|
Taking stock of people and ideas in the
news. | The Ugly Europeans Jean-Marie
Le Pen, Jörg Haider, and other xenophobes. By
Chris Suellentrop Posted Friday, April 26, 2002, at 7:49 AM PT
|
Filip Dewinter, Jean-Marie Le Pen, and
Pim Fortuyn | After Sept. 11, many
observers predicted that the ugly side of the American character would
soon reveal itself. Xenophobia and nativism would flourish. Ominous
reports of widespread violence against Arab-Americans would surface. A few
hysterical doomsayers worried that it was only a matter of time before
Muslims would be placed in internment camps. Despite those fears, none of
the Ugly American predictions came to pass. Instead, 9/11 cemented an
altogether different phenomenon: Ugly Europeanism.
Jean-Marie Le Pen's strong showing in the French presidential election
is only the latest in a string of successes by anti-Muslim political
parties across the Continent. Only two weeks after Sept. 11, Hamburg—the
most liberal state in Germany—elected an anti-foreigner candidate
nicknamed "Judge Merciless" to the state parliament. In November,
Denmark's anti-Muslim party, the Danish People's Party, received 12
percent of the vote, up from 7 percent three years earlier. Then in March,
the party of the Netherlands' Pim Fortuyn, a zero-immigration candidate
who says "the Netherlands is full," reaped 35 percent of the vote in
Rotterdam, making it the most popular party in the country's
second-largest city. A few weeks later, the Popular Party, which urges a
"special integration program" for African immigrants because of their
"propensity for violence," joined Portugal's new governing coalition. And
this week, Le Pen.
Granted, the Ugly Europeans are not purely a post-9/11 phenomenon. The
Freedom Party of Austria's Jörg Haider—who came to international
prominence in 2000—is a fellow traveler, as is Belgium's Vlaams Blok,
which took a third of the vote in Belgium's second-largest city that same
year. (The leader of Vlaams Blok, a Flemish nationalist party that wants
to forcibly expel all unemployed non-European immigrants, said he and Le
Pen were "brothers in arms.") And the Ugly Europeans' anti-Muslim tactics
predate the terrorist attacks. In 2000, for example, an anti-racism poster
picturing a black child and the caption "When I become white, I'll be a
schoolteacher" prompted the Danish People's Party to counter with its own
anti-welfare poster: a picture of a white homeless man with the
caption "When I become Muslim, I'll have a house."
| But
the Ugly Europeans accelerated their anti-Muslim rhetoric in the wake of
the Sept. 11 attacks, and they found a newly receptive audience.
Anti-Muslim sentiment was already widespread in Europe, but 9/11
reinforced the Ugly Europeans' bigoted message: Muslims cause crime.
Muslims cause unrest. Muslims must go. The effect was immediate: The
terrorist attacks and the discovery that Hamburg was a haven of al-Qaida
activity gave Judge Merciless (real name: Ronald Schill)—and his attacks
on "imported unemployment and imported crime" from Muslim countries—a more
than 5 percent bump in the polls. The anti-Muslim electoral wave had
begun.
Much of what the Ugly Europeans propose isn't out of the mainstream of
American political debate: Get tough on crime, promote Christian family
values, reform the welfare state, curtail immigration. But the Ugly
Europeans' policy inclinations on all those issues stem not from political
ideology but from prejudice. How to get tough on crime? Get rid of the
Muslim immigrants who are causing it. Why reform the welfare state?
Because the Muslims are sucking us dry. Why promote Christian values?
Because the Muslim invaders threaten to drown out our faith. Why curtail
immigration? Because Muslims cannot assimilate into Western European
cultures.
The
Ugly European viewpoint stems from an exclusionary ethnocentric
nationalism, summed up by Le Pen's slogan "France for the French,"
Haider's slogan "Austria for the Austrians," and Vlaams Blok's slogan "Our
Own People First." Muslims from North Africa cannot assimilate even if
they want to. Pia Kjaersgaard, the housewife leader of the Danish People's
Party, wants the Muslims in Denmark to "go home": "They must not be
allowed to integrate into Danish society." Filip Dewinter of Belgium's
Vlaams Blok agrees: "We must stop the Islamic invasion," he told the
New York Times Magazine. "I think it's, in fact,
impossible to assimilate in our country if you are of Islamic belief."
During a protest of a plan to open a center for foreign asylum-seekers in
his hometown of Antwerp, Dewinter proclaimed, "Antwerp is not a garbage
can." In an effort to prevent Muslim (and perhaps Jewish) assimilation in
France, the mayor of Marignane, who is a member of Le Pen's National
Front, eliminated the option for a non-pork lunch when pork was on the
menu at public school cafeterias. The clear message: We don't want your
children to eat with our children.
