Around 35.000 protesters attended the rally in the eastern city of Dresden to protest against the Patriotic Europeans against the Islamization of the West, or PEGIDAT, Anadolu news agency reported.
On Monday, more than 18.000 protesters attended PEGIDA’s rally in Dresden, marking the largest anti-Islam demonstration by the group.
The demonstration started with a silent homage for the people who were killed after the deadly attacks in Paris.
The anti-Pegida demonstrators held banners that said: "My friend is a Muslim," "Dresden opened to the world," and "against racism."
The mayor Orosz said during the anti-PEGIDA protest, "We will not be split though hatred."
Pointing that the PEGIDA demonstrations cause worldwide anxiety, PM Tillich said, "We are freedom-loving and democratic, open-minded, tolerant, caring and solidary."
"You cannot objectively speak with the people, who are polarized against the foreigners and have phobia against foreigners and immigrants and asylum seekers," he added.
German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere joined the anti-PEGIDA demonstration by following the rally behind the scene.
PEGIDA is expected to gather more than 18.000 people this Monday in the aftermath of a deadly attack in Paris on a French satirical magazine that killed 17 people.
The rise of the high-profile right wing group, PEGIDA, has recently made headlines in Germany and abroad. The group started weekly protests in Dresden in October with around 500 protesters, but significantly increased its support base within three months.
PEGIDA has inspired several copycat groups in other major German cities, like KOEGIDA in Cologne, HAGIDA in Hamburg and BAERGIDA in Berlin.
Both anti-Islam movements and anti-fascist groups held protests in Berlin, Stuttgart, Muenster and Hamburg.
Germany witnessed an increase in suspicion and negative feelings towards Muslims in recent months as far right and right wing populist parties sought to benefit from a growing fear of Islam and Muslims, largely influenced by reports of atrocities committed by the militant Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant group in the Middle East.
Nearly 30 percent of Germans polled by Stern magazine said they believed anti-Islam demonstrations organized by the recently formed far-right PEGIDA were justifiable.
According to the poll conducted for Stern by the Forsa Institute and published online Thursday, 29 percent of Germans said that Islam was such a big influence on the daily lives of Germans that the recent anti-Islam demonstrations such as the ones organized by PEGIDA were justifiable.
A total of 13 percent of those polled also expressed a willingness to join the protests if they were organized in their cities.