Prior to Geert Wilders' release of
the film, Fitna, Reason Magazine's
Michael Moynihan wrote a piece on
the subject, which is worth reading as he and I are about to engage in a
mini-dialogue on many of the questions it raises.
Michael argued that while Wilders
was "something of an extremist" and whose views on Islam were
"both reductive and puerile" his film, once released, needed to be
engaged "on its intellectual merits." Further, he argued that
"not to support Wilders" was tantamount to acquiescing to
"bullying" by "religious crackpots."
At the broad level, Michael and I
agree that Wilders' film should not have been banned and needed to be engaged
on its merits.
In my review of the film, I did
precisely that. So did numerous other people,
Iranian Student Protestors: Far more deserving of our sympathy than an illiberal fraud like Wilders including Irshad Manji
(in both English and Arabic), Sadegh Kabeer, (Iranian in the Middle East) and Mona Eltahawy (Egyptian in
the US). Not one of these three Muslim dissenters -- each with a long history
of disavowing Muslim extremism -- found Wilders' film interesting or coherent.
The film is intellectually lacking.
Where I particularly disagree with
Michael -- and why I maintain that we owe nothing to Wilders -- is over the
fact that Wilders is a threat to liberal society. I do not believe that
Wilders' views must be criminalized by the state, but they should be deemed out
of the bounds of liberal society much the same way that we consider discrimination
on the basis of gender unacceptable. Further, the threat of a civil and
democratic discussion --- yes, the threat of a discussion --- about the
criminality of his views should be left on the table as a deterrent. Our aim
should be to rid liberal society of people like Wilders. This can only start if
we ignore Michael’s exhortation about looking out for Wilders’ rights, and
spend our time either ignoring or mocking him.
Wilders' obfuscations are
pernicious. He conceals his xenophobic nativism by waving (incorrectly
translated and randomly picked) verses of the Quran. Sprinkled in the
middle of Fitna, which Wilders would have us believe is about the Quran, are
Dutch news clippings included for no other reason than to provoke an emotional backlash against immigrants. This is why I don't
believe this film had anything to do with theology. Fitna was nothing more than a veiled attack on the newest
"outsider." Jews and Chinese in the past, the Polish in London today
and Latinos here in the US, have been the butt of similar tactics by
ideologues. Demagogues enjoy taking pot-shots at the things immigrants hold
closest --- in this case, the Quran. I have no doubt that if it was Charlie and
the Chocolate Factory that Muslims held dear, Wilders would be trying to equate
Muslims with Oompa-Loompas. The job of public intellectuals like Moynihan is to
cut through the veneer and get to the heart of the matter.
Here, the heart of the matter is
nativism, not Islam, and not whether Wilders has an unqualified right to speak.
Today, in Europe, immigrants from
Muslim countries are viewed as being inherently incapable of becoming good
citizens in the West. It reminds me of the late 19th century when
discussion waged in Europe about how it was impossible for a Jew --- who gives obeisance to Talmudic Law --- to simultaneously give allegiance to
the state.
Similarly, the threat of "Eurabia," promulgated by men like Wilders, is not very different from the threat of "Aztlan"
raised by anti-immigrant forces in the US. Neither scenario is likely. But in a
picture where immigrants are painted as gang-bangers, rapists, arms and drug
dealers, rioters, and multiplying like the Borg, the narrative quickly shifts
from irrational phantasmagoria to social policies that are either explicitly
bigoted, or which turn a blind eye to the immigrants' concerns. This shifting
is what men like Wilders excel at.
What Wilders manages to do with
relative ease is to shift the discussion away from how power and resources
should be apportioned between native and immigrant Europeans into a referendum
on jihadism. This is wrong and unfair. By and large, European Muslim grievances
with Europe are grievances with the state apparatuses --- with unemployment, with
police brutality, with poverty. Yet Wilders and his cohorts would have us
believe that the issue is all of Islam all across the world and if you do not
characterize immigrants' agitations in a theo-political manner then you are
either "with the enemy" or have already turned into a "dhimmi."
This is called missing the point.
A perfect example of this
missing-the-point occurred during the riots by immigrant youth in France.
