The National - News

Islamophob­ia has complex roots in history and culture

-

Recommenda­tions from the fourth Forum for Promoting Peace in Muslim Societies in Abu Dhabi earlier this month included a proposal to establish an internatio­nal centre to study the “fear of Islam”, or Islamophob­ia, to “serve as a platform to study its causes and manifestat­ions and propose preventive methods to address it”.

However it is defined, Islamophob­ia is an issue of major concern. It is often, however, viewed far too simplistic­ally. It is not just hostility to Islam as a faith.

I was fortunate enough to attend a forum workshop examining this “fear of Islam” from a western perspectiv­e. Comments from both panellists and the floor noted, accurately, some of the complexiti­es that surround the general issue and also some of the actions and misunderst­andings out of which fear can arise.

Thus, one imam, a Muslim of Danish ethnic origin, noted that in his mosque, the Danish language was used, making it accessible to the surroundin­g community. In contrast, many others functioned primarily in Arabic, Urdu or Somali. It’s understand­able that migrant communitie­s wish to preserve their culture, language and – yes – their faith, but it’s scarcely surprising that doing so in a way that separates them from other Danes engenders problems.

My esteemed fellow columnist on these pages, Dr HA Hellyer, rightly noted that although Islam is not a race, much of the fear of Islam present in Britain has distinctly racist overtones. Victims of Islamophob­ic attacks can include not only Muslims but also Sikhs, Hindus and, for that matter, Christians of south Asian origins, just on the basis of their colour. A general fear of “the other” can prompt apparently Islamophob­ic attacks regardless of the faith of those involved.

It’s important, too, to recognise the different histories of the European countries where Islamophob­ia is rising. The United Kingdom and France formerly ruled over large parts of the majority-Muslim world, unlike, for example, Poland or the Czech Republic.

In Hungary, historical memories of the 145 years when Budapest was part of the Ottoman empire are still vivid, while the 1683 Ottoman siege of Vienna is a key moment in Austrian history. The Ottomans remained in the Balkans into the 20th century. Islamophob­ia in central and southeast Europe, not surprising­ly, has different roots from what is allegedly the same general phenomenon in western Europe.

There are difference­s, too, in the demographi­c origins, as well as the size, of locally resident Muslim communitie­s. In Britain, they are primarily of south Asian origin while in France, those of North African origin predominat­e, with most inward migration having come from their now-vanished empires. In Germany, at least until the last few years, most Muslims were of Turkish origin. The final statement of the forum noted, in part, that “the phenomenon of Islamophob­ia is also senseless and unethical because it fuels hatred and discrimina­tion in the West, which ultimately gives way to extremism”.

That, though, overlooks what another speaker from the United States identified as two different types of Islamophob­ia. He called these the “manufactur­ed fear”, manipulate­d for political and racialist purposes, and the “genuine fear”, which he described as arising from a sense of difference, albeit unjustifie­d.

It’s easy to simplify – but rarely helpful to do so. Unless the complexiti­es of culture and history are recognised, as well as the difference­s in faith out of which the current phenomenon of Islamophob­ia has arisen, efforts to devise

A general fear of ‘the other ’ can prompt apparently anti-Islam attacks regardless of the faith of those involved

a successful response are unlikely to meet with much success.

Just as the Muslim world and, within it, the Arab world, is hugely diverse, so too is the concept of “the West” – and that is without taking into account the fear, genuine or manufactur­ed, that arises out of terrorist attacks prompted by perversion­s of Islam.

The characteri­sation of Islamophob­ia as a senseless and unethical hostility arising out of a “clash of civilisati­ons” is an over-simplifica­tion that offers no solutions and no real understand­ing. It merely makes the issue yet more intractabl­e.

Peter Hellyer is a consultant specialisi­ng in the UAE’s history and culture

 ?? Alamy Stock ?? Victims of attacks can include not only Muslims, but also Sikhs and others on the basis of their colour
Alamy Stock Victims of attacks can include not only Muslims, but also Sikhs and others on the basis of their colour
 ??  ?? PXEXTEXRXH­XELXLXYER X X X X X X X X
PXEXTEXRXH­XELXLXYER X X X X X X X X

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates