The Obin Report (Rapport Obin) submitted to the Minister of Education in 2004 by Jean-Pierre Obin, General Inspector of Education, studied the impact of religious signs and manifestations in French public schools. Its conclusions regarding the spread and impact of Islam on the young and the dangers to national cohesion were so alarming that the report was temporarily shelved. Due to fear.
Fortunately, after a year of silence, the French education ministry finally found the courage to publish the report on the internet. As a result, we can now read the original PDF file on the official site of the French education ministry, in French and, using Google translate, in any other language, including English.
Anyone wanting to understand the mechanisms of what has been called the "Islamisation" of the young in French public schools should read this report.
It is especially relevant in the wake of the Toulouse massacres of Jewish children and French soldiers perpetrated in the name of Islam by the 24-year-old Frenchman of Algerian origin Merah.
Jean Pierre Obin, the author of the report, wrote a book in 2011 entitled Etre enseignant aujourd'hui, available in paperback and Kindle
***
There is another, even more chilling report, entitled The Development of Fundamentalist Islam in France, Security and Social Aspects, which explores the ghettoisation of Muslims, the spread of fundamentalism, the origins and psychological profils of French jihadhists, the financing of fundamentalism in France, and the risks of terrorist attacks.
This 2005 report, was issued not by Education Nationale but by a private Think Tank called Cf2R, Le Centre Français de Recherche sur Le Renseignement. It's author is Eric Denécé, a former intelligence agent and author of numerous books, including in 2011 Commandos & Forces Spéciales.
Written six years before the Toulouse attacks, it offers precise insights into their preparation.