Ugly Europeans are adamantly opposed to multicultural, multiethnic
societies, and they employ a neat rhetorical trick: framing their racist
anti-Muslim sentiment as a defense of the multicultural value of
diversity—a way to protect their own national culture, which they see as
threatened. (The Netherlands' Fortuyn, in a similar bit of ideological
gymnastics, justifies his intolerance for Muslims by saying that Muslims
threaten the Netherlands' vaunted reputation for tolerance.) They're
fiercely opposed to the European Union, which they see as leveling the
distinctions among the Continent's distinct nations. And most assail
America for its globalizing culture and its multiethnic society.
In this, ironically, the Ugly Europeans share more than a little in
common with the Islamic extremism that has propelled them to new heights
of popularity. They may not be terrorists and murderers, but their
separatist agenda is familiar: a belief that Christians and Muslims cannot
commingle; that the infidel invaders must be expelled to ensure their
countries' self-preservation; and a backward-looking celebration of an
empire long, long gone.
|
AcuVibe
Cordless Massager
$49.95
At the end of a long day or a tough workout,
ease tense muscles with this handheld oscillation massager.
|
Chris Suellentrop is a Slate assistant editor.
Illustration by Charlie Powell.
|
|
|
|
Reader Comments From The
Fray:
1. Xenophobia is a very very common
fear. I know of no individual, let alone a nation, who hasn't
experienced it. This includes our own nation. So why should we
point fingers of blame at the Europeans? They are struggling
with an issue that every country struggles with--and without
our advantages. Except for Native Americans, every citizen of
this country is either an immigrant or a descendant of one.
Thus, when speaking of "our" culture, we inevitably speak of
"the melting pot" that is America. A cornerstone of our
culture is multiculturalism. Most other countries in
this world, including those in Europe, are more homogeneous in
nature. Therefore, large numbers of immigrants do
pose a greater threat to their cultural status quo than we in
America might feel.
2. The only thing I know of that
grants a person the automatic right to live in a given country
is being born there. All others who wish admittance are
allowed in on certain criteria, the most common one being "Is
it to our advantage to let you in?" This is, by the way, the
same criteria used to admit people to companies, schools,
clubs, and almost any other group. Is it really so shocking
that a country would wish to expel those "guests" whose
presence is not to their advantage, such as the
unemployed?
I find the racism expressed in many of the
other opinions posted on this site very sad. The points I
wished to make are simply 1. racism is a common human failing,
but 2. not all exclusion is racism. I suggest compassion for
the Europeans (and their resident aliens), and a dose of
humility for ourselves.
--Lastrat
(To
find or answer this post, click here.)
The
problem is change. Of all the world's peoples Americans have
the culture, economy and political institutions best able to
help them adapt to change without losing livelihoods or having
our way of life suddenly changed beyond recognition, and it
isn't easy for us. It must be much more difficult for
Europeans, who have cultural traditions much older than ours
and whose craving for a quiet, predictable life was probably
strengthened by the deadly turmoil that enveloped the
continent within the memory of many of the people living
there.
Beyond that, some of the "ugly Europeans" make
valid or at least arguable points. Large numbers of Muslim and
especially Arab immigrants from nearby countries do in fact
present difficulties with respect to cultural assimilation and
even public order that it is foolish to dismiss with ritual
cries for more tolerance. Welfare benefits throughout Europe
are in fact a significant public expense and do make it
possible for an immigrant (or, to be fair, anyone else) intent
on making trouble to afford to live while doing it. American
politics feature frequent discussions of "values" that often
revolve around the actual or imagined abandonment of the
values instilled by traditional and specifically Protestant
Christianity, once dominant here and now in decline; it is not
surprising that Europe, where the decline of active Christian
faith is much further along, should harbor some anxiety about
what the Muslim values of some of their new immigrants
portend...
The issues European mainstream political
leaders have refused to address, reactive people like Haider
and Le Pen are now speaking to--not always constructively or
creatively, and often with appeals to elemental prejudices
that we Americans find distasteful. Our distaste for the
language they sometimes use is no reason not to try to
understand the reason they are getting the response they
are.
--Zathras
(To find or answer this
post, click here.)
For
years we've been hearing about the slow rise in racial tension
in Europe, sparked by increasing numbers of Islamic
immigrants. Against this background, the recent triumphs of
bigots like Le Pen are more alarming than their transitory
nature would suggest.
When you're boiling water, for
the longest time, it seems like nothing's happening. And then
you'll catch a glimpse of a tiny stream of bubbles rising from
the bottom. It doesn't look like anything, but if you so much
as turn around and blink the entire surface of the water will
be a writhing mass of bubbles and steam.
Don't discount
the likes of Le Pen. I have a horrible suspicion that their
victories could be exactly that sort of a
sign.
--Thrasymachus
(To find or answer
this post, click here.)
(4/26) | |
|
|
|
|