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Alain
Badiou |
Not
only has the hijab ban issue in France generated an ongoing
debate between secularism and Islam, it has perhaps more
importantly reflected within the secular camp itself. The
following is a translation of a thought provoking article,
published last month in Le Monde, by prominent French
philosopher and activist Alain Badiou. An exuberant and
sarcastic thinker, Badiou makes a fresh and unique addition to
the ongoing debate inside France. As part of IslamOnline’s
effort to show varying points of view on the issue, we would
like to share this perspective with our readers. Your comments
and suggestions are welcome at our Talking
French corner on the discussion board.
1.
A few likeable Republican women and men once put forward the
idea that a bill banning scarves from the hair of schoolgirls
had to be drafted. First, ban the scarf from school. Then, ban
it from elsewhere and everywhere if possible. Did I hear “a
law”? A Law! The President of the Republic was as limited
a politician as he was unsinkable.
Totalitarianly
elected by 82 percent of voters, including all of the
Socialists, i.e. those from whom a good number of the likeable
Republican women and men used to be recruited, Chirac nodded his
assent: a law, yes, a Law against a few thousand young girls who
put the aforementioned scarf over their hair. Those hairless,
mangy things! Muslims, moreover! This is how, once again,
likewise to the surrender in Sedan, Pétain, the Algerian War,
Mittérand’s deceits and the villainous laws against workers
without working papers, France has astonished the world. After
the tragedies, the farce.
Those
hairless, mangy things! |
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2.
Indeed, France has finally found a problem worthy of itself: the
scarf draping the heads of a few girls. Decadence can be said to
have been stopped in this country. The Muslim invasion, long
diagnosed by Le Pen and confirmed nowadays by a slew of
indubitable intellectuals, has found its interlocutor. The
battle of Poitiers was kid’s stuff, Charles Martel, only a
hired gun. But Chirac, the Socialists, feminists and
Enlightenment intellectuals suffering from Islamophobia will win
the battle of the headscarf. From Poitiers to the hijab, the
consequence is right and progress considerable.
3.
Grandiose causes need new-style arguments. For example: hijab
must be banned; it is a sign of male power (the father or eldest
brother) over young girls or women. So, we’ll banish the women
who obstinately wear it. Basically put: these girls or women are
oppressed. Hence, they shall be punished. It’s a little like
saying: “This woman has been raped: throw her in jail.”
The hijab is so important that it deserves a logical system with
renewed axioms.
In
France, Islam is the religion of the poor. |
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4.
Or, contrariwise: it is they who freely want to wear that damned
headscarf, those rebels, those brats! Hence, they shall be
punished. Wait a minute: do you mean it isn’t the symbol of
male oppression, after all? The father and eldest brother have
nothing to do with it? Where then does the need to ban the scarf
come from? The problem in hijab is conspicuously religious.
Those brats have made their belief conspicuous. You there! Go
stand in the corner!
5.
Either it’s the father and eldest brother, and “feministly”
the hijab must be torn off, or it’s the girl herself standing
by her belief, and “laically” it must be torn off.
There is no good headscarf. Bareheaded! Everywhere! As it used
to be said-even non-Muslims said it-everyone must go out “bareheaded.”
6.
Notice well how the hijab girl’s father and eldest brother are
not your mere parental associates. It has often been insinuated,
sometimes even declared, that the father is an idiotic worker, a
loser “right out from the country” and working the
assembly line at Renault. An archaic guy, but stupid. The eldest
brother deals hash. A modern guy, but corrupt. Sinister suburbs.
Dangerous classes.
7.
The Muslim religion adds the following very serious taint to
other religions: in France, it is the religion of the poor.
8.
Picture a secondary school principal, followed at a few
centimeters’ length by a squad of inspectors armed with
scissors and books on jurisprudence: at the school gate
they’re going to check whether the hijabs, kippas and other
hats are “conspicuous.” That hijab, as big as a
postage stamp perched upon a chignon? That kippa the size of a
two-Euro coin? Fishy, very fishy. The tiny may well be the
conspicuous version of the huge. Wait a minute, what do I see?
Watch out! It’s a top hat! Well now! When once questioned
about top hats, Mallarmé said it all: “Whoever put such a
thing on cannot remove it. The world would end, but not the hat.”
Conspicuous of eternity.