The New York Times and various other news agencies took a barracking, right here at
Jewcy, for referring to the rioters as "youth" and not as "Muslim."
Yet, the fact was that the latest rounds of the riots were touched off not only
by the 40% unemployment rate --- a rate that matches Saudi Arabia's --- among
immigrant youth but the police mandate to deport 25,000 illegal aliens a year
and the specific incident of the police rather
bizarrely running over a pair of youth on a motorcycle. As the UK Spectator and Reuters
both noted, what needn't have been about Islam, became about Islam.
If Wilders were interested in
discussing extremism, jihadism or even Islamism, he would have done it in a way that allowed Muslims who oppose these things to join with him. However, he
purposefully chooses to marginalize such people in order to pretend that they
don't exist. In some quarters this is called bigotry. I’ve already pointed out, even dissenting Muslims are acknowledging that while
Wilders shouldn't be banned, they are also feeling that he isn't someone to be taken seriously either.
There are reasons for this, reasons having to do with the fact that the guy is
not just a bore but also a boor. We don't jail boors, but we shouldn’t be
particularly interested in what they are saying either.
What people like Wilders
ultimately do is to encourage the worst parts of the discourse to feel
empowered, whether Islamophobic or Islamophilic. I am, for example, not
particularly surprised that on the heels of Wilders film we have news about
French Muslim graves --- from World War I no less -- defiled by Islamophobic
elements (which previously used Nazi imagery on Muslim graves). Nor am I
surprised that around the world handmaidens of
dictators have tried to stir violence in response to the film. (The
Jamat-e-Islami’s protests are particularly disgusting given that they
participated in the rigged 2002 elections of Pakistan and boycotted the 2008
elections because they were free and fair).
While I do not believe that we
ought to be influenced by what ayatollahs and extremists on the other
side of the globe think, I do think we ought to speak in a way that will
promote our values: democracy, decency and exemplarism. When the philosophers
Jürgen Habermas and Richard Rorty went to Tehran to criticize religious
oligarchy, their lectures were attended by an astonishing 1500 people. Those of
us who profess to support democracy cannot forget that in the world today our
allies aren't people like Wilders, but those 1500 dissenters in Iran who brave
torture and prison to exchange in the best of our ideas. If for no other
reason than for the sake of their emancipatory project, we should reach out to
them and tell them: As you fight your supremacists, we fight ours. The only way
we can make this showing is if Wilders is aware that he is perpetually
"this close" to losing his right to offend. I don't want Wilders
criminalized but I certainly don't understand why I ought help make him more
audacious.
At the end of the day, Michael, when I bully Wilders, it's not because I am a religious crackpot, or in league with any such people, or antagonistic to free speech, but because I consider Wilders a threat to our liberal principles (and so does the Dutch Parliament). As you said, people like Wilders have a right to offend, but simultaneously people like me have a right to chastise the offensive. My optimistic sense is that in liberal societies people like me far outnumber people like Wilders and always will. I happen to think this is a good thing.
Links:
[1] http://www.jewcy.com/user/1514/ali_eteraz
[2] http://www.jewcy.com/post/geert_wilders_and_other_threats_liberal_society
[3] http://www.jewcy.com/post/liberal_democracies_must_have_room_even_hateful_free_expression
[4] http://www.reason.com/news/show/125716.html
[5] http://www.jewcy.com/post/geert_wilders
[6] http://www.alarabiya.net/views/2008/04/04/47854.html
[7] http://www.eterazonline.com/2008/03/last-respectable-home-for-bigotted.html
[8] http://www.monaeltahawy.com/blog/?p=44
[9] http://poligazette.com/2008/03/28/two-reviews-of-fitna/
[10] http://www.jewcy.com/cabal/psst_french_rioters_are_muslim
[11] http://www.economist.com/world/europe/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10225005
[12] http://www.spectator.co.uk/clivedavis/380756/in-search-of-an-intifada.thtml
[13] http://blogs.reuters.com/faithworld/2007/11/29/why-we-dont-call-them-muslim-riots-in-paris-suburbs/
[14] http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7333344.stm
[15] http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3527773,00.html
[16] http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,347014,00.html
[17] http://poligazette.com/2008/04/02/dutch-parliament-pulls-a-fitna/