Sunday 7 March 2010

How Western anti-Muslim bigotry became respectable

Link

The historic roots of a newly resilient ideology
← BACK



Bio
Sener Akturk is a political scientist and fellow at the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, lectures at the Department of Government, both at Harvard University. .
Mujeeb Khan is affiliated with the doctoral program in political science at the University of California Berkeley. He wrote a chapter in the book The New Crusades: Constructing the Muslim Enemy..

How Western anti-Muslim bigotry became respectable: The historic roots of a newly resilient ideology
by
ŞENER AKTÜRK & MUJEEB R. KHAN

As scholars who work on the centuries-old Islamic presence in Europe and the continent’s first post-Holocaust genocide against, not coincidently, the Muslims of Bosnia and Herzegovina, we were deeply disturbed but not surprised that an ostensibly tolerant and pluralistic Western democracy like Switzerland would vote by a margin of 57 percent to ban the religious symbol of 400,000 of its Muslim residents because they felt “threatened” by the grand total of four minarets that exist there.
The Swiss referendum was the tip of an iceberg reflecting both deep and age-old historic prejudice against a Muslim presence on the continent as well as a recent concerted ideological campaign to construct Muslims as the “other” on the part of rightwing racist movements in Europe and their fellow travelers in the neo-conservative and Southern Evangelical movements in the US. While secularism and constitutional safeguards for religious freedom are seen as hallmarks of the post-Enlightenment West, Europe and the West have traditionally been far more hostile to religious-cultural pluralism than Buddhist, Confucian, Hindu and Islamic societies, which historically viewed religious and cultural heterogeneity and pluralism as the natural order of things. This historic reality explains to a large degree why, in contrast to Europe, such religious diversity survived into the modern era in these societies, albeit not always harmoniously. Indeed, the famous thesis of the Belgian historian Henri Pirenne was that the very notion of “Christendom” or “the West” first emerged from the ruins of classical civilization in opposition to northern pagans and southern Muslim and Jewish infidels whose presence in Europe was actually coterminous with the spread of the Holy Roman Empire and Church in large areas of the continent.


While Paris was a collection of mud huts, Muslim Cordoba in the 10th century was the largest and grandest city in Europe with massive public baths, libraries, universities, underground sewers and even street lighting, which predated that of London by 700 years. Recent academic contributions by David Levering Lewis, Maria Rosa Menocal and Michael Hamilton Morgan have underscored how the uniquely tolerant multicultural civilization of Muslim Spain and the Levant played a central role in preserving and enhancing the philosophic and scientific legacy of Greece, Persia, India and China, directly laying the foundation of the European Renaissance itself. However, from neo- conservative ideologues such as Geert Wilders and Christopher Caldwell to Dutch and Austro-German politicians, conveniently forgetting the Ottoman origins of their tulips and kaffee kultur, the centuries-long European Muslim historic and cultural legacy has invariably been presented as transient and alien. Constructed as “aliens” in the European body politic, it is not surprising that European Muslims, Jews and Roma, from the Crusades to the Inquisition, and in our own era, the Holocaust and Bosnia, were the paramount targets of pogroms, ethnic cleansing and even genocide.

Even modern secularizing Western and southeastern European countries have been historically intolerant of mosques, minarets, synagogues and other symbolic forms of non-Christian representation. Budapest, Belgrade and Athens, which lived under Ottoman Muslim rule for centuries, like the fabled southern Spanish Muslim cities of Granada and Cordoba, did not emerge into the 20th century with a single surviving mosque.
Even though Athens is home to an estimated 200,000 Muslims, it took enormous controversy and the Olympic Games to be able to construct a single mosque. The same impediments are true of a number of European Union member states, which are obligated to maintain freedom of worship and non-discrimination. Germany is the EU member state with the largest Muslim population, boasting a minority estimated at 3 to 4 million people, but its capital city, Berlin, only has a single mosque with a clearly visible minaret that is located in the outskirts of the city next to Tempelhof Airport. While Germany has appropriately made great efforts to restore synagogues, which had been erased from the skyline in the 1930s, right-wing mobilization against the building of mosques, as in the case of Cologne, instead of being viewed as bigotry has been championed by populist politicians and the mainstream media.

