Cameron's Failure On Multiculturalism: The Muslims To Liberate Their Own Country
07 February 2011By Mustaqim Sahib Bleher
There is the old adage that it is better to look
intelligent and keep your mouth shut than to open it
and remove all doubt. British prime minister David
Cameron has just made that big mistake by talking, or
rather trying to read a speech written for him, about
issues he fails to comprehend. His focus at the Munich
Security Conference focused on terrorism and
extremism, and besides the folly of washing British
laundry publicly abroad, it seemed evident that he was
not at home with the subject he had chosen or that had
been imposed on him.
After reassuring the attendants that Britain was going
to continue to support the NATO mission in
Afghanistan, without for a moment reflecting on its
futility or redefining its objectives - if ever they
were clearly defined -, the prime minister offers the
platitude that "We will not defeat terrorism simply by
the action we take outside our borders". Bravo! Has it
ever occurred to him that it is the action Britain
takes outside her borders that make her a target for
terrorism? Would any group around the world bother
with this wet and dark island in the North Sea if it
stopped meddling in other people's affairs? What makes
Britain and America prime targets of terrorism is that
they continually moved to deny other people the
freedom, democracy and right of self-determination
they postulate as their own birth right and greatest
achievement. And in Afghanistan it was them who
trained and armed the very "extremists" to fight their
war against the Soviet Union for them, pretending that
they would were only there to help the "Mujahidin" to
liberate their own country. Now that they have been
made to swap one occupier for another, does that
longing for liberation not burn equally strong in
them? The same holds true for the people of Iraq,
Somalia, Palestine etc., but Cameron wants us to
believe that the world's problems are merely the
result of a few Muslim youth in the UK failing to
integrate into the Great British way of life.
Indeed, he goes as far as stating that
multiculturalism has failed. In passing he admits that
the "United Kingdom still faces threats from dissident
republicans in Northern Ireland" (probably because the
Irish youth wasn't too apt on integration either?),
but then states that the "root of the problem" is the
existence of an ideology, Islamist extremism". I so
love the use of that postmodern term "Islamist" (only
"Islamicist" could be worse) as a ruse to put the
blame on Islam and Muslims without explicitly having
to say so. Once more, Cameron pays lip-service to
Islam as a "a religion observed peacefully and
devoutly by over a billion people" and "Islamist
extremism is a political ideology supported by a
minority", but then displays his ignorance when
identifying the latter with the ultimate goal of "an
entire Islamist realm, governed by an interpretation
of Sharia". "Sharia", of course, is another of those
emotive words in the West, conjuring up images of
beheadings and cutting of hands, yet it is actual the
name of the complex legal code of Islam governing both
private and public life and without which Islam would
be reduced to a few pious prayers said quietly at
home, which is, of course, what Cameron and his ilk
would love to see, the separation of religion and
politics. Yet, in the West too, religion and politics,
or indeed religiously motivated ideologies and
politics, are hardly kept apart, as evidenced in the
total sell out of Western politicians to Israel and
its supremacist ideology of Zionism with the ultimate
goal of an entire Zionist realm permitting neither
dissent nor criticism.
British prime minister Cameron, heading a country
whose legacy includes the conflict in Palestine due to
the infamous duplicity of Britain and the Balfour
declaration, does not view Israeli piracy on
international waters against a humanitarian mission,
the "aid flotilla", as an act of extremism even worth
mentioning. The total absence of Zionist terrorism as
a constant catalyst for an "Islamist" counter-reaction
tells us in whose camp his script writers belong.
Instead he beats the old mantra of Islamic "real
hostility towards Western democracy and liberal
values", when the fact is that Islamic movements in
Palestine, Syria, Egypt, Tunisia, Algeria and so on
are the ones asking for democracy and liberal values,
freedom of speech and freedom of organisation, as well
as their nations' right to their own resources and to
deciding their own destiny, and it is Britain and
America, and to a lesser degree France, who by their
never-ending support for the dictators oppressing the
people of those countries prevent democracy and
liberal values from interfering with their ongoing
political and economic exploitation of those regions.
Anticipating this argument Cameron spends a little
time explaining that extremism is not intrinsic to
Islam, nor is it the result of poverty or lack of
democracy or indeed Western foreign policy, for
otherwise there would be not extremism to be found in
midst of the rich and democratic Western nations. A
very hollow and short-sighted argument, for do not the
people living in the West have the capacity to
empathise with those in countries where protest is not
allowed? Moreover, in its attempt to have a finger on
the pulse of every political event in the world,
Britain (and to a lesser degree France) has actively
sought to attract dissident groups to set up home in
the UK, partly to better be able to spy on them,
partly to forge a relationship with them should the
tide turn. When Rashid Ghannoushi, leader of the
Tunisian opposition party An-Nahda, recently returned
to Tunis, he did so from exile in London; when
Khomenei replaced the Shah in Iran, he came straight
from France.
