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with Sarah Grey

As Muslims around the world protest their contemptuous treatment by the West, catalyzed by the provocative, racist American film Innocence of Muslims, the French media added fuel to the fire of by publishing offensive cartoons of the prophet Muhammad. Left-wing alt-weekly Charlie Hebdo ran cartoons that depicted a naked, turbaned Muhammad in profoundly racist and offensive ways. To make matters worse, French interior minister Manuel Valls announced that demonstrations against Islamophobia would be officially banned and that “any incitement to hatred must be fought with the greatest firmness.”

In Paris, 150 protestors (out of 250) were arrested after a peaceful protest at the US embassy—and on Friday, protest permits were withheld as Valls warned that police would be on alert to break up any unauthorized protests by force.

The French government denounced the cartoons as “irresponsible,” and European Affairs Minister Bernard Cazeneuve lectured that “when you are free, in a country like ours, you always have to measure the impact of your words.”

In practice, though, it appears that “measuring one’s words” applies more to Kate Middleton’s topless photos than to racist bigotry. A French judge issued an injunction against further publication of the Middleton photos in the interest of decency, while no such consideration was given to the decency of publishing openly racist imagery. Such blatantly disparate choices in the same week expose a colonial mindset: while royalty should be treated as, for the lack of a better word, royalty, ex–colonial subjects (most French Muslims are from former French colonies) may be denigrated with impunity and their right to protest and exercise free speech may be curtailed.

French Muslims have had much to protest; the cartoons are only the tip of the iceberg. They are treated as second-class citizens in a variety of ways, and in recent years angry protests by French Muslims and their left-wing allies have demanded decent living conditions in the working-class banlieues as well as labor rights for undocumented workers. Recently demonstrations in Gennevilliers raised the injustice of the firing of four Muslim workers for fasting during the holy month of Ramadan.

What is particularly insidious is that behind the much-vaunted French tradition of liberté, égalité, fraternité, a colonial mentality can masquerade as progressiveness.  Full-face coverings such as the burqaand the niqab were banned from the public streets in 2011. This follows upon the nearly decade-long ban in public schools of religious coverings, particularly the hijab.  Both these acts were justified on the grounds that they “promote secularism” and “protect” Muslim women from oppression; violators are fined or forced to attend classes on “French citizenship.”

A full two centuries after Napoleon invaded Egypt and promised to bring liberty to its people, his mission civilisatrice (civilizing mission) remains alive and well.  Ironically, though, Napoleon actually proffered greater respect for Islam—even going so far as to claim that the French were “Muslims” in his widely circulated manifesto—than his descendants today.[i]

The French have a long and proud tradition of massive street protests, but it would appear that this tradition is reserved for the “right” kind of people.  A poll by the survey group TNS found that 58 percent of French respondents thought that freedom of speech was a “fundamental right,” yet 71 percent supported the ban on Muslim protest.

The propaganda that is responsible for winning this sort of consent is rooted in a long history of presenting Muslims as an “other” who must be brought into the fold and taught the “right”—or French—way to live.

Such attitudes are widespread among imperial nations. The US magazine Newsweek ran a cover photo of bearded, angry Muslim men with the headline “Muslim Rage.”  Picking up the baton from Bernard Lewis, whose 1990 essay “The Roots of Muslim Rage” introduced the world to the term “clash of civilizations,” former Dutch parliament member and rabid Islamophobe Ayaan Hirsi Ali wrote that furious, violent rage is “the defining characteristic of Islam.”

If we allow them to protest, the logic goes, there will be no stopping the flood of Muslim rage.  And so, rather than extending the courtesies of the famed French freedom of speech to its Arab and Muslim citizens, the “socialist” François Hollande administration has responded by banning their voices entirely from the public debate. Charlie Hebdo, whose Paris offices are under police protection, sold out of its Muhammad issue last Wednesday.

Such racist hypocrisy is not new to the French left.  For instance, the French Communist Party did not support the Algerian struggle for national liberation.  Jean-Paul Sartre, in his preface to Frantz Fanon’s The Wretched of the Earth, blasted his compatriots: “You who are so liberal, so humane, who take the love of culture to the point of affectation, you pretend to forget that you have colonies where massacres are committed in your name.”

Today, while the sun has long set on the French empire, its colonial mindset and ideology persist.