Swiss referendum painfully ironic

The Swiss referendum is particularly painfully ironic since its Muslim community is to a large extent made up of secular Balkan Muslims who survived ethnic cleansing and genocide in Bosnia and Kosovo. A hallmark of the Serbian and subsequent Croatian campaigns was to erase all vestiges of the unique and priceless Ottoman-Islamic architectural heritage in the region, with mosques and minarets as particular targets. At the time, one of the authors, Mujeeb Khan, was involved in lobbying efforts on behalf of the Bosnian state and had written in “East European Politics and Societies” that official British and French appeasement of the Serbian genocide reflected disturbing and deep-seated historic complexes against religious and cultural minorities in Europe. The White House historian Taylor Branch in his recent book “The Clinton Tapes” confirmed this, recounting how Paris and London insisted on maintaining the arms embargo on the defenseless Bosnians. “They justified their opposition on plausible humanitarian grounds, arguing that more arms would only fuel the bloodshed, but privately, said the president, key allies objected that an independent Bosnia would be ‘unnatural’ as the only Muslim nation in Europe. He said they favored the embargo precisely because it locked in Bosnia’s disadvantage.” Branch, in conversation with Clinton continued: “When I expressed shock at such cynicism, reminiscent of the blind-eye diplomacy regarding the plight of Europe’s Jews during World War II, President Clinton only shrugged. He said President François Mitterrand of France had been especially blunt in saying that Bosnia did not belong, and that British officials also spoke of a painful but realistic restoration of Christian Europe.”

The recent British, French and Serbian policy reflected 19th century European efforts to solve the Ottoman “Eastern Question” by expelling the “Turks bag and baggage,” in the words of William Gladstone, from Europe in a campaign of ethnic cleansing which would claim the lives of over 200,000 Ottoman Muslims and render 5 million refugees whose descendants comprise a good portion of modern-day Turks. While almost all nations commemorate their suffering and loss, this campaign of genocidal ethnic cleansing and a similar one against Muslims in the Caucasus and Crimea has hardly been discussed in the Turkish Republic due to efforts at erasing the past after the founding of the republic. At the time of the Bosnian slaughter, one of the writers, Mujeeb Khan, was the first to accurately predict that callous bigotry and indifference to the plight of highly secular and pacific European Muslims by the Western architects of “the new world order” in Iraq would catalyze militant movements across the Islamic world. He also pointed out that since the breakup of the Ottoman state, the Islamic world, unlike China and India, lacked for the first time a regional hegemon capable of preventing external invasions and undertaking industrial, technological and social development on a global scale and predicted that a democratizing Turkey would embrace her Ottoman-Islamic past and historic role of providing leadership and cohesion in the Muslim world. Such a momentous change is now, of course, under way with the election of the Justice and Development (AK Party) and the development of the neo-Ottoman foreign policy, which has aroused tremendous popular support throughout the Muslim world and which, along with the re-emergence of China and India, might shift the global balance of power away from the West, where it has resided since 1750.

