FILE PHOTO: People pray in the street in a suburb near Paris, France. © Alain Jocard / AFP

Once branded a “no-go” zone by authorities, the Paris suburb of Trappes has become a recruiting ground for Islamic State – and ground zero in France’s struggle to integrate Muslims into its staunchly secular state.

According to French intelligence, 67 people from Trappes have joined the ranks of Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIL/ISIS), while other radicalized residents have carried out attacks inside France.

It’s safe to say that Trappes, which is situated 30km southwest of Paris, is not your typical French suburb.

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“You won’t see any non-halal butcher shops. There are, I think at the moment, over 1500 prayer rooms and five mosques. If you look at people on the street, you won’t see couples holding hands. You’ll see that women are dressed in strict Islamic dress,” Dr. Leslie Shaw, President of the Forum on Islamic Radicalism, told RT.

“You couldn’t really consider Trappes as a traditional French town anymore. It’s a little bit like a state within a state,” he added.

lthough it is a breeding ground for jihadists, where hardline Salafism and Wahhabism are widely practiced, Trappes has remained largely immune to French laws designed to clamp down on religious extremism and preserve the country’s secular traditions. Some women in Trappes openly defy a French law passed eight years ago that bans full-veil coverings. However, police have been reluctant to intervene since residents rioted in 2013, when officers tried to ID a woman who was fully covered.

“It’s a very, very fragile situation. The government doesn’t want to provoke urban riots which would quickly spread like wildfire all over France,” noted Dr. Shaw. “It’s only a matter of time before we have another attack. The basic problem is the ideology that’s driving this. And this goes much deeper than terrorist cells, [or] planning and executing attacks.”

But Trappes may not be the only town in France where radical Islam has planted roots. Last year, a poll of French high school students found that 32 percent of Muslim students believe Islamic doctrine is superior to scientific fact. In 2016, a similar poll found that 68 percent believe French law is subordinate to Islamic law.

On Monday, French President Emmanuel Macron announced that his government would implement new reforms to address “the problematic ties between Islam and the French Republic.”