 |
|
|
We
cannot ignore the distinctiveness of the Muslim community in
France |
To
restrict the discussion of any broad-ranging matter-like that of the
forthcoming ban of the Islamic headscarf in France-to parochial
references is to add more salt to our multi-cultural wound. It is
effortlessly self-satisfying to one’s ideological preferences to
allow reductionism to play its everlasting game between two poles:
black and white, good and evil, “secularism” and
“traditionalism,” Islam and the West-all, of course, are impotent
positioning of relationships.
To
think or believe that the “forward-looking” gaze-secularism,
pluralism, freedom of expression and their sisters from the same
modern plane-will enable us to ascend to a man-made utopia has
systematically become an academic trance; what has happened to such
axioms? Are they becoming mirror images of their medieval opposites?
All mainstream religious peoples, non-Muslims as well as Muslims, are
getting more and more tribally quarantined by secular forces, equal in
absolute values, to that of the unenlightened dogmatists-those of the
“backward gaze.” In fact, the fundamentalists within them-in all
beliefs-are making things even worse for them.
The
Context in Space
Here,
we are trying to pave a path for our contextual assessment. Let us
knock on the doors of the global world, first of all. Does the
bankruptcy of the nation-state project still need an official
announcement in order to be confirmed? It must be noted that the
people at stake are not clandestine immigrants, because the majority
of Muslims in France are French. Therefore, under trans-global
skies, the French government is still looking upward and contemplating
the definition of citizenship, both internally and externally
constructed.
In
the eyes of the French government, to be a true French citizen you
must be stripped of any milieu or identity and conform to the plea
(prescription?) of the state in order to assimilate-can we call that
fascist pluralism or secular fundamentalism? First, let us see the
well-constructed argument by one of the best scholars in cultural
studies, on the subject of identity and its return to the public
sphere:
The
logic of the discourse of identity assumes a stable subject [to be
French is to be “religionless”], i.e., we’ve assumed that there
is something which we can call our identity which, in a rapidly
shifting world, has the great advantage of staying still. Identities
are a kind of guarantee that the world isn’t falling apart quite as
rapidly as it sometimes seems to be. It’s a kind of fixed point of
thought and being, a ground of action, a still point in the turning
world. That’s the kind of ultimate guarantee that identity seems to
provide us with1.
In
the eyes of the French government, to be a true French citizen
you must be stripped of any milieu or identity and conform to
the plea (prescription?) of the state.
|
|
What
the French officials are failing miserably in, just like an
unmotivated and below-average-intelligence student, is that one needs
a personality even before being a citizen. It is simple: no
enunciation, no personality; hence no identity, no citizenship. One
has to put oneself somewhere, sometime, somehow, before knowing and
doing anything at all. A reference point is the prerequisite to
knowledge or action. To try to delimit identity in a changing world
like ours is to castrate one’s pursuit to “authenticate”
oneself, experience, and potential.
In
this, ethnicity comes as the middle ground between both identity and
difference and is the method of authentication in the face of the
modern and global forces of destabilization. Still, the ethnicity we
are approaching here is not a tribal one in essence or effect. “It
is no longer contained within that place as an essence. It wants to
address a much wider variety of experience. It is part of the enormous
cultural relativization of the entire globe that is the historical
accomplishment-horrendous as it has been in part-of the twentieth
century.”2 This ethnicity
is saturated in mythical historical dialects. It is the settlement
between identity (the one that appreciates and recognizes the plain
occurrence of its own form and of others) and difference.
Particularizing
the Case: Muslim France
Let
us not ignore the distinctiveness of the Muslim community in France.
It has been mentioned earlier that the majority of Muslims there are
French. In addition, historical investigation shows that the majority
of that Muslim French community is North African- Moroccan, Tunisian
and Algerian-and the majority comes from the latter, as Algeria was
considered a “department,” not a colony as other countries were,
under French imperialism. Given that, let us dwell more on the
socio-economics and cultural presence of that segment.
French
Megherbis are generally referred to as Beurs and Beurettes,
although they are born and raised in France, and French is their first
language. “In spite of and because of the Beurs’ Frenchness,
a large section of the French population resent their presence in
France; they are seen as a kind of invasion from the south,
responsible for many of the ills of contemporary France-economic
social and otherwise.”3
They are looked upon as a constant reminder of the dark side of the
society where all dire symptoms of the decay of the French social
security are manifested and concentrated: the ghettos on the outskirts
of Paris and the main cities, unemployment, vandalism, crime, drugs,
religious fanaticism, and all other items on the dreadful list of the
ghettos.
