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Take me to your leader
Post-secular society and the Islam industry
Eurozine
23rd April 2007
The emergence of
"Muslim-ness" as an important marker of identity has
created a new cadre of "professional Muslims" aware that kudos is to be
gained in speaking on the "Muslim problem". But the "take me to your
leader" approach, practiced by governments and replicated by the media,
cuts out the majority of Muslims, writes Abdul-Rehman Malik.
Muslim communities are looking for leadership and vision, not
representation, he argues. If the emerging "Islam industry" cannot
offer that, then it is not rising to the challenges of the moment.
Long
gone are the halcyon days when emboldened intellectuals declared the
"end of history" and the decisive destruction of wars over ideology.
They seem like the good old days – too bad they were so short-lived.
Islam has crashed the party, sideswiped the cake, and stolen the
champagne. The same thinkers now spend their time asking, "What went
wrong?"
Many
had myopically linked the rise of Islamist movements to Cold War power
politics. Movements for democratic change or national
self-determination were classed differently. Today it is more often the
Islamist or neo-Islamist political organizations that are leading these
struggles. A resurgent – although decidedly heterogeneous – Islam is
now a global presence and not, as some might have it, a diaspora. Islam
and Muslims, although linked in greater number to certain geographic
regions by migration and language, see themselves as present and at
home in any part of the world. They see their faith as mobile,
relevant, and bold. For many second- and third-generation Muslims,
citizens of their respective European countries, there is no "back
home" to speak of.
Let's be frank: the European experiment is on the rocks and an
increasingly frustrated liberal (and conservative) intelligentsia is
pointing the blame at "resurgent Islam". The growing concern over the
presence of a visible, loud, and increasingly politicized Muslim
minority is as much a reflection of Europe's own pathologies as it is
about genuine concerns over integration, security, and economics. The
dispute is not only about the political and economic union's own power
and legitimacy, but also about the notion of a common set of European
values. There maybe an ethos of human rights at the heart of EU
legislation, but the idea that Europe is a secular super-state where
religion, at best, has only a seat at the table is far from clear.
Pronouncements by (then) Cardinal Ratzinger and Valery Giscard
D'Estaing on the Christian character of Europe ought to have seemed
anachronistic to the secular minded. That Turkey be refused
consideration to join Europe on the basis that it is a "Christian Club"
should have been met with cries of "shame" from ardent "Europeanists" –
it was not. The reason is simple: Europe's Muslim minorities are
unwilling to divest themselves of their religious identities. For many,
religious identity – in a post-"war on terror" period – is wrapped up
with social and political identity. For Europe's Muslims, religion is
categorically a key element of who they are and influences the way they
choose to behave as social, political, and even economic actors
(evidenced, for instance, by the growth of Islamic finance and banking
options). A dynamic, self-identifying Muslim presence, a robust
religious minority within the West (and a growing force outside it),
has re-shaped our view of religion in the public sphere. While
Christianity is in decline – churches are rarely full and in many
countries are being sold off to make up for a shortfall in the coffers
– and Judaism remains a numerically marginal religious minority,
Europe's Muslims have almost single-handedly brought religion back into
public discourse. The contemporary European experience of Islam defies
Harvey Cox's notion, which many still cling to, of the "secular city"
and the juggernaut process of "secularization" as an inevitable
social-political force. Pope Benedict's now infamous Regensburg address
was clearly an attempt to make space for Catholicism in the debate over
religion by taking a swipe at what he clearly sees as his main
contender. We are living, I would argue, in post-secular societies:
religion refuses to stay in the box.
This
is not a conversation between equals, however. From the banlieues of
Paris to the mill towns of Yorkshire, the debate over
"multiculturalism", "integration", "cohesion", and "diversity" is not a
polite, dispassionate matter – it's about the lived reality of millions
of people who have been segregated from the economic and political
mainstream, radicalized by the fallout of one too many foreign policy
blunders. The banlieue rioting of 2005 by Muslim youths had less to do
with religion and more to do with having a say in the present and the
future. The blah-blah and navel gazing of columnists and politicians
means little to those who at the very least perceive that their voices
are little heard.
