By Christopher Orlet on 1.28.08 @ 12:07AM
The latest initiative by Europe's far right should make Muslim fundamentalists feel right at home.
Not long ago I watched a British documentary film that alleged
German neo-Nazis and young militant Muslims had struck up an
alliance against their common enemies: Jews and gays. If true, this
would not be the first time Nazis and Muslims have joined forces to
destroy Jews -- even gay Jews. In 1941, the Grand Mufti of
Jerusalem Haj Amin al-Husseini and Nazi leaders hatched a plot for
a Middle Eastern version of the Holocaust -- one that happily did
not come to fruition.
The filmmakers say that in 1990 there were only 23,000 Jews
living in Germany. With so few Jews to pick on, Germany's neo-Nazis
directed their hate toward the local Turkish population. Following
the collapse of the former Soviet Union, however, Germany received
an influx of 200,000 Russian-speaking Jews. Not long after the new
immigrants arrived -- the filmmakers alleged -- militant Muslims
and skinheads cemented their alliance, one as notorious as the
Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact.
This back-and-forth continued the other week as several far
right, anti-immigration parties, including the Flemish separatist
party Vlaams Belang, Alsace First, the Austrian FPOE, and Germany's
Pro Koln joined to form a group called Cities Against
Islamification.
CAI's purpose is ostensibly to resist the "Islamification of
European cities." For obvious reasons, these far right parties do
not use the term "Islamofascism," preferring "Islamosocialism."
So what is the CAI's agenda? Apparently it consists in telling
Muslim schoolgirls that they cannot wear head scarves to school,
banning forced marriages and the ritual slaughter of animals and
slapping a moratorium on the building of new mosques.
"We already have more than 6,000 mosques in Europe, which are
not only a place to worship but also a symbol of radicalization,"
Vlaams Belang's Filip Dewinter whined to a Dutch radio station,
citing a large new mosque being built in Rotterdam. "Its minarets
are six floors high, higher than the [lights] of the soccer
stadium!"
Amazing. In Holland, soccer really is above God.
Like an increasing number of European (and Canadian)
governments, Cities Against Islamification wants to save European
cities from becoming the boreal equivalent of Tehran by curtailing
freedom of religion and freedom of expression. Already France has
banned the wearing of crucifixes and headscarves in its schools and
public places. Britain recently passed a law making harsh criticism
of religion a crime. In Canada authors and editors are being
prosecuted for publishing books and magazine articles critical of
Islam.
These are the kind of laws one might expect to find on the books
in Saudi Arabia, where new Christian churches and Jewish synagogues
are banned, but certainly not in Western Europe. At least not since
the Enlightenment.
THIS IS NOT TO SAY that Europe doesn't have a problem with its
Islamic populations. That is self-evident. Since 9/11 once moderate
Muslims have reacted to a perceived increased hostility toward
themselves and their religion not by denouncing terror or radical
Islam, but by embracing their religious ideology, often in its most
fundamentalist forms.
This reaction increased tenfold after the invasion of Iraq and
the London subway bombings. Thus you now find young, educated,
professional Muslim women defiantly wearing the niqab, demanding
sharia law, voluntarily adopting the segregation of the sexes, and
equating the immorality of the Muslim terror attacks with everyday
street crime.
Philosophers have known for millennia that the excessive
increase of anything causes a reaction in the opposite direction,
so we now see far right parties reacting against the Muslim
reaction against the Iraq War, or support for Israel, or
Islamophobia, or whatever, and on and on ad infinitum. New
laws against critical religious speech have not diminished the
swelling us-versus-them mentality.
Muslim enclaves grow in number and size, and even moderates in
their midst loudly demand Islamic law and Islamic values in place
of Western ones. Can calls for separate, independent Islamic
city-states be far off?
Before this century is out Europe could be faced with any number
of Islamic separatist-terrorist groups (like those raising hell in
southern Thailand, most notably the Mujahideen Islam Pattani and
the Pattani United Liberation Organization, and in the southern
Philippines, particularly the Abu Sayyaf Group) battling
ultra-nationalist, pro-indigenous militias.
Not likely, you say? In France Muslims will be the majority in a
quarter century if the current birth rate continues. In a few years
Muslims will be the voting majority in several European cities.
European leaders will have to find a way to forestall this
scenario, to neutralize the far right and the Islamic
reactionaries, and bring two clashing civilizations together. Right
now they seem to have concluded that the way forward is by limiting
dissent. This should make the fundamentalists feel right at
home.
topics:
Religion, Islam, Books, Law, Iraq, Russia, Israel, Socialism, Fascism, Immigration