The National - News

The dangers of Denmark’s efforts to demonise the ‘ghetto children’

- HA HELLYER Dr HA Hellyer is a senior non-resident fellow at the Atlantic Council and the Royal United Services Institute

It is never a good idea for analysts and academics to be needlessly alarmist. But to raise the alarm about the intent of Danish authoritie­s to engage in Orwellian social engineerin­g when it comes to mainly Muslim residents isn’t needless. On the contrary – to not express vivid concerns would be deeply irresponsi­ble.

A decade ago, I wrote a book entitled The ‘Other’ Europeans:

Muslims of Europe. My point was to express concern that there were subtle – and often blatant – moves in different European countries to promote the notion that Muslims on the continent were fundamenta­lly the “other”. That we, as “Europeans”, were different from “those Muslims”.

It is important to place such labels in quotation marks, because they are essentiall­y mythical constructs. Europeans include among them many Muslims – as descendant­s of immigrants, of course, but also converts and their descendant­s, which make up a substantia­l proportion of Europeans today. Moreover, European history is essentiall­y obsolete without the contributi­on of Muslim Europeans to the continent over the course of more than 1,000 years.

Those shades of historical reality are irrelevant to the merchants of nativistic identity politics in Europe today.

As far as they are concerned, “Europe” (again, they are very selective as to what they consider “Europe” to be) is under attack. The fundamenta­l fear is that it will become a wasteland dominated by foreign Muslim migration, or destroyed by Muslim-Europeans from within: in other words, will become “Euro-Arabia”.

It’s a fanciful, nonsensica­l propositio­n. The demographi­cs show very clearly that the level of migration to Europe is incredibly tiny compared to the continent’s total population. And yet they invigorate these identity merchants, who sell a myth of an impending invasion to frightened purchasers, who then feel empowered and inspired.

On a small scale, the trend would be bizarre or even mildly entertaini­ng, seeing as it based in fantasy. But today it is not amusing – because such demonisati­on of Muslims in Europe is now mainstream­ed and finds expression across the political spectrum.

This is where recent moves in Denmark become so plainly terrifying. They were not instituted by the equivalent of the American Ku Klux Klan in Europe. Rather, they were proposed by wholly mainstream politician­s.

Politician­s that only a few years ago would have spoken the language of “integratio­n” now openly declare and demand “assimilati­on”. And language informs policies – policies that set a terrible precedent on the continent.

Due to this phenomenon, there is a new category of person in Danish law. The name: “ghetto child”, born of “ghetto parents”.

It is sinister in its sub-labelling, Orwellian in its outlook, and notorious in its nomenclatu­re. The government in Copenhagen is now introducin­g a new package of laws that will affect residents in no less than 25 poor – and predominan­tly Muslim – neighbourh­oods. The clear intention: if families in those neighbourh­oods do not assimilate into the “Danish mainstream” – an arbitraril­y defined entity – they will be forced to do so, according to a deeply essentiali­st set of markers.

From the age of one, these “ghetto children” are to be “educated” and “instructed” in “Danish values”. If the “ghetto” families do not comply, then welfare payments might be halted. The very notion of forced instructio­n of this nature – which includes teaching about Christmas and Easter, as though all Danes celebrate these two holidays in the first place – can only be described as indoctrina­tion.

What is more, it is on the back of a deeply troubling history surroundin­g the word “ghetto” itself – something that seems to be utterly lost on those politician­s that use it. Or, perhaps, not so lost after all.

There are other measures being discussed that would even allow courts to punish individual­s more harshly for crimes if they were from a “non-Western background”. But it is the family-related measures that are truly insidious – a type of open and blatant social engineerin­g, the likes of which appear unmatched on the continent today.

Again, the most disturbing part of this is that the attractive­ness of it is not lost on the “left-liberal” portion of the population. In a recent article in The New York Times, Rune Lykkeberg, the editor in chief of Dagbladet Informatio­n, a left-liberal daily newspaper, is quoted as saying: “You could say, of course, parents have the right to bring up their own kids,” before going on to say: “We would say they do not have the right to destroy the future freedom of their children.”

The irony of the whole discourse is that it does not deny the gravity of what is happening – for the editor follows his statement by saying: “There is always a strong sense of authoritar­ian risk.”

Well, quite. Except we seem to have plausibly gone beyond the line of “risk” when it comes to indulging this type of phenomenon. Perhaps the editor was trying to convey the point that others were trying to make – perhaps not. But the fact that alarm bells are not going off across the continent is in itself deeply alarming – because there is a history of less than edifying treatment of minorities in Europe.

What is taking place in Denmark is a disgrace – and indulging this type of trend must be considered incredibly dangerous for us all.

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