It does not help that politicians take to calling them scum, or that
rightwing parties are polling 15 per cent and more in many
jurisdictions on the back of very public anti-Muslim campaigns. During
a particularly trying week last Autumn, London's Evening Standard
carried front-page headlines that reported on rioting at the site of a
proposed mosque in Windsor; the Metropolitan Police's granting of a
request from a Muslim officer to be removed from guard duty at the
Israeli embassy; the alleged refusal by a London Muslim taxi driver to
transport a blind passenger and his guide dog; and the brouhaha over
Jack Straw's disapproving comments about veils. If you didn't know
Britain, you'd think that there was no greater threat to social order
and no bigger news story than the supposed antics of Muslims.
Much of the tabloid journalism about Islam and Muslims is sadly not
confined to the tabloids. Stories are often reported without context,
interviews and investigations are sometimes cursory, and reporting can
get lazy as journalists rely on easy-to-get quotes from go-to
representatives. The media problematizes – any journalist knows that.
While an increasing number of journalists are becoming more nuanced in
their reporting on Muslim communities, many more are not. It's the
nature of news reporting in a 24-hour, high-pressure, corporate culture
that demands that the appetite for stories and controversy (the desire
always to be breaking news) be fed. Imagine the hundreds of hours
needed to be filled on dozens of 24/7 news channels across the world.
Blaming media rhetoric can only go so far – the problems are systemic
as much as about poor editorial judgement and Islamophobia (which is
certainly real, demonstrable, and measurable).
Enter the Islam industry – and a new cadre of "professional believers".
From a British experience, diversity has been conventionally viewed in
racial, ethnic, and linguistic terms. The Race Relations Act of 1976
emerged from an acute social need to identify and protect in
legislation the rights of minority and racial ethnic groups; this would
tackle disadvantage and create a mechanism whereby racism and
discrimination could be taken on, and difference recognised. While the
Race Relations Act did not stop racial discrimination or disadvantage,
it created institutional advocates for social and political change. The
emergence of the Commission for Racial Equality (CRE) as the main
mechanism through which communities were to engage with policy makers
and government looked fine on paper, but the notion that one
organization or institution could serve both the role of advocate and
representative was simply untenable. What emerged in the years
following 1976 was a fascinating emergence of "new" identities –
although in fact they had been there all along, it was just that nobody
seemed to see them (perhaps they were too disruptive for the narrow
communalist system that underscored ad hoc British multiculturalism).
Thus the idea of "black", which had initially included all visible
minorities, was broken down into "black" and "Asian". With the
immigration of "Asian" Muslims, Hindus, and Sikhs of Gujarati heritage
from Uganda in the wake of Idi Amin's expulsion, and the presence of
diverse ethnic and linguistic communities, the categories were
constantly revised. Religion was left out of the equation. While the
race industry developed a growing concern with self-preservation and
institutionalization – its own leadership, representative
organizations, funding mechanisms, spokespersons – the voices of
increasingly loud religious minorities, particularly Muslims, were
ignored. Religion was too messy and legislation did not provide for the
official consideration of religious minorities. Jews and Sikhs,
although having discrete confessional affiliation, were in time
accepted into the race-based framework because of their faiths' close
tie to an ethnic or linguistic identity (Punjabi, in the case of
Sikhs). As so-called Asian groups were largely biased towards
Indian-Hindu communities, Muslims – from the sub-continent, the Arab
World, and beyond – were left out in the cold. The law did not protect
them from discrimination, if that discrimination took place on the
basis of religion. A white, British Muslim woman, for instance, who was
attacked because someone was enraged by her headscarf, had no recourse
to anti-discrimination legislation because she was white. Her case
would be treated as a regular assault, when in fact it was an act of
violence motivated by hatred for her religion.
Identities, of course, are not fixed; we wear many identity masks
concurrently – race, ethnicity, gender, class, language, region, tribe,
and faith all exist simultaneously. While identity is not essential, it
is a profoundly democratic act to self-identify and to choose which
aspects of one's identity to represent in the public sphere. The Race
Industry sought to control that impulse and undermine expressions that
were a threat to their own legitimacy.
