Irish Independent

EU claims to celebrate oppressed cultures – yet it demonises Catalans

- Janet Daley

THERE are two wildly contradict­ory conception­s of Europe that manage to co-exist in current political fashion.

The first, of which we hear much, is of the continent’s quite recent incarnatio­n as an enlightene­d over-arching organisati­on: a liberal confederat­ion of member states which transcends the old evils of nationalis­m and enmity, and actively repudiates its imperial past. This is, of course, the official Brussels doctrine.

The New Europe is seen as the embodiment of a progressiv­e ideal. Those who wish to declare independen­ce from it, such as the British, or from one of its member states – such as the Catalonian­s – are throwbacks to a benighted age in which quaint loyalties to ancient identities divided the continent.

The other view is that Europe as a historical entity remains a pernicious, oppressive cultural hegemony, snuffing out interest and a proper degree of respect for all those intellectu­al accomplish­ments cultivated by the former colonised races which it still implicitly regards as inferior.

So there it is: either Europe is an unmitigate­d force for good, spreading tolerance and social progress across old boundaries. Or else it is a vile nest of unrepentan­t elitists whose educationa­l institutio­ns breed contempt for black and ethnic communitie­s and which must therefore be forcibly “de-colonised” to purge their racist attitudes.

Bizarrely, these two views are very often held by the same people – or at least the same sort of people.

So pride in your historical identity, and determinat­ion to preserve it, is perfectly acceptable when claimed on behalf of ex-colonial peoples, but it is unacceptab­le when it is asserted by Europeans who believe that their traditiona­l selfdeterm­ination is being trampled by the dominance of supranatio­nal EU institutio­ns (in the case of Britain) or by the overweenin­g government of an EU member state (in the case of Catalonia).

As Spain was convulsed over its battle with the Catalan independen­ce forces, Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy made a statement which got precisely to the heart of this: “The thing that Catalans need protecting from is not what they’re calling Spanish imperialis­m, but a minority who, in an intolerant way, declare themselves the owners of Catalonia and consider as exclusive a history, culture and feelings that are the heritage of the community.”

That, indeed, is the question: who owns your culture and your history? If you insist that you have a right to preserve it and to pass it on to future generation­s intact, does that make you a nativist bigot or worse, a racial purist?

THERE are some perverse consequenc­es of this odd tendency to embrace two mutually exclusive positions at the same time: it has been the orthodoxy for some years in left-liberal circles to advocate the return of cultural artefacts to their country of origin instead of holding them in “imperialis­t” European museums. This argument seems to accept the “de-colonising” version of Europe as a transgress­or against the historical identities of other peoples.

But shouldn’t the believer in a cosmopolit­an, postnation­alist world be in favour of museums which honour all cultures and allow comparativ­e study of their works?

If you are a liberal internatio­nalist, why favour a kind of cultural ethnic cleansing in which everything has to be sent back to where it started?

That both of these ideas of Europe can be presented with equal force under the banner of metropolit­an liberalism is evidence of either moral incoherenc­e or profound intellectu­al dishonesty. Or maybe both – since the latter serves the purposes of the former.

To attack British universiti­es for teaching a Eurocentri­c curriculum should be an uncomforta­ble fit with the reverence for Europe as the enlightene­d leader of a new world order which is certainly the prevailing view in our universiti­es.

Rejecting European domination is an automatic good if you are descended from people who were once under its imperial rule but bad if you see yourself as subject to its new kind of excessive power.

In Barcelona, the EU can justify almost any degree of authoritar­ian action in shutting down a claim of “nationalis­t” identity. But when British academics are described as racist for concentrat­ing their teaching on the European corpus, such comments are treated with respect rather than instantly repudiated by university authoritie­s.

There is only one thread of consistenc­y running through all this: the perennial guilt and self-loathing which is Europe’s inescapabl­e burden from its 19th and 20th century past. Nations which once hated one another must have peace, unity and co-operation enforced upon them. But the peoples that they exploited are owed endless contrition – even if it is largely meaningles­s. This is not a political philosophy, it is a mass neurosis: an endless acting out of futile amends and apology.

But ironically, the New Europe, for all its idealised talk, is as arrogantly self-regarding as ever.

It may have renounced the old forms of imperialis­m but its self-aggrandisi­ng spread to the East and its persistent overtures to countries like Ukraine have arguably justified Russia’s revanchist revival.

So lacking in selfawaren­ess are the spokesmen for this incoherent, illiberal mess that they are stumbling into a new wave of precisely the nationalis­t resentment and anger that they dread. (© Daily Telegraph London)

 ??  ?? A pro-unity marcher in Barcelona yesterday
A pro-unity marcher in Barcelona yesterday
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