You see the type of Muslims who willingly go and settle in such heavily White and non-Muslim areas, where there isn’t even a mosque they can go and pray in, or if there is one, it is a tiny house miles away that they struggle to attend even once a week for the Friday service…to me such Muslims are extremely weak minded people who are also extremely less conscious of their “Muslim-ness” what so speak of religiosity. I look down upon such people precisely because they give people like you ammunition in your wrongheaded thinking that Muslims are weak minded people who if given enough time in Canada and enough exposure to the dominant White European culture will assimilate and become your “buddies”. I prefer to be part of those Muslim communities that are much more conscious of their Muslim-ness and much more serious about preserving their identity. Here in Brampton where I live there are dozens of Mosques easily accessible in every part of the town, to such an extent that there are Mosques just across the street from each other. We are therefore closely-knit communities down here, unlike your weak minded individualist Muslims up there who have lost all sense of community and identity. Here we dress like Muslims openly and unapologetically, and we speak our language, we have our own shops, our own markets and restaurants for Halal food. We have regular events and functions and we are in tune with the broader Muslim world. We don’t live in isolation, because Islam stresses that the Muslim lifestyle is a collective social one, it is not merely a faith that extremely personalized. In this way Islam is much closer to Judaism than to Christianity.
Your comparison with Harry Potter is quite flawed. Though you may consider certain religious doctrines fictional, the religious scriptures like Bible and Qur’an are in fact historical documents with information on real history and historical figures. To compare this to fictional literature is a huge blunder on your part.