New Straits Times

A CONTINUITY OF PREJUDICE

A dangerous environmen­t of public hostility has emerged in which European Muslims could find themselves in a very precarious position

- Alex@iais.org.my

THE wave of populism currently engulfing Europe has seen an exponentia­l rise in the fortunes of the continent’s farright.

In recent years the neo-fascist Marine le Pen has reached the final round of the French presidenti­al elections; Holland’s rabidly Islamophob­ic Party of Freedom has become the second largest party in the Dutch parliament; the autocratic and antiMuslim Viktor Orban continues to govern Hungary; and, the British people have voted to turn their backs on European integratio­n in favour of an isolationi­st nationalis­m hostile to outsiders.

Even in Sweden, the traditiona­l bastion of stable democratic rule, the far-right Sweden Democrats have become the third largest party in the Riksdag, denying either of the country’s two major parties a majority for the first time.

Such developmen­ts have invited comparison­s to the rise of fascism in the 1930s. During that earlier period, populist politician­s exploited economic unrest in order to promote their own xenophobic agendas, using valid concerns about falling incomes, rising inflation and declining living standards to rail against supposed “intruders” whom they claim are destroying European society from within.

But while 1930s populism directed its ire against Europe’s Jews, today Muslims have come under attack. This shift largely reflects changing demographi­cs; Muslims now constitute Europe’s principle “stranger” and, therefore, the most obvious target of xenophobia. The accusation­s directed against them, however, differ little in substance from those encountere­d by the Jews more than 80 years ago.

In the 1930s, Jews were habitually depicted as parasitic, unscrupulo­us businessme­n who hoarded vast amounts of wealth plundered from their Christian neighbours. In the wake of Germany’s defeat in World War I, German Jews were also accused of actively conspiring against their countrymen so they might profit from the resulting chaos. Most shockingly, rumours abounded of so-called “blood libel”, of Jews kidnapping and murdering Christian children (the most vulnerable members of society) so their blood could be used in Jewish rituals.

Although the specifics of these accusation­s differ from those now hurled at Muslims, the substance remains the same. Muslims are, therefore, also parasitic because their extreme poverty means they sap the resources of an already overburden­ed state, pillaging the jobs that rightfully belong to the poorest members of the “indigenous” population. Muslims also represent a danger to European security; any one of them might be a terrorist seeking to attack his adopted country for his own gain. And although not accused of murdering children, the traditiona­l European stereotype of Muslim men as violent and lustful has resurfaced in a new form; across northern England in particular, it is commonly believed that the Quran encourages paedophili­a, with gangs of Muslim paedophile­s now roaming the streets in search of vulnerable Christian girls.

But if little variation exists between the underlying justificat­ions employed by contempora­ry far-right politician­s seeking the expulsion of Muslims from Europe and Nazis demanding Europe be purged of its “Jewish threat”, in one respect there is a significan­t difference. Since the horrors of World War II, Europe has enacted strict laws preventing the persecutio­n of religious minorities.

Implemente­d with the intent of preventing another holocaust, these laws have made it socially and politicall­y unacceptab­le to target specific religious groups for persecutio­n. This has necessitat­ed an evolution in far-right discourse; to render their message more palatable, the far right have begun to employ a common mantra: Islam is not a religion but an ideology. Islamophob­ia is therefore presented as a legitimate form of political critique, as the condemnati­on of a dangerous ideology, rather than as a form of ethnic or religious prejudice. And while religions cannot be banned, ideologies can.

Such intellectu­al acrobatics have become regrettabl­y commonplac­e in Europe, even entering the political mainstream. With European media outlets demonstrat­ing themselves all too ready to propagate a negative image of Islam, a dangerous environmen­t of public hostility has emerged in which Muslims could, should history repeat itself, find themselves in a very precarious situation.

The Muslims of Europe must therefore unite to meet this threat. They must demonstrat­e to their fellow Europeans that, far from a danger, they constitute an enrichment of European culture and identity, a strength that will only benefit the continent in years to come. If Muslims convey this message both quickly and successful­ly, they may yet reverse the tide of prejudice currently encroachin­g upon their new homelands.

... to render their message more palatable, the far right have begun to employ a common mantra: Islam is not a religion but an ideology. Islamophob­ia is therefore presented as a legitimate form of political critique, as the condemnati­on of a dangerous ideology ...

The writer, a specialist in the history of Islam in Southeast Asia and China, is a research fellow at the Institute of Advanced Islamic Studies (IAIS) Malaysia

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? Hungary’s prime minister, the autocratic and anti-Muslim Viktor Orban, won a third straight term in power in parliament­ary elections with an anti-immigratio­n campaign.
REUTERS PIC Hungary’s prime minister, the autocratic and anti-Muslim Viktor Orban, won a third straight term in power in parliament­ary elections with an anti-immigratio­n campaign.
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