It should come as no surprise, then, that when one group of people is targeted as France’s “other,” the floodgates open wide to other forms of racism. Charlie Hebdo’s racist cartoons not only depict the Prophet in profoundly offensive ways, but also include anti-Semitic caricatures of Jewish rabbis. And when the hijab was banned in French schools, so were Jewish students’ yarmulkes.

National Front fascist Marine Le Pen, who won nearly 18 percent of the vote in the first round of presidential elections earlier this year, called publicly this week for a ban on yarmulkes on the public streets, stating that it was an “obvious” logical extension of the ban on Muslim veils.

The mixing of anti-Jewish with anti-Muslim sentiment, illustrated so viscerally in the disgusting Charlie Hebdo cartoons, dates back at least to the first Crusade in 1099, when Muslims and Jews alike were swept out of Jerusalem and murdered in the first pogroms. The crusaders even stopped in Germany on their way east to murder Jews there.  During the Reconquista of Moorish Spain, too, Jews who had been living peacefully side by side with Muslims were driven out and murdered by Christians.  (Many fled to safety in the Muslim Ottoman Empire.)  Islamophobia and anti-Semitism have coexisted for at least a millennium.

Throughout history, when one ethnic group has been targeted as evil, dangerous, or threatening, such treatment has opened the door to the oppression of other minorities and this has been especially true of Jews and Muslims in Europe.

In the twenty-first century ,we have seen a wave of struggles explode across the Middle East and North Africa that have inspired people in the US, Spain, Greece, and elsewhere. This time, the Western left has to get it right—we have to learn the lessons of the past and eschew ethnocentrism in the interest of true international solidarity. If liberté, égalité, fraternité are to mean anything, they must apply equally to everyone—not least of all to our Muslim brothers and sisters.

written with:

Sarah Grey is a freelance writer, book editor, and indexer at Grey Editing in Philadelphia. Her work has been published in International Socialist Review, Monthly Review, GRID, Motivos, and 101 Changemakers: Rebels and Radicals Who Changed US History, forthcoming from Haymarket Books.


[i] See the discussion in Deepa Kumar’s Islamophobia and the Politics of Empire, p. 27.

 

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An alarming trend is sweeping Europe. Far right wing parties, using anti-Muslim and anti-immigrant rhetoric, have made electoral gains in several European countries. In the June European parliament elections, these parties were able to garner votes in a way they haven’t before. The British National Party (BNP) which has its roots in fascist parties of the past, got almost a million votes and its first two seats in the European parliament. Geert Wilders’ Party for Freedom (PVV) made significant gains as well.

Overall, as Time magazine notes about the June elections:

“Around Europe a ragbag of extremist parties, as varied as the countries that produced them yet united by a vehement nationalism that singles out minority groups as a growing threat, scored in Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Denmark, France, Finland, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Romania and Slovakia. Confronted with sliding economies and disappearing jobs, voters kicked the mainstream parties they held most responsible. “

Even in countries considered liberal, such as Holland and Sweden, far right wing parties have had breakthroughs. In the recent elections in Sweden, the party of Jammie Akesson, the Sweden Democrats, gained power in the parliament running on blatantly anti-Muslim campaigns. Akesson called for restricting immigration, stating that Islam is the greatest threat facing the Swedish nation.

In Holland, Geert Wilders’ party, the Party for Freedom (PVV), won 24 seats in the Dutch elections and appears poised to be part of a new minority government.

Wilders is a notorious Islamophobe. He has compared Islam to fascism, equating the Koran to Hitler’s Mein Kampf. Wilders ran on the platform of banning immigration from Muslim majority countries, contending that people who are a part of Islamic cultures are “retarded.” He would further ban the Koran and veiling.

In striking a deal with Wilders, the center-right coalition that is attempting to form a minority government in Holland has adopted several of Wilders’ policy demands such as banning the burqa and imposing tighter immigration standards.

Wilders’ was one of the highlighted speakers at the September 11th rally against the proposed Islamic center in downtown Manhattan called by Tea Party bigots, where he called on his audience to “defend itself against the powers of darkness, the force of hatred and the blight of ignorance.”

This should come as no surprise. The far right in the US not only collaborates with its counterparts in Europe, but it is also learning the lessons of their electoral victories.