The emergence of "Muslim-ness" as an important marker of identity
(particularly in the aftermath of the Rushdie affair, the Bosnian
genocide, and 9/11) meant that new institutions, media, spokespersons,
and leadership would emerge, seeking to represent that. British
Muslims, like their brethren globally, are diverse and aware of
interpretive, cultural, linguistic, sectarian, and political
difference. This, in turn, makes Muslim communities politicized and
globalized in a profoundly different way than other Europeans. Their
shared and remembered experience of colonial encounter, migration, and
struggle means that they often defy the narrow confines of discrete
national, ethno-linguistic identities. Most Muslims are citizens of the
nations they live in, but accepting that citizenship is not the panacea
to their problems, any more than their embrace of a particular civic
identity explains their many successes.
Like "black" or "Asian" (largely outdated and objectively useless terms
of identification), the label "Muslim", while indicating a shared
belief system and theology, hides a robust spiritual pluralism and
intra-Islamic diversity. This was an issue that particularly concerned
Q-News; as early as 1992 we were challenging our communities to have an
active debate about who we "Muslims" are. Q-News' founding editor and
publisher Fuad Nahdi asked: "Beyond beards, scarves, and halal meat, is
there more to being a British Muslim in the twenty-first century?" The
inevitable emergence of umbrella groups advanced the myth of
homogeneity that served self-styled community leaders well. With at
least 56 nationalities and over 100 languages, Muslims in Britain are a
truly global religious community at home in Britain. The same
experience has replicated itself in varying degrees across Europe.
With questions of integration, cohesion, and multiculturalism now
deeply connected to the "war on terror" and the prevailing concerns
over security, governments have sought to find representatives to speak
to. It is a communitarian approach the British Raj would have been
proud of. The "take me to your leader" school of community relations
cuts out the majority of Muslim voices, particularly those who have
little institutional clout within their own communities – namely women,
young people, and minority ethnic communities present within broader
Muslim communities. People must have the freedom to represent
themselves, to deny representation. The British government has been
reluctant to extend that privilege to a minority group that is
increasingly seen as the indigestible other, the so-called "enemy
within". Control has taken precedence over democracy. It is at the
heart of the general sense of lazy governance that sits alongside New
Labour.
While Muslim communities need real civil society and spaces where a
spectrum of views – from the most liberal to the most extreme – have an
opportunity to be debated and legitimized (or delegitimized) through
frank, unmediated discourse, umbrella groups and government have
colluded to be gatekeepers of what is "acceptable" Muslim opinion.
In the aftermath of the 7/7 attacks in London, the government has been
under acute media scrutiny to act on the issue of religious extremism.
Previous Whitehall favourites have been quickly replaced (out with the
Muslim Council of Britain, enter the Sufi Muslim Council), but the
communitarian model remains more or less the same. Because of policy
confusion and drift at the centre, along with the media obsession with
Islam and its commensurate desire to hear "Muslim voices", the field
has never been more open for "Islam entrepreneurs" to rush in and claim
legitimacy and a stake. This is not always civil society per se, but a
cadre of consultants, groups, think-tanks, journalists, commentators,
activists, and policy wonks who are acutely aware that public and
social policy priorities have shifted, and that there is plenty of
kudos (and some money) to be had if solutions to the "Muslim problem"
can be delivered, critiqued, or, in the case of rightwing pundits,
mocked. I include in this group individuals like Ayaan Hirsi Ali,
Salman Rushdie, and Tariq Ali, who have little connection with Islam as
a faith, but because of their Muslim "heritage" and "experience" find
reason to comment and have their comment legitimized.[1]
Like the Race Industry, the new Islam industry has within its ranks a
growing class of "professional Muslims" (the author of this piece would
be accused by some of being one), on call and available to put forward
a Muslim (and sometimes Islamic) perspective. They are either eager, or
in genuinely high demand, to be part of the growing policy networks
that are now cropping up to talk about the Muslim presence in Europe.