For Cameron, however, it is easier to put the blame
squarely on problems Muslims in Britain have with
identity and integration, and this aspect of his
speech has been the most widely quoted: "In the UK ,
some young men find it hard to identify with the
traditional Islam practiced at home by their parents,
whose customs can seem staid when transplanted to
modern Western countries. But these young men also
find it hard to identify with Britain too, because we
have allowed the weakening of our collective identity.
Under the doctrine of state multiculturalism, we have
encouraged different cultures to live separate lives,
apart from each other and apart from the mainstream.
We've failed to provide a vision of society to which
they feel they want to belong. We've even tolerated
these segregated communities behaving in ways that run
completely counter to our values." The media mostly
reported this as "British PM says multiculturalism has
failed", but the truth is that Cameron is admitting
that "Britain has failed with regard to
multiculturalism".
Let's be clear: For the British PM to sum up the
problem as white Brits having been too tolerant and
hands-off to criticise the more radical views amongst
their coloured neighbours, and that this led to
enforcing segregation and some Muslims feeling
rootless, is laughably naive. Maybe a little history
lesson on multiracial, multicultural Britain would
benefit Mr. Cameron: First of all, West Indians and
Muslims came to Britain because they were called and
needed to build the British economy after the war.
Secondly, they were never welcomed with open arms but
always viewed with suspicion. Britain wanted cheap
labour, semi-slaves, not people making their home in
this "green and pleasant land". Nor did they segregate
out of choice but partly because they were placed into
ghettos by town planners and partly because they felt
the need to protect themselves against racism. Over
the time span of half a century and now in their
third, if not fourth, generation those immigrants
eventually became part and parcel of British society,
providing valuable and essential services without
which the British economy would collapse over night,
but are still viewed by the host society as outsiders.
And now that there is large-scale immigration from
Eastern Europe of people who are white Christians (and
who ironically can't be lectured on having to learn
English and integrate, because as EU nationals they
have an automatic right to stay), right-wing
politicians like Cameron finally think they can turn
up the heat against the darker skinned Brits, hoping
they might leave. A sophisticated politician's version
of the common British thug observation: "I love curry
but hate Pakis".
Actually, it's not just Blacks and Asians who are
looking for an exodus from Britain. Approx. 200,000
Brits leave the UK every year seeking a better life
abroad, and about 1 in every 10 British citizens lives
abroad. With Cameron's belt tightening measures and
tax increases this number might soar. Out of the total
of some 5.5 million Brits living abroad, there are
about 1.3 million Brits living in Australia, some
800,000 in the USA, those being natural
English-speaking alternatives, but there are as many
as 800,000 Brits living in Spain where most neither
bother to learn the language nor to integrate into
Spanish society or politics. Talk about hypocrisy!
These are people who have permanently turned their
backs on their home country and settled elsewhere, not
holiday makers. Both, however, expect to be welcomed
with open arms wherever they go and are happy to
accept local hospitality. Yet, this hospitality is not
extended by domestic Brits to visitors coming to visit
or live amongst them from overseas. "There are
practical things that we can do as well", says
Cameron. "That includes making sure that immigrants
speak the language of their new home and ensuring that
people are educated in the elements of a common
culture and curriculum." Wake up Mr. Cameron: Maybe it
is not the children of immigrants but the children of
indigenous Britons who need citizenship lessons and
who need to learn to live along peacefully with
everybody else, including those from different
cultures or who hold different views to themselves.
And for the British prime minister himself, as an
advanced programme of citizenship lessons, I highly
recommend a book recently published by Pluto Press:
"The Contemporary Arab Reader on Political Islam"
edited by Ibrahim M. Abu-Rabi' from the University of
Alberta who describes his task as researcher thus:
"We, as critical theorists, need to make Western
audiences aware that Islamism as a political discourse
embraces far more than the dogmatic fundamentalism and
terrorist violence that dominate in the Western
press." The book contains translations of various
contributions by Arab Islamist thinkers from the
Middle East and North Africa, covering the whole
spectrum from government appointed scholars to
jihadist theologians. It demonstrates that far from
Islam being monolithic, there is a lively political
debate going on in the Muslim world, below the radar
of the Western media and political establishment who,
as Abu-Rabi' observes, write about the Islamic
movement whilst failing "to even consult original
Islamist sources", and sets out as the aim of the
312-page publication to come to grips "with the
conceptual framework of the 'many varieties of
Islamism'." Maybe just what Mr. Cameron needs, but
seeing he had difficulty reading even the script
prepared for him at Munich without constantly
stumbling over his words, it might be a little above
his intellectual acumen.
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