Pamela Geller, whose group Stop Islamization of America was largely responsible for polarizing the discussion around the proposed Islamic center in downtown Manhattan, is not only a fan of Wilders (and the feeling is mutual given his glowing blurb for the book she co-authored on the Obama presidency) but an admirer of open fascists and street gangs such as the English Defense League that routinely attack Muslims and immigrants.

The Tea party has clearly taken a few pages from the European right. They have learned that in the context of a prolonged economic crisis, racism and the politics of scapegoating can enable them to reach a wider audience.

Thus, anti-immigrant groups such as the Minutemen have started to appear at Tea party rallies and events. Similarly, Geller who identifies as a Tea Party person spoke at the Tennessee Tea party convention in May.

It is not a coincidence that Tennessee is also the site where an Islamic center in Murfreesboro, has come under attack. There were arson attempts and gunshots at the center creating a climate of fear and intimidation for the Muslim community.

Tennessee is also the location where Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey, endorsed by more than 20 Tea Party groups, ran on the promise that he wanted to prevent sharia law from coming to Tennessee, and referred to Islam as a “cult” and a “violent political philosophy.”

What we are seeing is a right wing populist movement beginning to coalesce with racism at its core. This movement has both an electoral strategy as well as a grass roots strategy based on intimidating Muslim communities (and Latino immigrants). While earlier, Islamophobia in the US primarily served as a means to justify the “war on terror,” it is now serving the domestic agenda of the far right in ways similar to what has gone on in Europe.

As Gary Younge put it in a recent article in the Nation, the current phase of Islamophobia,

“marks the rise of xenophobic and racist forces within the Republican Party, for whom the election of a black Democratic president with an uncommon name and an African father has produced a perfect storm for divisive, deranged rhetoric. As such, this most recent outburst of Islamophobia marks a plot development in the narrative of the Nixon strategy, which used the dog whistle of racially charged rhetoric to realign the South toward the GOP. Now no dog whistle is needed. The racism is not veiled but naked, the delivery not subtle but brutal. With the Minutemen, the birthers, the Tea Partyers and Fox News on common ground, it was only a matter of time before they turned their pitchforks on Muslims. For while they did not invent Islamophobia, they were well positioned to exploit it.”

Europe is a mirror of what can happen at the level of mainstream politics in the United States if this right wing movement is not pushed back. Yet, Europe also offers lessons for the left in the US.

First, the rise of the right is taking place in the context of a prolonged economic crisis. European governments have responded through imposing austerity measures and attacking the most vulnerable. Unfortunately, traditional left parties have failed to offer an alternative. In this gap, the right by scapegoating Muslim immigrants, have been able to tap into voter anxiety.

In Sweden for instance, the social welfare state has been steadily dismantled over the last decade. Left parties such as the Social Democrats have been party to such efforts, and have failed to put up any resistance to cuts in unemployment benefits, and the privatization of health care, schools etc. In this context, and with the ongoing recession, it becomes easy to place blame for the public’s economic hardship on immigrants.

France’s upper house voted almost unanimously to ban the burqa. When the vote passed in the lower house, the left parties (the socialists, Greens and Communists) abstained. Rather than put up a principled defense of Muslims and try to defeat the measure, they decided to sit out the vote instead. The Socialist Party then came forward and stated that it too objected to the veil, but didn’t support constitutional measures banning it.

Such pathetic responses only strengthen the right. Even in the US, as I have argued earlier, the far right was able to set the terms of discussion around the Cordoba House controversy because the liberal establishment failed to present a principled anti-racist defense.

The first lesson, therefore, is that you cannot fight the right from the center. In the face of hyperbolic rhetoric that blatantly demonizes Muslims, a weak kneed response that attempts to be “moderate” only strengthens the far right.

The second lesson is that the right is being resisted by ordinary people, sometimes organized by smaller left groups. The non-mainstream left in various European nations have a historical memory of what it takes to fight the right. For instance, the Anti Nazi League in Britain that successfully pushed back the fascist National Front, the precursor to the BNP, organized on two fronts. First, they articulated a principled defense against racism. But second, they also articulated a broader politics that explained how racism and scapegoating are the products of an economic system that needs to blame racial “others” for its flaws, thereby putting forward a progressive alternative.

Today, in the context of a global recession that seems to have no end in sight, this is a crucial lesson. Islamophobia has to be exposed as the scapegoating tactic of a system in crisis, but this has to be part of a broader vision which puts on offer both a political and an economic alternative to neoliberalism and war.

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