Arab News

A test of equality and fraternity

Cultural gap and social disparitie­s complicate the march toward integratio­n of French youth of Arab origin

- Khattar Abu Diab Paris Shuttersto­ck AFP

The latest wave of terrorism that hit France this year, succeeding that of 20152016, revives a debate on the adaptation of a new generation of immigrants and their degree of integratio­n in France.

The ability of the French secularism model to promote respect and the implementa­tion of the founding principles of the republic, in particular equality and fraternity, is also questioned.

Cultural schisms and social inequaliti­es undoubtedl­y complicate and delay the march toward the integratio­n of a strained youth, caught between the hammer of extremist religious sirens and the anvil of racism and discrimina­tion, in the absence of effective mechanisms to promote citizenshi­p. From the beginning of the 1980s, French society became aware of the reality of the presence of immigrants of Muslim heritage, especially in the suburbs of large cities, called at the time “suburbs of Islam.”

As immigrant workers who came to France in the 1970s intended to stay put, the French landscape changed, and over time, Islam became the second religion in the country after Catholicis­m. Thus, alongside a socio-cultural shock, mistrust has developed between, on the one hand, native French people and, on the other, new French people of migrant origin, mostly Maghrebian­s.

The year 1983 symbolized the emerging new deal, with the March of Arabs and strikes in the automotive sector, in which immigrant labor played an important role. We then begin to talk about the “second generation.” The year 1989 is another key date, when the “Muslim presence” poses new challenges, especially in the area of secularism.

The Creil case, in which three college girls who refused to take off the Islamic headscarf in class in a public school were excluded, suddenly raised the question of the manifestat­ion of religion in public space.

The Creil case would spark an intense debate within French society, and calls began to be made for Islam to adapt to the republican model. The year 1989 thus marks the dawn of a new era, marked by the greater presence of Islam in France, whether in the media or sociologic­ally.

Since this period, this “visible Islam” in an increasing­ly pluralist and multicultu­ral society has continued to weigh on the secular model, either because of the refusal of the integratio­n of Muslims into a non-Muslim and secular society by certain currents, or because of the rise of racism and the fear of a change in the religious and social landscape.

The various attempts by the Jacobin state to legislate in order to organize Islam from above have in turn failed. Not all of these factors have resulted in significan­t social appeasemen­t or a successful integratio­n process.

Laws on the ban on the headscarf and other religious symbols in schools and public spaces, the ban on the niqab, as well as the creation of the French Council for the Muslim Faith (CFCM) to make Islam an actor at the table of the republic have certainly laid legal foundation­s, but have not succeeded in implementi­ng a new social contract or drawing up a code of conduct for living together.

The late installati­on of Islam in parts of Judeo- Christian or secular Europe continues to pose particular problems, and the Islamologi­st Mohammed Arkoun was not wrong to point out that matter. “The West believed it was done with the religious question, philosophi­cally, legally or culturally. The arrival of Muslims in Western Europe showed that this was not the case,” he said.

This historical reminder shows that two visions clash: That which the majority has of young North Africans from France and which results in particular from a reaction to the long history of the play of the European powers in the region, and opposite, that of a part of French establishm­ent and native French, marked by the cultural gap and the quarrel between religions.

One of the great problems of this new Muslim generation installed in France and in Europe today is that modernizat­ion does not appear a natural process, but rather an imposed model. It is therefore seen as a loss of identity in certain religious circles. The notions of “citizen” and the “rule of law” are always confusing for these newcomers.

The separation between religion and the state establishe­d by the law

Above: France’s Muslim and Arab population­s have faced pressure since the 1980s.

Below: Young Muslims in particular feel attacked over the demands of the republic’s secularism. of 1905, while Islam did not officially appear on the territory of the metropolis until 1926, on the occasion of the founding of the Great Mosque of Paris, explains partly the rise of political Islamism and other radical or retrograde currents within the Muslim population.

Christiani­ty in France, for its part, has experience­d a different path. But this new Muslim generation, which does not live an Islam adapted to French reality, does not realize that current European civilizati­on owes a lot to the time of Muslim presence in Andalusia, with the influence of Cordoba and its sister cities. The movement of translatio­n and cultural interactio­n which has devel developed in what is now a region of Spain has sown the he seeds of European progress.

As the size of this is Muslim population has increased sed and the observatio­n of religious igious precepts by Muslim youth spreads and accelerate­s, economic mic actors have responded to this s demand, promoting the emergence ence of a market encouragin­g respect ect for the Islamic principle of halal. al.

This dynamic has been carried by many actors, associatio­ns and mosques founded d by countries from which immigrants grants come, or by associatio­ns linked ked to ideologica­l currents (the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and Tabligh gh to name just two).

This demonstrat­es es a breakdown of integratio­n to access citizenshi­p due to “ghettoizat­ion” ttoization” on the one hand and religious and identity withdrawal al on the other. What the Arab News en Francais-YouGov survey shows is that French people of Arab origin desire to belong to a democratic and secular France and adhere to the fundamenta­l values of the French Republic.

Yet they do not feel accepted, and even stigmatize­d. Their responses underline a feeling of exclusion which, for 51 percent of them, is not linked to skin color but rather to the ethnic origin of their name (36 percent) which has a negative impact on their prospects.

This new generation considers that the concrete requests that are demanded in order to adapt to secularism represent an attack on its identity. These young Muslims or Maghrebian­s believe “a Muslim student should be able to eat halal in school canteens and that a young girl should be able to wear the veil to school or not to go to the swimming pool.”

Thus, the bet on a process of seculariza­tion and of an “exit from religion,” which would also have concerned the immigrant population and these young people of Arab origin, has dissipated, with the Salman Rushdie affair, the rise of the ideas of political Islamism, and the continuati­on of migratory flows causing a gre greater cultural and social influence from countries of origin, amplif amplifying identity withdrawal.

In a context of terr terrorist threats and risks of rupture conveyed by Islamophob­ia in a to toxic environmen­t, the differing v views on one side or the other are in influenced by the confluence of hi historical, political, religious, cultu cultural and economical elements.

For France, the me merciless fight against terrorism an and religious radicaliza­tion repres represents a national priority. It is a about the defense of national co cohesion and stability. In this con context, adapting the secular Fre French model so that it becomes p positive and open should g go hand in hand with the e efforts of the Muslim elites for better integratio­n and respect for the ob obligation­s of citizenshi­p citizenshi­p.

The West believed it was done with the religious question. The arrival of Muslims in Western Europe showed that this was not the case. Mohammed Arkoun

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