Borrowing from the tool kit of demagogues

Sadly, the disgraceful example of bigotry and chauvinism set by Francois Mitterrand in Bosnia has been continued by the current French president, Nicolas Sarkozy. Instead of joining his foreign minister and prominent human rights activist Bernard Kouchner in condemning the Swiss referendum, Sarkozy wrote an editorial in Le Monde expressing sympathy and called upon French minorities to practice their faith “discreetly” while “humbly” deferring to the centrality of Christian culture and history in what is ostensibly a hyper-secular and egalitarian state. The high-profile intervention was part of his recently launched “debate on national identity” meant to appeal to populist French resentment of racial and religious minorities. Borrowing from the tool kit of demagogues everywhere, Sarkozy identified a few dozen burqa-wearing women in a country of 65 million as the gravest threat confronting the nation. A few days after Sarkozy’s Le Monde essay, the main mosque in the town of Castres was vandalized with swastikas and graffiti stating “France for the French” and “Sieg Heil.” France’s leading anti-racism organization, SOS Racisme, noted that such incidents and even more serious ones involving murder and injury grew out of the politically expedient appeals to racial and religious fears and intolerance by leading politicians starting with the president of the republic himself.
The legitimation of anti-Muslim and anti-immigrant bigotry in the European mainstream has allowed formerly ostracized far-right Neo-Nazi and Fascist-oriented groups such as the British National Party, the Vlaams Belang of Belgium, the Liga Norda of Italy, the National Front in France and the Danish and Swiss people’s parties to present themselves as respectable political movements. They have done this by distancing themselves from traditional anti-Semitic ideology, which continues to be viewed as abhorrent and often illegal, while openly espousing anti-Muslim bigotry, which is seen as much more politically correct and often reflecting mainstream political and media opinion.

In this, they have been greatly helped by anti-Muslim American neo-conservatives allied with people such as Mark Steyn, Daniel Pipes, Norman Podhoretz and Charles Krauthammer. During the Obama presidential campaign, the use of Muslim identity as a slur and form of innuendo was as vicious as any anti-Semitic whispering campaigns found in troubled parts of Eastern Europe. CAIR, the Council on American-Islamic Relations, and Glenn Greenwald of Salon.com have documented how leading Republican politicians have long casually spewed anti-Muslim bigotry without any repercussions. Congressman Peter King of New York has stated that “there are too many mosques in this country,” and GOP representatives Sue Myrick (North Carolina), John Shadegg (Arizona), Paul Broun (Georgia) and Trent Franks (Arizona) have collaborated with the far-right extremist and white supremacist Dave Gaubatz in demanding that young American Muslims not be allowed to serve as interns in Congress.

An unholy alliance

In this anti-Muslim campaign, neo-conservatives have an unholy alliance with followers of Armageddon theology in many Southern Evangelical churches, including the likes of Sarah Palin, who view Muslims as the anti-Christ and feel that Jesus will not return until the Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock are destroyed and the Jewish Temple replete with animal sacrifices in Jerusalem rebuilt. Both the reverends Pat Robertson and Franklin Graham have demanded that Islam be banned as a violent religion while enjoying intimate ties with the highest levels of the GOP and while continuing to preach a theology of hate, itself directly linked to historical crimes against African, Native, Hispanic and Asian Americans in the US. Such views and those of European anti-Muslim bigots such as Wilders and the late Oriana Fallaci, who channeled Der Stürmer in complaining that Muslims breed like rats, have been given prominent positive coverage in neo-conservative media outlets like the Weekly Standard, The National Review, The Wall Street Journal and of course Fox News. The problem with these forms of bigotry is that they quickly spread to other ethnic, racial and religious targets as well, as witnessed by recent anti-Hispanic and anti-immigrant hysteria in the US, posing ominous questions about the future of coexistence in now extremely diverse Western societies.

Bigots and chauvinists, like bullies everywhere, direct their vitriol toward those seen as weak and defenseless. Because China and India have emerged with a continental-scale hegemonic state and market structure in their historic domains of civilization, they are treated with great deference by Western statesmen and would-be hate-mongers like Rupert Murdoch of the News Corporation alike, a lesson Muslims would do well to ponder in the wake of campaigns of genocide, ethnic cleansing and destruction in their historic lands.

