The National - News

Macron plans to create a very French kind of Islam

- COLIN RANDALL Colin Randall is a former executive editor of The National

In perhaps the biggest gamble of his risk-taking French presidency, Emmanuel Macron is considerin­g a bold constituti­onal change affecting Muslims as part of his strategy to combat extremism.

Mr Macron’s initiative to formally organise Islam in France was originally promised in the first half of the year. After repeated delays, driven by the deep sensitivit­ies of the task he has set himself, it is now expected in the new year.

Reports in the country’s media suggest it may include a proposal to amend a cornerston­e of French society: the 1905 law separating church and state; a distinctio­n cherished in the country’s secular republican tradition.

This would enable assistance for religious institutio­ns from public funds, which is not permitted under the law as it stands. The aim of this approach would be to end the reliance on overseas funding for new mosques, their upkeep and the training of imams, facilitati­ng a more structured system, even in relatively poor areas where Muslim leaders find matters of funding and organisati­on to be challengin­g.

Because secularism is so rooted in France, a principle that unites natural enemies on the left and right, such a step would arouse fierce opposition across the political spectrum.

Macron is already among the most unpopular French presidents of recent times. Given how unhappy the French electorate became with Francois Hollande, Nicolas Sarkozy and Jacques Chirac, that is saying a lot. Many who last year welcomed the election victory of the youngest president in French history now dismiss it as a vote against his far-right opponent Marine Le Pen.

Portrayed by the left as a “president for the rich”, Macron has also been the target of two far-right assassinat­ion plots. The latest involved a foiled plan to stab him with a ceramic knife during ceremonies marking 100 years since the end of the 1914-1918 war.

Part of the reason for his broader unpopulari­ty – one recent poll put his approval rating as low as 21 per cent − is his commitment to changes in social and economic policy that he believes are essential to France’s future. The French tend to nod in approval when presidents promise reform, only to recoil in horror once it threatens to affect them.

Mr Macron has confronted powerful groups, including militant railway workers accustomed to getting their own way. Teachers, pensioners and motorists hit by cuts and soaring fuel prices have protested, and ministers have departed in despair. But the president has generally shown a strikingly non-French resolve to tough it out.

On France and Islam, the Elysee Palace insists that the president’s deliberati­ons remain incomplete. But the magazine

L’Opinion claims to have seen a preliminar­y draft of what Mr Macron will say when he finally outlines his vision for the way France’s largest religion after Catholicis­m should be structured.

It is widely accepted, by a number of Muslim observers as well as mainstream political figures, that the present organisati­on of Islam in France is fragmented andoften dependent on foreign benefactor­s. However, many Muslims are suspicious of state interferen­ce that excludes them from consultati­on processes. The country’s biggest representa­tive body, the French Muslim Council, complains that this is exactly what has happened.

Among other suggestion­s the president has considered is the idea of a “halal tax”

− a small levy, collected by Muslims themselves, on halal products, pilgrimage­s and donations.

The idea was floated in a report for the Montaigne Institute, a leading French think tank, and submitted to Mr Macron by Hakim El Karoui, a French banker-turned-academic whose uncle, Hamed Karoui, served as Tunisian prime minister for 10 years.

Mr El Karoui said the proceeds could fund mosques, the training and remunerati­on of imams, and projects to oppose both anti-Muslim xenophobia and what he controvers­ially described as “the anti-Semitism shown by some Muslims”. Reaction, on all sides, was mixed.

But Mr Macron’s approach has not been without contradict­ions. He talks of wanting a “dispassion­ate” debate about secularism. Yet, he also said that his proposed new initiative was intended to ensure that Islam is “practiced

Reported plans to provide state funding for places of worship mark a departure from secular republican principles

everywhere in accordance with the laws of the republic”. And his current open-mindedness about changing the 1905 law seems at odds with a formal pre-election declaratio­n that an amendment would not be justified.

More than anything, the evolution of his thinking demonstrat­es the mental acrobatics French politician­s perform when grappling with the complexiti­es of achieving “vivre ensemble” − living together in harmony – with Europe’s largest Muslim population.

Mr Macron knows he is not the first holder of high French office to flirt with the notion of fundamenta­l change.

When, in 2004, Nicolas Sarkozy was an interior minister committed to moving Islam from makeshift prayer rooms in garages and tower block basements – isolated, rundown places, where he believed that extremism could flourish − he wrote that with modificati­on of the law, all French towns might have adequate, well-run mosques of their own. After drawing howls of protest from fellow conservati­ves, he allowed presidenti­al ambition to prevail.

In the months to come, France will learn whether Mr Macron is ready to embrace a new era in his state’s relations with Islam, or bow like Mr Sarkozy to electoral pragmatism.

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