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Deccan Herald » Panorama » Detailed Story
Culture: The collapse of tolerance
By Charles Taylor
All the sociological evidence about the girls' motives is swept aside as irrelevant.

Multiculturalism, has become a suspect term almost everywhere in the world nowadays, and particularly in Europe. People say things like: “I used to be for openness and toleration of difference, but now I see where it’s leading”. But where is it leading?

Almost every reason for toleration’s apparent fall into disrepute concerns Islam. Even simple requests, like that of schoolgirls to wear headscarves in class, are suddenly freighted with immense political significance and treated as issues that must be resolved at the highest level of government. People — and their elected leaders — often have the feeling that such seemingly innocent proposals are in fact part of an ominous “hidden agenda”.

That agenda is “Islam”, which many imagine to include all the terrible things that we can read about in the press every day: the stoning of adulterous women under shariat law in Nigeria, the amputation of thieves’ hands in Saudi Arabia, honour killings of women who refuse arranged marriages in Pakistan, the willingness to justify suicide bombings.

If you reply that the girls who want to wear headscarves to school aren’t living in Nigeria or Saudi Arabia, and almost certainly don’t share the extreme Wahhabi views found in those countries, you will be met with a look of almost indulgent pity, a look of the type reserved for the terminally naive. Or you will be told stories about how Saudi trained imams are twisting the girls’ arms, turning them into unwilling stalking-horses for “Islam”.

Indeed, it is virtually impossible nowadays to talk about headscarves as an issue in its own right. All the sociological evidence about the girls’ motives, which are in fact very varied, is swept aside as irrelevant. All that matters is the threat posed by Islam.

This is a classic example of what I call “block thinking”, which seems to have made huge strides in Europe in recent years. John Bowen’s recent book Why the French Don’t Like Headscarves documents this shift.

Block thinking fuses a varied reality into one indissoluble unity, and in two ways. First, different manifestations of Islamic piety or culture are seen as alternative ways of expressing the same core meaning. Second, all Muslims are then seen as endorsing these core meanings. The possibility that a girl wearing a headscarf might in fact be rebelling against her parents and their kind of Islam, and that others might be deeply pious while being utterly revolted by gender discrimination or violence, is lost from view.

Block thinking is an age-old phenomenon, and we all do it to some degree. But, while in another age we might have been indulgent about its consequences, today it has explosive potential, because people who think in this manner are prime recruits for seeing the world in terms of Samuel Huntington’s theory of the “clash of civilisations”.

By treating all the varied segments of Islam as nothing more than parts of a unified threat to the West, they make it harder for Muslims to stand out and criticise their own block thinkers. Block thinkers on each side give aid and comfort to block thinkers on the other side, and with each exchange they pull us closer toward an abyss.

Block thought persists in part because its critics on each side are unknown to those on the other side. Indeed, how many times does a critic of European block thought meet this kind of response: “But where are the Muslims who are criticising extremist Islam?”

Of course, one isn’t likely to meet them in the drawing rooms of Paris journalists or the wider European professional political class. But explaining that to block thinkers will never have the impact of a real connection to the multi-faceted discourse that is actually taking place on the other side. The real question, then, is this: where are the crossover figures who can provide that urgently needed connection?
Guardian

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