, the story is the same: failure to integrate is resulting in not only skyrocketing crime rates, but also growing pools of radicalization within the prison system.
A Wake-Up Call
This situation has triggered growing concern among citizens and political leaders alike who see Italy’s identity, security, and cohesion at risk. Many are now calling for:
- A ban on foreign-funded mosques and religious organizations.
- Mandatory civic education rooted in Italian and European values.
- Stronger emphasis on assimilation over accommodation.
- Investigation into prison radicalization networks.
What’s happening in Milan is not an isolated episode—it’s a microcosm of Europe’s failed multiculturalism. The numbers don’t lie: Italy is raising a generation of internal strangers, many of whom are not just disengaged—but openly hostile to the nation that raised them.
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Author: Vlad Tepes
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