Ought
these young ladies who pleasantly blend yesterday and today to really
be excluded? |
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9.
Secularism. A rust-proof principle! Three or four decades ago,
high schools forbade the sexes from mixing in a single
classroom. Pants weren’t allowed for girls. Catechism and
chaplaincy were compulsory. Communion was solemn, with the guys
in white armbands and the cutie pies under tulle veils. A real
veil, not a headscarf. And you’d like me to hold that hijab as
a crime? That symbol of a lag, of unrest, of a temporal
intertwining? Ought these young ladies who pleasantly blend
yesterday and today to really be excluded? Go on, let the
capitalist grinder turn. Irrespective of the comings and goings,
the repenting or the worker arrivals from afar, capitalism will
figure out how to substitute the fat Moloch of merchandise for
the dead gods of religions.
10.
While we’re on the subject, isn’t business the real mass
religion? Compared to which Muslims look like an ascetic
minority? Isn’t the conspicuous symbol of this degrading
religion what we can read on pants, sneakers and t-shirts: Nike,
Chevignon, Lacoste… Isn’t it cheaper yet to be a fashion
victim at school than God’s faithful servant? If I were to aim
at hitting a bull’s eye here-aiming big-I’d say everyone
knows what’s needed: a law against brand names. Get to work,
Chirac. Let’s ban the conspicuous symbols of Capital, with no
compromises.
Let’s
ban the conspicuous symbols of Capital, with no compromises. |
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11.
Clear something up for me, please. What exactly characterizes
Republican and feminist rationality on what is to be shown of
the body in different spaces and at different times, and on what
is not? As far as I understand, nowadays still, and not only at
school, neither nipples are shown, nor pubic hair, nor the male
member. Do I have to get angry that these parts are “withdrawn
from the sight of others”? Must I suspect husbands, lovers
and eldest brothers? Not that long ago in our own
countryside-and still to this day in Sicily as elsewhere-widows
wore black scarves, dark stockings and mantillas. You don’t
have to be an Islamic terrorist’s widow to do so.
12.
Strange is the rage reserved by so many feminist ladies for the
few girls wearing the hijab. They have begged poor president
Chirac, the Soviet at 82 percent, to crack down on them in the
name of the Law. Meanwhile the prostituted female body is
everywhere. The most humiliating pornography is universally
sold. Advice on sexually exposing bodies lavishes teen magazines
day in and day out.
13.
A single explanation: a girl must show what she’s got to sell.
She’s got to show her goods. She’s got to indicate that,
henceforth, the circulation of women abides by the generalized
model, and not by restricted exchange. Too bad for bearded
fathers and elder brothers! Long live the planetary market! The
generalized model is the top fashion model.
14.
It used to be taken for granted that an intangible female right
is to only have to get undressed in front of the person of her
choosing. But no. It is vital to hint at undressing at every
instant. Whoever covers up what she puts on the market is not a
loyal merchant.
15.
Let’s argue the following, then, a pretty strange point: the
law on the hijab is a pure capitalist law. It orders femininity
to be exposed. In other words, having the female body
circulate according to the market paradigm is obligatory. For
teenagers, i.e. the teeming center of the entire subjective
universe, the law bans any holding back.
The
prostituted female body is everywhere. The most humiliating
pornography is universally sold. |
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16.
It is said virtually everywhere that the “veil” is an
intolerable symbol of control over female sexuality. Do you
really believe female sexuality to not be controlled in our
society these days? This naiveté would have made Foucault
laugh. Never has so much care been given to female sexuality, so
much attention to detail, so much informed advice, so much
distinguishing between its good and bad uses. Enjoyment has
become a sinister obligation. The universal exposure of
supposedly exciting parts is a duty more rigid than Kant’s
moral imperative.
In
passing, between our tabloids’ “Enjoy it, women!” and our
great-grandmothers’ dictate “Don’t enjoy it!” Lacan long
ago established an isomorphism. Commercial control is more
constant, more certain, more massive than patriarchal control
could ever be. Generalized prostitutional circulation is faster
and more reliable than the hardships of family incarcerations,
the turnabouts of which kept audiences laughing for centuries
from Ancient Greek comedy to Molière.
17.
The mother and the whore. In some countries, reactionary laws
are drafted in favor of the mother and against the whore. In
other countries, progressive laws are drafted in favor of the
whore and against the mother. Yet it’s the alternative between
the two which must be rejected.
