By P. David Hornik on 5.31.05 @ 12:06AM
Western Europe was proud to display it. Now America is its only way out.
Eurabia: The Euro-Arab Axis
By Bat Ye'or
(Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 384 pages,
$23.95)
Europe baffles many people. Why does this continent of democracies
persistently favor Arab dictatorships while pouring vitriol on the
United States and Israel? Why, in the run-up to the war in Iraq,
did the streets of Europe fill with millions of demonstrators
supporting Saddam Hussein while hurling epithets at George Bush and
Ariel Sharon? Why does a continent that is historically, and still
demographically, Christian let itself be inundated with Muslim
immigrants who are allowed to keep their culture and fealties
instead of assimilating to Western values?
In Eurabia the historian Bat Ye'or, pioneer of the
concept of dhimmitude (submission to Islam by non-Muslim
peoples), presents a deeply insightful, richly documented
explanation of the European malaise. She locates its roots in
France's desire during the 1960s to revive its crumbling
Mediterranean empire by building "quiet" influence in the Arab
world, while indulging its Gaullist dreams of grandeur by uniting
that world with Europe as a counterforce to American power. It was
an impulse that, from the start, subordinated cultural affinities
with democratic, Christian America to a mix of
ressentiment and lingering romanticization of the Arab
world.
Although Europe's capitulation to the Arabs is often dated from
the 1973 oil crisis and ascribed to economic factors, Bat Ye'or
maintains that the Arab oil sheikhdoms' own dependence on the West
essentially rendered the oil weapon hollow, as evidenced by
America's successful surmounting of the crisis. By that time,
though, France had already led Europe into closer affiliation with
the Arabs for reasons that were largely political, and she suspects
that the oil threat was only "a pretext...to reverse previous EEC
economic policy toward Israel and the Arab world."
It was, indeed, the period of the oil crisis that saw the
creation of the Euro-Arab Dialogue (EAD) -- a network of
parliamentary, propagandistic, cultural, and economic ties that Bat
Ye'or views as the main engine of Europe's creeping
dhimmitude. Evolving through a series of pompous
conferences and wordy, high-flown documents about supposed "common
values," the EAD enabled European politicians and intellectuals to
impose their geopolitical program on a European populace that
initially was neither pro-Arab nor anti-Israeli, and to this day is
ignorant of the EAD and its activities.
It was a process of moral decay and betrayal of Europe's own
democratic ideals. Under EAD influence, Europe played the key role
in legitimizing Yasser Arafat and his PLO even as they made
terrorism an international plague. At the same time, Europe
launched its campaign of pressuring and vilifying Israel while
ignoring the plight of Christians in Arab countries like Lebanon,
Egypt, and Sudan and embracing blood-drenched dictators like Saddam
and Syria's Hafez al-Assad. This went hand in hand with mounting
antagonism to America even while its Cold War umbrella was all that
shielded Western Europe from the Soviet threat.
Meanwhile, a deliberate, preferential immigration policy, openly
stipulated in EAD documents, brought millions of Arabs and other
Muslims to Europe under advantageous terms that allowed them to
import their civilization intact -- including the traditional
Muslim contempt toward "infidel" peoples. Although those EAD texts
spoke in grandiose terms of "mutual" benefit and influence, the
demographic traffic was strictly one-way. Accordingly, whereas
Europe increasingly glorified Arab-Islamic culture and instituted
it in its educational systems, while denying its own Christian
roots, the Arab countries retained their dictatorial, exclusively
Islamic character. Lurking behind this growing European cravenness,
Bat Ye'or asserts, were motives of fear and greed -- fear of Arab
terrorism and the desire to avert it by paying what amounted to a
traditional Islamic "poll tax" of servile tribute and economic
assistance; greed for the economic benefits that this relationship
brought to Europe itself.
The trends merged in what Bat Ye'or calls the "cult of
Palestinianism." It involved not only a morally insouciant,
political backing of the Palestinians no matter what violence they
perpetrated and what efforts Israel made to accommodate them, but
also the growing embrace of a new Palestinian "replacement
theology" that portrayed Jesus as a Muslim Arab and Islam as the
matrix of Christianity. Though resisted by the Vatican, this
theology was increasingly adopted by both Catholic and Protestant
circles in Europe in comradeship with Middle Eastern churches whose
own espousal of it reflected their condition of severe
dhimmitude. Central, of course, to this outlook is a
denial of the Jewish roots of Christianity as part of the
delegitimization of Jewish ties to the Holy Land and of Israel as a
state.
Three decades after the EAD began eroding Europe's identity as a
Western-aligned continent, Bat Ye'or sees Europe's situation as
bleak. As an "aging, confused, and timorous" civilization that has
affiliated itself with "an assertive, demographically booming,
Arab-Muslim world," a reassertion of identity is "highly
improbable" and the decline "may be irreversible." "One may hope,"
however -- the sole hope Bat Ye'or offers in this sobering book --
"that America's resolute policy has opened...new opportunities for
the world to eschew a former order of political connivance with
hate and crime." As she has stated in lectures and elsewhere, she
sought specifically to publish this book in America as a means of
alerting Americans both to Europe's advanced state of decay and to
the United States' role as the last bulwark against Islamic
encroachment and last possible force for Western moral revival.
The message is not made easier to absorb by the book's often
cumbersome prose, which strangely alternates with passages of
almost prophetic eloquence and power. The fruit of the effort
sometimes needed to read this work, though, is exposure to a mind
of uncommon depth and brilliance and a message of urgent
importance.
topics:
Education, Islam, Books, Iraq, Israel, Immigration, Oil