Transcript

PAUL JAY, SENIOR EDITOR, TRNN: Hi. Welcome to The Real News Network. I'm Paul Jay, coming to you from Washington. And now joining us from Ismit, Turkey, is Sener Akturk. He's a political scientist and fellow at the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, lectures at the Department of Government, both at Harvard University. And coming from Berkeley, California, is Mujeeb Khan. He's affiliated with the doctoral program in political science at the University of California Berkeley. He wrote a chapter in the book The New Crusades: Constructing the Muslim Enemy. So, Mujeeb, let's start with you. The events in Fort Hood opened up quite a debate and a volley of rhetoric about whether this was terrorism, what was the reason for the events in Fort Hood, but certainly it was an instance of a tremendous amount of rhetoric about Muslims, their role in America. Let me read something back to you that you wrote together with Sener. Talking about the anti-Muslim rhetoric in the United States, you say they've "been greatly helped by anti-Muslim American neoconservatives that allied with people such as Mark Steyn, Daniel Pipes, Norman Podhoretz, and Charles Krauthammer. During the Obama presidential campaign, use of Muslim identity as a slur and form of innuendo was as vicious as any anti-Semitic whispering campaigns found in troubled parts of Eastern Europe." You go on to say anti-Muslim slurs are popularized "with followers of Armageddon theology in many Southern Evangelical churches, including ... Sarah Palin, who view Muslims as the anti-Christ." So, Mujeeb, talk about the events at Fort Hood. To what extent was this anti-Muslim rhetoric? To what extent was this a legitimate reaction to this attack?
MUJEEB KHAN, UC BERKELEY: Well, it's understandable that people would be very upset by what Major Hasan did at Fort Hood. But what he did was [inaudible] far from being the only incident that unleashed a sort of barrage of invective and anti-Muslim rhetoric in a very broad and general way, which we don't see when someone like Tim McVeigh carries out some kind of attack like this, or, in fact, many instances of mass shootings in the United States.

JAY: By that you mean no one was calling McVeigh a Christian terrorist, or if someone shoots an abortion doctor, they're not called Christian terrorists.

KHAN: Right. Or there's an attempt to sort of, you know, delineate that, this specific group that person might be affiliated with, or that person acting as an individual. But we never in a broad-brush away talk about the danger posed by Christians as a whole in America or white people in America or other racial or religious groups. But when it comes to Muslims, at the highest levels, you know, in the US government, people like Peter King, Representative Peter King, that made very broad-based, general statements, saying, like, there are too many mosques in this country, or that American Muslims pose some kind of threat to the United States, this kind of rhetoric is not policed. It's not. When these statements are made in our country at such high levels of office, they get away with it. And to me this is a very troubling racial and religious double-standard that we see.

JAY: Now, in your article, you point to the idea that this is a deeper, more profound ideology that begins in Europe but also has roots in terms of their view of the Apocalypse. Talk a bit about this.

KHAN: Yeah. You know, this goes back well before 9/11, in fact. I remember growing up in the United States and, you know, as someone in junior high and watching Pat Robertson interviewing Major Saad Haddad, who was head of this notorious militia in southern Lebanon, who was also involved in the massacres at Sabra and Shatila of Palestinians. And he was talking about how Islam and Muslims represent the antichrist, how the United States has to bring about the creation of greater Israel, and he was talking about end-times prophecy. And I was wondering, you know, this guy probably doesn't know any Muslims. You know, there are not that many of them in Virginia where he was based. But where does this animus come from? So it's been there. It's an ideology that goes back to the 19th century and was considered heretical, known as pre-millennial dispensationalism, popularized by a British preacher named Darby. But it caught on widely in the South and influenced Cyrus Scofield, who authored the famous Schofield Reference Bible. But as I said, this was largely seen as far out of the mainstream, in terms of Protestant theology. But with the creation of Israel in 1948, in particular the Six-Day War in 1967, there emerged this great enthusiasm and popularization of this ideology of end-times prophecy and Armageddon, and it's unfortunate. It's become quite mainstream now. It's been very influential in the Republican Party at the base level, and by people like Jerry Falwell, who created this alliance with the neoconservatives as part of the Reagan Revolution back in 1980, and it's just grown from there with John Hagee and Pat Robertson, even someone like Franklin Graham.

