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Times Literary Supplement reviewer
Patrick Belton doesn’t much like the bestseller, Les Islamistes Sont
Déjà Là, (The Islamist Are Already There*) which articulates
French fears of Muslim radicalism. He allows that “sales of the book
reveal the nerve it has touched in French society.” But the book’s
success, in his estimation, says more about France than about French
Muslim fundamentalism, the latter being a figment in bigoted French
imaginations. A familiar theme? Belton‘s rush to fault ordinary
Frenchmen for their well-founded fears will resonate with many
Americans, who are often labeled “Islamophobes” by Muslim activists, the
odd libertarian, and practically all left-liberals, when they voice
similar trepidations.
The two Christophes who coauthored the maligned book—Deloire from Le
Point; Dubois from of La Parisien—have it all wrong, says
Belton. “The Republic” and Islamism are not at war; extremists do not
seek to impose Shari’a in place of French laws, Muslim youth are not
flocking to “green fascism,” to train for jihad, moderate Muslims have
not been marginalized, and French Muslims don’t take their orders from
Saudi Arabia. In support of his objections, however, our reviewer offers
only that the authors mingle the “genuinely troublesome with the
overplayed and the wholly non-problematic.”
Yes, Belton concedes, acts of anti-Semitic violence have risen
considerably—the hate fueling the acts of aggression is spread by Saudi
proselytes and acted on mostly by Maghrebian Muslims. Also true is that
a majority of French prison inmates are now adherents of the religion of
peace. That Algerian and Moroccan governments exert considerable
influence over local mosques and that 95 percent of French Imams come
from abroad is equally accurate. All this is “potentially troublesome,”
but, on second thought, not so much. The French “intelligentsia” still
believes fears about the rapid transformation of their society are
“overplayed and … wholly non-problematic.” I mean, doesn’t the Vatican
select France's bishops? Then why shouldn’t foreign governments select
“French” Imams?
Like all liberals or neoconservatives, our reviewer twists like a
Cirque du Soleil contortionist to depict his countrymen as having
failed to accommodate “the oppressed.” You see, a popular humbug,
repeated by the Bush/Blair pair, and their ideological acolytes in
France, is that aggression is a symptom of oppression for which the
putative oppressor should be blamed, not the aggressor. French Muslims
endure untold oppression. Consider: “Nuns do not have to remove their
headscarves for passport or driver’s license photographs; Muslim women
do.” France’s holidays are largely saints’ days. School cafeterias serve
fish on Fridays. French restaurants still serve wine and pork. Likewise
French souvenir shops peddle porcelain pigs. Oh the indignities! As one
smart sort (his name, but not his words, escapes me) once said: “Had
Muslim women in the West been living in the Islamic world, it would be
liberalization and not the hijab they’d be campaigning for.”
Not unlike our own, the French intelligentsia, with Nicolas Sarkozy in
the lead, has plenty solutions to the oppressed-cum-aggressive Muslims
in their midst. Described as a “charismatic politician cast from the
post-ideological mould of Blair and Clinton,” “Super Sarko” wants an
Islam that’s more French, more mod. His book, La Republique, Les
Religions, L'esperance (Republic, Religions, Hope), proposes
to achieve such a thing with dollops of dhimitude, beginning with
state funding for mosques. Such assistance (or
baksheesh) is likely, says Sarko, to encourage “an indigenous French
Islam.”
Since “the State finances thousands of cultural associations, sporting
clubs and other groups, why should religious associations not receive
any aid,” Sarkozy asks. Where have I heard that before? Not from Bill
Clinton. The Fabians in the
White House
and their friends at Fox News were first to beat that
drum. They’ve long since supported funneling taxpayer funds to
faith-based organizations. Left-liberals or neoconservatives: telling
them apart is becoming harder with every dirigiste deed.
* Lawrence Auster translated.
©2005 By Ilana Mercer
Free-Market News Network
October 28
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