France :
The Looming Battle
over Muslim Integratio n....
Among the long list of recommendations...the panel says that
public schools in France
should be taught in Arabic and African languages rather than in French."It would no longer be
up to French immigrants to adopt French culture, but for France to
abandon its own culture, language, history and identity to adapt to other
people's cultures." — Jean-François Copé, UMP Party.
Instead of integration,
"parallel societies are forming that continuously distance themselves from
each other." — Alain Finkielkraut, author of L'identité malheureuse.
A panel appointed by French
Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault to review France 's integration policies has
urged the government to implement a "new form of secularism" that
would raise the profile of Islam in public life—in order to improve the
integration of Muslim immigrants.
Among a long list of recommendations
aimed at "recognizing the richness of multiple identities," the panel
says that public schools in France
should begin allowing Muslim pupils to wear headscarves in class (clothing that
has been outlawed since 2004), and that courses should be taught in Arabic and
African languages rather than in French.
The panel also recommends a
number of other multicultural changes that would provide greater recognition to
the "Arab-oriental dimension" of France 's national identity. These
include changing street and place names, overhauling the history curriculum
taught in schools and creating a special day to honour the contribution of
immigrant cultures.
More notably, the panel
says that authorities and the media should be prohibited from referring to
people's nationality, religion or ethnicity in public, and that the government
should create a new law that would make "racial harassment" a
punishable offense.
The controversial
recommendations are contained in a series of five documents
that were discretely posted on the prime minister's official website in
November, but only came to public attention on December 12, after an exposé by the French
daily newspaper, Le Figaro.
Not surprisingly, the
proposals to develop an "inclusive secularism" in France have
sparked a firestorm of criticism.
Jean-François Copé, the
leader of France 's main
opposition party, the conservative UMP, said in a statement
that the proposals are "explosive and irresponsible" because they
replace "the one and indivisible French Republic
with a motley assembly of communities, ethnicities and groups of all
kinds." According to Copé:
"This report is an
attempt to make multiculturalism the new model for France . It would no longer be up to
immigrants to adopt French culture, but for France to abandon its own culture,
language, history and identity to adapt to other people's cultures...I cannot
accept that we build a society where 'responsibilities' are completely replaced
by 'rights.' French voters should know that in this report the word
'responsibility' appears only 13 times, while the word 'right' is repeated 440
times."
Copé also accused the
government of using the report to deliberately drive voters towards the
anti-immigration National Front (FN) party in order to weaken the UMP.
The leader of the FN, Marine
Le Pen—who has attained record-breaking popularity
due to her criticism of runaway immigration—said the report's recommendations
are "a very grave provocation" and implementing them would be
tantamount to "a declaration of war on the French people."
The negative reaction to
the report has put the ruling Socialists on the defensive.
French President François
Hollande—the most unpopular French president on record, with approval ratings well
below 30%—has distanced himself from some of the more explosive recommendations
contained in the report, which he says do "not
at all represent the government's position." Hollande also denies that the
ban on Islamic veils in schools will be reversed.
Ayrault, who originally
commissioned the report in July 2013 to recommend ways to "get the
republican model of integration working again because it has broken down,"
said there are no plans to drop the headscarf ban. "Just because I receive
a report does not make it government policy," he said.
Nevertheless, the report's
recommendations are supposed to form the basis of future reforms ostensibly
aimed at better integrating Muslim immigrants. These reforms will eventually be
put to a vote in the French Parliament sometime during 2014.
In the face of public
outcry, however, Ayrault cancelled a public seminar that had been planned to
discuss the report's recommendations, which will now be debated in a
closed-door meeting tentatively set for January 9, 2014.
Other key Socialists have
also distanced themselves from the recommendations, including Thierry Mandon, the
spokesman for the Socialist group in the National Assembly, the lower house of
the French Parliament.
"I do not envision
that we will return to the law on the veil," said Mandon, who compared
Hollande and Ayrault to over-eager students who go too far and end up with
"extremist" formulas that will lead to the
"de-Republicanization" of France .
In any event, the report
has opened yet another chapter in the long-running debate over multiculturalism
in France , which has the
largest Muslim population in Western Europe .
The debate pits the
Socialist supporters of multiculturalism in France
against the Conservative republican camp, which is concerned about the steady
disintegration of French society due to mass immigration, and which is calling for
the return to the traditional values of the French Republic .
Opinion polls show that a
majority of people in France
believe that multiculturalism has gone too far.
According to a poll published by Le
Figaro in October 2012, 60% of French people believe that Islam has become
"too visible and influential" in France and 43% consider the presence
of Muslim immigrants to be a threat to French national identity, compared to
just 17% who say it enriches society.
In addition, 68% of people
in France
blame the problems associated with Muslim integration on immigrants who refuse
to integrate, and 52% blame it on cultural differences. The poll also shows a
growing resistance to the symbols of Islam. Nearly two-thirds (63%) of French
people say they are opposed to Muslim women wearing the veil or Islamic
headscarves in public, and only 18% say they support the building of new
mosques in France.
In September 2013, the
government introduced a "secularism charter"
for schools. The document—which is to appear in a prominent location in all of
the 55,000 public schools in France—would serve to remind students and teachers
of a list of secular principles underpinning the separation of mosque and
state.
Although the initiative has
enjoyed a generally positive reception, many observers say they doubt Hollande
has the political will actually to enforce secular principles in French
schools, with or without a charter.
This skepticism stems from
the circumstance that Muslim children constitute an increasingly large
proportion of the 10 million students in the French public school system—and
because Muslim parents make up an increasingly important voting bloc in French
politics. Muslims, in fact, cast the deciding vote that
thrust Hollande into the Elysée
Palace in May 2012.
With major municipal
elections in France
coming up in March 2014 and European parliamentary ballots in May, speculation
is rife that the flailing Hollande is seeking to leverage the debate over
multiculturalism to further endear himself to Muslim voters.
But the French philosopher
and essayist Alain Finkielkraut says multiculturalism and runway Muslim
immigration are responsible for the destruction of French national identity.
In a politically incorrect interview
with the German newsmagazine Der Spiegel on December 6 to discuss his
latest book, "L'identité malheureuse"
[The Unhappy Identity], Finkielkraut says European elites have consistently
misrepresented multiculturalism as the model for the future. Instead, he says,
"mistrust prevails, communitarianism is rampant—parallel societies are
forming that continuously distance themselves from each other."
According to Finkielkraut:
"Immigration used to
go hand-in-hand with integration into French culture. That was the rule of the
game. Many of the new arrivals no longer want to play by that rule. If the
immigrants are in the majority in their neighborhoods, how can we integrate
them? … Many Muslims in Europe are
re-Islamizing themselves. … The Left does not want to accept that there is a
clash of civilizations."
Finkielkraut sums it up:
"I am of the opinion that our generation's task is not to recreate the
world, but to prevent its decline. … I become sad and feel a growing sense of
anxiety. Optimism would seem a bit ridiculous these days. I wish the
politicians were able to speak the truth and look reality in the face. Then, I
believe, France
would be capable of a true awakening—of contemplating a policy of civilization."
FRANCE TODAY - EUROPE TOMORROW!
FRANCE TODAY - EUROPE TOMORROW!
No comments:
Post a Comment
Anything to say about anything.....