JAY: The ideological roots of this anti-Muslim rhetoric and policies, which are very closely aligned with anti-Semitic, anti-Jewish policies in Europe, Sener, can you talk a bit about the recent referendum in Switzerland and what it tells us about what's happening in Europe now?

SENER AKTURK, DAVIS CENTER FOR RUSSIAN AND EURASIAN STUDIES: Europe doesn't have an enviable history of religious tolerance from the Middle Ages onward, through the Protestant Reformation, even, and the resurgent Islamophobia that we observe today is only the most recent new ideology of intolerance, a new form of anti-Semitism, and it actually employs many of the tropes, anti-Semitic tropes, that were once upon a time employed in discriminating against Jews.
JAY: Give us some examples.

AKTURK: One of them is this idea of some kind of secret conspiracy, some kind of secret plan that Muslims have of overtaking European countries demographically, economically, politically. This is reminiscent of the most horrible czarist Russian and Nazi anti-Semitic propaganda about Elders of Zion and global plans of Zionist control and so on and so forth. And in both cases, these anti-Semitic propaganda have been employed against a minority that is demographically really small: Muslims in Europe range from 1-4 percent of the population in most European countries; only in France the figure is about 6-7 percent. And despite this fact, despite the fact that they are economically underprivileged, they are politically almost unrepresented, they are being demonized as this constantly plotting, ever-organized menace that is about to take over Europe. Just think of France, which has a population that is sometimes claimed to be 8 percent, even 10 percent [inaudible] Muslim, and yet there is not a single Muslim representative in the French Parliament—or the recent ban on headscarves, Muslim headscarves, in French schools; or the mobilization in Germany against the construction of a large mosque in Cologne; or, for that matter, the constitutional amendment that passed in a popular referendum by 57 percent of the electorate in Switzerland, a country that takes pride in its history of religious tolerance, going back to Calvin and the Protestant Reformation again, and it's a country that takes pride in its multiculturalism, bringing together Italian speakers, German speakers, French speakers, a country with four official languages, a very wealthy country, always ranking in the top three in GDP and human development index, and this country has voted by a large margin, by 57 percent, to ban a key architectural element of Islamic religiosity. This is a development incomprehensible unless we put it in historical perspective of an embedded hostility to religious diversity. Europe, even today after the mass migrations of the postwar years, is still one of the most religiously homogenous regions of the world. Compared to the Middle East, compared to much of Asia, definitely compared to much of Africa, Europe is still, by and large, nominally Christian and it's very difficult to find very large non-Christian denomination, whether these are Muslims, Jews, Hindus, or Buddhists. And this is the challenge. The issue that we tried to draw attention to in our op-ed was that this is a new ideology of intolerance, and the issue is one of accommodating religious diversity in a Europe that would like to deepen its democracy and build a multicultural society.

JAY: Please join us for the next segment of this interview on The Real News Network.


The historic roots of a newly resilient ideology Part 2

More at The Real News


5 comments:

Pray-er said...

Franklin Graham has criticized what he calls Islamic violence, but can scholars ŞENER AKTÜRK & MUJEEB R. KHAN point to any reliably documented occasion when Franklin Graham advocated a ban on Islam?

Michael said...

The comments he made about Islam in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks when he referred to Islam as "a very evil and wicked religion" rather proves the point. 9/11 had nothing to do with Islam, but instead the murder of 1.5 million Iraqis by Christians in regards to the sanctions. You may recall the very evil and wicked Mad. Albright mentioning the deaths of 500,000 Iraqi children was worth it.

Michael said...

You need to hit "submit".

By the way this blog seems to be getting tied up and slow and I can't help feeling it's due to the audio noise.

Michael said...

I presume you signed on first?

Michael said...

Here's one of your comments made last night at 2010-03-09, 10:39:00 pm http://respectdiscussion.phpbb3now.com/viewtopic.php?f=16&t=1993 It went through OK.