Nonetheless,
the Beurs have contributed a great deal to French culture in
literature, music, and sports-names like Jacques Derrida, Cheb Khaled,
Taher Ben Jelloun, and Zinedine Zidane. However, it must not be
forgotten that in the eyes of the French administration, conformist as
it is, Arabic and Islamic signifiers are still seen as they were
through the colonial eyes.
Islam
à la Français: Has the
Veiled Girl Done Her Homework?
If
one really does not fall for the misconceptions and sealed
associations, the Muslim community in France has really done its
homework-at least on both the organizational and collective levels.
The Muslim community in France has been through sturdy secular
harassment, varying from banning any Islamic publications and
arrest (that was during the time of Charles Pasqua, former interior
minister), restrictions on halal slaughter, and foreign finance
to mosques, and still no Muslim institution can represent any form but
secular architecture (it seems fair to call that aesthetic despotism).
Yet,
in any case, the government has been trying to collaborate with the
Muslims, which is seen as an acceptable way to cut off foreign finance
from the Muslim world.4 In
the face of this, most of the Muslim community in France agrees on
advocating Islam de France:
They
emphasize one or the other of two poles in their public deliberations:
either the diasporic networks of Muslims in Europe, Africa, and
Asia, united by Arabic and by common political as well as scholarly
visions, or the hexagonal framing of Islam within France, distinguished
by a commitment to laicité [secularism] (emphasis added).5
Whether
this or that camp, both openly agree on maintaining an Islam à la
Français. The “diasporic” camp, the majority of whose members
gather in the European Council of Fatwa and Research, is represented
in the Union des Organisations Islamiques de France (UOIF). The
hexagonal camp stresses more on French style and use of the French
language in learning Islam. Many fatwas have been given by Muslim
scholars-based on developed Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh)
particular to Muslims living in France like all non-Muslims-related to
specific conditions: the permissibility of mortgages for buying the
first house, marriage and divorce under the present civil law, and
eating non-halal meat. All these efforts are seen as creating a
fiqh de France to manifest the translocality of Islam under the
secularist skies.
How
“Veiled” is “Visible”?
Central
to the issue of the ban of the headscarf in France is the question of
“visibility” in the public space. However, before we shed light on
the visible aspect of “Muslimness,” let us take a little detour in
the dark. Prayer in Islam is of a cardinal essence to maintain one’s
spiritual connectedness to the Divine in a physical manner. One does
it at a mosque, or any place. Outside of Prayer, there is no
physically visible trace that negates secular laws-be they French or
whatever-yet one will be surprised to read the following (and I quote
from an accomplished paper by John Bowen, with references-emphasis
added):
In
France, the frequency of performing salat [Prayer] was taken by one
government body to indicate the degree of one’s assimilation into
French culture. The Institut National d’Etudes Démographiques
(INED) defined “assimilation” as the disappearance of culturally
specific features, the convergence of behavior into a general French
model, and a mixing of populations (Tribalat 1996:254-55).
Assimilation implied the reduction of religion to the private sphere
and a lessened intensity of religious practices, “in sum, a
laicization of behavior” (254). Specific indices of assimilation
used in the report include praying less frequently; not following
the fast, abandoning polygamy, and making fewer visits to the country
of origin...This judgment of assimilation can have very practical
consequences for the individual. Each year the French government
refuses about one-third of the applicants for admission, and some of
those refusals were of candidates who met the formal conditions for
naturalization (Liberation 5 April 2000)…Some highly educated
Muslim candidates have been rejected on those grounds (D. Bourg,
personal communication, 20 August 1999).6
That
is that. The ridiculousness of seeing the occurrence (or
“visibility” or “conspicuousness”) of religious practices as
the return of religion cannot be overlooked. It is relative to its
location; that is why “the ‘head scarves question’ in France is
symptomatic of extreme partiality and relativity to the nature of
visibility. In other words, the Islamic headscarf is visible in France
but much less so in Germany and the United Kingdom.”7
Here comes the problem; just like Judaism, Islam is a way of life and
functions as a vector pertaining to a collective identity. That
is exactly why, in the negative contrast of the absolutist French of
“assimilation,” this is exposed as heretical to the secular
gospel.