Many of these "expert voices" are indeed capable, experienced, and add
value to the current debates. In the UK, leading think-tanks such as
Demos, Policy Exchange, and the Fabian Society have dedicated resources
and published major reports on Muslim communities that have been the
source of much public debate and comment. In the US and Europe,
millions are being committed to an endless carrousel of conferences,
"high-level" meetings, and roundtables sponsored by foundations
prefixed with Carnegie, Rockefeller, Ford, and Brookings. Not to be
outdone, the (in)famous Saudi Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal is
strategically endowing centres for the academic study of Islam and
Muslims in the US.[2] In the aftermath of the 7/7 bombings, Q-News
entered into partnership with other Muslim organizations to promote
legitimate theological perspectives that opposed and challenged the
religious justifications for violence popular among a small minority.
This project was supported by over 20 partner organizations throughout
the UK and received financial support from the British government.
While the partners maintained their editorial independence and
participating speakers were free to speak their mind about British
foreign policy or the approach of government to Muslim communities, the
project had to work hard to maintain legitimacy within Muslim
communities suspicious of government.
The presence of so many players is not the necessarily the issue. The
more voices the merrier. Many of those engaged in this work are sincere
and care deeply about Muslim communities and the role of Islam in the
modern world. But here's the problem. We have learned little from the
successes and, more importantly, from the failures of the Race
Industry. Institutionalized and supported by legislation, institutions
like the CRE (although soon to be replaced) became interest groups
committed to their own preservation.
The emergence of Islam and Muslim experts and policy entrepreneurs does
not necessarily mean that the government and the media are more
connected to the so-called Muslim street – to the aspirations,
feelings, and concerns of Muslim communities. The plethora of savvy
voices does not mean that Muslim communities have a leadership they
trust. The closer this nascent Islam industry appears to government,
the more they are held suspect by "ordinary Muslims". Proposals to
tinker with Islam itself, as made by the Rand Corporation and others,
have made the Muslim street even more nervous.
Clearly, replicating the race experience is not in the interest of
Muslim communities. It is not in the interest of Britain or Europe as a
whole either. Government would serve the interests of social cohesion
and the multicultural, multi-faith reality by truly understanding the
way in which communities operate on the ground. It is time that the
tremendous voluntary and community sector resources of the communities
they seek to engage with are mapped and identified, rather than relying
on sometimes cut-throat policy entrepreneurs.
Muslim communities themselves are looking for more leadership, vision,
and innovative ideas rather than representation. They want to see
mechanisms through which they can participate in their societies and
their faith community. They want to challenge the power asymmetries
they experience and have the right to dissent, represent, and lead on
their own terms like all other citizens. If the emerging Islam industry
cannot offer that, then it is simply not rising to the critical
challenges of the moment.
At the heart of the debate over professionalizing religion and the
emergence of the Islam industry is the nature of religious identity;
this is primarily a discussion for people of faith. Religion is
ultimately not about political identity, it is about living a life of
divine awareness and acting in accordance with high moral values and
ethical standards. After all, the Prophet Muhammad said that he came to
do nothing "except perfect good character". Religion impacts the way a
believer behaves in the world, how she chooses act. The Islam industry
largely ignores religion and theology, seeing Muslims as merely another
ethnic minority target group. To try to understand Europe's Muslims
without reference to faith and religious discourse is a mistake that
disregards the very basis of religious identity. It is critical that
Muslim in Europe, while self-identifying and organizing themselves
along faith lines, do not allow themselves to be made into just another
cookie-cutter interest group. In this post-secular context, religion
matters (just as it always has for so many Europeans) – we need not be
ashamed of that.
[1] See Fareena Alam's
review of Hirsi Ali in the New Statesman; and
Laila Lalami's excellent response to both Hirsi Ali and Irshad Manji in
The
Nation).
[2] The
Prince Alwaleed Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding at Georgetown
and The Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Islamic Studies Program at Harvard –
both of which received US$ 20 million.
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