18.
Not however by the “neither… nor…”, which only
perpetuates on neutral ground (i.e. at the center, like with
François Bayrou?) what it professes to contest. “Neither
mother, nor whore,” that’s quite pathetic. As is “neither
whore nor submissive,” which is simply absurd: isn’t a
“whore” generally submissive, and oh so much? In France in
the past, they used to be called “les respectueuses”
(the respected). Public submissives, all in all. As for
“subs” themselves, perhaps they are only private whores.
Thought’s
enemy nowadays is property, business, things such as souls, but not
faith. |
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19.
There’s no getting around it: thought’s enemy nowadays is
property, business, things such as souls, but not faith. What
should be said instead is that [political] faith is what lacks
the most. The “rise of religious fundamentalism” is but a
mirror through which sated Westerners consider the frightful
effects of the devastation of minds over which they have
presided. And especially of the ruining of political thought,
which Westerners have attempted to organize everywhere, either
under cover of insignificant democracies or with the sizable
back-up of humanitarian paratroopers. Under such conditions,
secularism, professing to be at the service of different forms
of knowledge, is but a scholarly rule by which to respect the
competition, train according to “Western” norms and be
hostile to every conviction. This is a schooling system for
consumer cool, soft business, free ownership and disillusioned
voters.
20.
One will never go into raptures enough over feminism’s
singular progression. Starting off with women’s liberation,
nowadays feminism avers that the “freedom” acquired is so
obligatory that it requires girls (and not a single boy!) to be
excluded owing to the sole fact of their dressing accoutrements.
21.
All of the society jargon about “communities,” and the as
metaphysical as furious combat pitting “the Republic”
against “communitarianisms,” all of that is utter nonsense.
Let people live the way they want to, or can, eat what they are
used to eating, wear turbans, dresses, hijabs, miniskirts or
tap-dancing shoes, to bow low at any time […] to take low-bow
pictures of each other or speak in colorful jargons. These kinds
of “differences” do not have the slightest universal scope.
They neither hinder thought, nor uphold it. Nor is there a
reason to either respect or vilipend them. That the “Other”
lives a little bit differently-as admirers of discreet theology
and portable morality are wont to say after Lévinas-is so
obvious an observation as to be meaningless.
22.
As for the fact of human animals grouping together according to
their origins, this is a natural and inevitable consequence of
what are most often the miserable conditions immigrants face
when arriving in France. Only the cousin or the fellow village
countryman can, volens nolens, greet you at the St. Ouen
l’Aumone home. One would really be obtuse to have to formally
stress the point that the Chinese go to where the Chinese
already are.
That
my life as a human animal is wrought with particularities is the law
of things. |
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23.
The only problem regarding these “cultural differences” and
“communities” is certainly not their social existence,
habitat, work, family or school. It is that their names are vain
when what is in question is a truth, whether it be of art,
science, love or, especially, politics. That my life as a human
animal is wrought with particularities is the law of things.
That the categories of this particularity profess to be
universal, thereby taking upon themselves the seriousness of the
Subject, that’s when things regularly get disastrous. What
matters is the separation of predicates. I can do mathematics in
yellow underwear, or I can have a Rasta’s dreadlocks and work
as an activist for policies subtracted from electoral
“democracy.” The theorem isn’t any more yellow (or
not-yellow), than is the slogan under which we gather made of
dreads. Nor for that matter does the slogan consist of an
absence of dreadlocks.
24.
It is said that schooling is gravely threatened by as
insignificant a particularity as a few girls’ hijabs. This
very feeling casts suspicion over the belief that truth has
anything to do with what is being played out here. Instead, we
find opinions, base and conservative opinions at that. Weren’t
politicians and intellectuals seen to be asserting that
schooling exists first and foremost to “train citizens”?
What a gloomy program. In our times, the “citizen” is a
little bitter-sensualist clutching at a political system-any
semblance of which to truth is simply foreclosed.
25.
Shouldn’t we be preoccupied in both high and low places that
the number of girls of Algerian, Moroccan and Tunisian origin,
with their chignon tightly wound, an austere look on their
faces, and doggedly at work, make up with a few Chinese, who are
no less bound to the family universe, formidable class brains?