Power-Discourse:
French Game and Vocabulary
Jocelyne
Cesari, a prominent scholar from the Sorbonne-Paris, lists the
following as the main reasons for the “visibility” of Islam within
France (and not the return of religion; let us make sure not to make
that mistake as he suggests):
“working
class”, “immigrant”, “worker” and even “immigrant suburban
youth” no longer provide easy identification…offering alternative
methods of social or political action…cultural activism...counter
mechanism of exclusion…Difficulties of finding employment, the
feeling of social relegation and discrimination, perspective of the
highly negative public opinion of Islam, the vivid memory of
humiliations from the French colonial past passed on by their families
(as if that part of their history was not included in the French
national identity), and the bankruptcy of a whole series of ideologies
such as Marxism or the Third World movement which fired the ideals of
elder brothers and sisters.8
A
long list indeed. What is significant at this point, in relation to
the issue at hand, is to remember that the headscarf not only
represents the religious symbolism of commitment but much more. In the
majority of all the discussions over the headscarf, the old
ideologically supercilious motifs were spontaneously incarnated; it is
a sign of male-domination, chauvinism, violation of female rights,
patriarchal social order, etc.
Islam
is a way of life and functions as a vector pertaining to a
collective identity. That is exactly why, in the negative
contrast of the absolutist French of “assimilation,” this
is exposed as heretical to the secular gospel.
|
|
For
sure, some Muslim parents force their daughters to wear it. However,
in the first cases of dealing with the headscarf in 1989, the Conseil
d’Etat (State Council) left it to the Minister of Education, who
advised school principals to deal with the cases on an individual
basis, by advising discussion and consultation. If it were enforcement
(and all the supremacist allegations that come along with it), that
would have solved the issue. But no, “by and large, the courts have
overturned these exclusions [in case consultation did not take place
or work] unless wearing the headscarf has been accompanied by a
refusal to attend physical education classes or been associated with
protest outside organizations.”9
Secular
Blues
The
headscarf, and what it represents, is seen as a threat to conformity
within the educational system. The ban of the headscarf is nothing but
an enforcement of power to neutralize the girls who refuse to attend
the sex-education classes or wear the same training suits that other
girls do-and their parents, class, beliefs. It is as if chastity has
become a modern-day crime; what a cultural menefregismo.
Certainly there are militant Muslim fundamentalists in France, and
some have imported the Algerian civil war to France, but does
counteracting such threats mean the castration of an entire community
from its legitimacy, religious, cultural, and historical setting? One
wonders.
All
in all, the French case against the Islamic headscarf cannot be seen
as anything but a manifestation of a power discourse trying to offset
a troublesome segment of French society with a (mistakenly seen)
potential to upset the balance of social fabric though a discursive
conformity. French-style secularism has reached the bottom of
self-destruction and defeat. What is the difference between the power
of the Catholic Church and the feudal system in medieval times and
that of the French officialdom today? None. “Compel them all.”
Just substitute the axioms of heretical for religiosity, assimilation
for conformity, complete neutrality for freedom of expression, and you
will have a perfectly inverted history of the evolution of European
secularism taking place in modern day France.
**Tarek
A. Ghanem is
a staff writer and editor of the Contemporary Issues page of
IslamOnline.net. He is specialized in comparative politics and
contemporary Islam. You can reach him at t.ghanem@islam-online.net
1-
Hall, Stuart, “Ethnicity: Identity and Difference. Radical
America, 23,4 (October-December 1989), p. 9-20.
2-
Ibid.
3-
Jaccomard, Hélène, French Against French: The Uneasy Incorporation
of Beurs into French Society, ( http://www.arts.uwa.edu.au/MotsPluriels/MP297hj.html).
4-
Bowen, John R., Islam in/of France: Dilemmas of Translocality (www.ceri-sciencespo.com/archive/mai02/artjrb.pdf).
5-
Ibid.
6-
Ibid.
7-
Munoz, Gema Martin (ed.), Islam, Modernism and the West, IB
Tauris, 1999, pp. 211-223.
8-
Ibid.
9- Leslie
J. Limage, “Education and Muslim Identity: The Case of France”
[73-94], Comparative Education, February 2000, (Vol. 36, No.1).
|