Nowadays, it takes a lot of abnegation to do so. And it could
very well turn out that Chirac the Soviet’s Law ends up
noisily banishing some excellent students.
26.
“To enjoy with no hindrances.” That stupid motto from 1968
never ran the motor of knowledge at high speed. A certain dose
of voluntary asceticism, the deeper reason for which has been
known ever since Freud, is not foreign to the land of teaching.
From it at least a few rough fragments of effective truths have
emerged. So much so, that a headscarf may end up being useful.
When patriotism, that hard alcohol of apprenticeship, is
entirely lacking, every kind of idealism, even the cheap kind,
is welcome-at least for those assuming that the object of
schooling has little to do with “training”
consumer-citizens.
The
law expresses one thing: fear. |
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27.
In truth of fact, the Scarfed Law expresses one thing and thing
alone: fear. Westerners in general, the French in particular,
are but a shivering, fearful lot. What are they afraid of?
Barbarians, as usual. Those from within, i.e. the “young
suburbanites”; those from without, i.e. “Islamist
terrorists.” Why are they frightened? Because they are guilty,
but claim to be innocent. They are guilty of having renounced
and attempted to annihilate-ever since the 1980s-every kind of
emancipatory politics, every revolutionary form of Reason, and
every true assertion of something else. Guilty of clutching at
their lousy privileges. Guilty of being but old children playing
with their manifold purchases. Yes, indeed, “in a long
childhood, they have been made to age.” They are thus
afraid of everything a little less aged. A stubborn young lady,
for instance.
28.
But especially, Westerners in general and the French in
particular are afraid of death. They are no longer able to
imagine how an Idea might be something for which risks are worth
taking. “Zero death” is their most important desire. They
see millions of people around the world who, for their part,
have no reason to be afraid of death. And among them, many die
in the name of an Idea almost daily. For the “civilized”
this is the source of a most intimate sense of terror.
29.
I am well aware the Ideas one is ready to die for are usually
not worth very much. Being convinced that all gods withdrew long
ago, I am grieved whenever young men and young women tear their
bodies apart in horrendous massacres under the funereal
invocation of something that has not existed for a long time. I
am also aware that those fearsome “martyrs” have been made
into instruments by conspirators concerned little about whom
they intend to slaughter. It will never be repeated enough how
Bin Laden is a creature of the American services. I am not naïve
enough to believe in the purity, nor in the greatness, nor even
in any effectiveness whatsoever of these suicide slaughters.
30.
But I say that this atrocious price is first of all paid by the
meticulous destruction of all forms of political rationality by
the dominators of the West. This undertaking has only come about
through the abundance of intellectual and popular complicity,
notably in France. You wanted to fiercely liquidate the Idea of
revolution as far as into its memory? You wanted to uproot all
usage, even allegorical ones, of the word “worker”? Don’t
complain about the result. Clench your teeth and kill the poor.
Or have them be killed by your American friends.
31.
We get the wars we deserve. In this world that is numbed with
fear, the big gangsters mercilessly bomb countries drained of
blood. Medium gangsters practice targeted assassinations of
those who bother them. It’s the really small crooks who draft
laws against hijab.
32.
They’ll say it’s less serious. To be sure. It’s less
serious. Before the late Tribunal of History, we’ll obtain
extenuating circumstances: “As a specialist in hairdressing
styles, he only played a small role in the scandal.”
Alain
Badiou is one of France’s leading philosophers, and
heads the Philosophy Department of the Ecole normale supérieure
in Paris. His domain of philosophical research includes
mathematics, aesthetics, political thought and psychoanalytic
theory. His major work, L’Etre et l’événement, was
published by les éditions du Seuil in 1987, and has yet to be
translated in English. Among his most important works to be
published in English are Manifesto for Philosophy (edited and
translated by Norman Madarasz), Deleuze: the Clamor of Being,
Ethics: An Essay on Evil, and Saint Paul. A
novelist, political pamphleteerist and long-time activist,
Professor Badiou is also an accomplished playwright, with Ahmed
Le Subtil standing as his most celebrated play.
*Translated
for IslamOnLine by Norman Madarasz, a
Canadian philosopher residing in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. A
student of Alain Badiou, he completed his Ph.D. in the
University of Paris, and he teaches and writes on international
relations, political economy and philosophy. He is also a
regular contributor to Counterpunch and has published think
pieces and philosophical research extensively. |