A Counter Society Within A Society That Seeks To Destroy It
"Macron is right about Islamist separatism," goes the headline of the Fraser Myers piece at Spiked.
Here's where it's led in France:
Five years ago, the staff of Charlie Hebdo were gunned down by Islamist extremists. It was the deadliest attack on French soil for 50 years. But it would soon be surpassed by the attack on the Bataclan concert hall in Paris (killing 90) and the truck attack during the Bastille Day celebrations in Nice (killing 86). Overall, more than 240 people have been killed by Islamist terrorists in France since 2015. Only last month, an Islamist with a butcher's knife stabbed two employees of a TV production company working on the same street as the old Charlie offices.
However, "French president Emmanuel Macron delivered a speech last week decrying an 'Islamist separatism' that deviates from the 'values of the republic,'" writes Myers.
The danger, he argued, is the creation of a 'counter-society' within France.A new law will be drawn up to give the state a greater role in the regulation of Islamic practice. Local authorities will be given new powers to disband groups that act in ways that are contrary to 'republican ideals', while homeschooling will be banned (only children with medical conditions are exempt). Islamic organisations that receive state funding will have to sign a 'secular charter'. Meanwhile, Arabic lessons will be taught in public schools to draw children away from 'unregulated' teaching in mosques. Around €10million will also be invested in teaching and research in Islamic culture.
The long-term aim is to encourage the development of a more Westernised form of Islam - an 'Islam of Enlightenment'. Macron is particularly concerned that the majority of France's imams are currently trained overseas in countries like Morocco, Turkey and Algeria. By forcing imams to be certified in France, this would 'liberate France from foreign influences', he argued.
But the problem is not merely a foreign import, as Macron rightly acknowledged. France may be officially colourblind (the collection of data on race and ethnicity is forbidden, for instance), but it is, in practice, highly 'ghettoised'. 'We built a concentration of poverty and problems, we concentrated populations according to their origin and social background', Macron said of France's banlieues, which have become a byword for a toxic mix of racial segregation, unemployment and crime. 'We created neighbourhoods where the promise of the republic was never kept', he added, leaving Islamist radicalism as one of the few 'sources of hope'. 'We built this separatism ourselves', he said.
He is right. Integration is a two-way street. France's Muslim population needs something to integrate into. Previous governments' attempts to discourage overt identification with Islam, through bans on the headscarf and the burqa, for instance, have pushed some Muslims away from mainstream France, instead of inviting them in. And though the republican, universalist ideals of liberté, égalité and fraternité are important to aspire to, they can ring hollow when they fail to apply to a large segment of the population.
As is predictable following any criticism of Islamism, accusations of racism and Islamophobia were swiftly made following Macron's speech.
But if you see what Macron said, it's about anything but hate and all the rest. It's about not letting French society be a home to corrosive, deadly forces from within. That's not real hard to get behind, though whether policy can prevent this remains to be seen. I remain hopeful but very doubtful.








I don't like the homeschooling ban, because it is something I considered, but I can see how in a place like France the need for integration is more important than the need for personalized school choices.
I think this is great. I wonder how Imams will be certified... who decides?
Adding Arabic to the public schools is a great idea.
NicoleK at October 6, 2020 11:33 PM
Does Macron not understand that to be a Muslim in good standing[*] is to seek a "counter-society"? one dominated by Islam?
This is also ~60 years too late. You could have tried to assimilate the Algerian immigrants who have been coming to France, but instead France didn't assimilate them, and permitted (encouraged?) them to congregate in banlieues?
Assimilation is not the French way.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-11-16/the-othered-paris-of-the-banlieues
[*] according the head choppers and many mullahs, that is a requirement of the faith. Not all conquests are carried out via the sword. In Islam, the world is divided into two houses: Dar al-Harb and Dar al-Islam.
I R A Darth Aggie at October 7, 2020 8:47 AM
To be radicalized, a French Muslim does not have to go to Algeria. He can get his daily dose of Islamic fundamentalism right there in Paris.
Assimilation is not the progressive way, respect for other cultures and all. We're falling into the French trap as well with large populations of unassimilated immigrants, both legal and illegal populating our cities.
Conan the Grammarian at October 7, 2020 9:02 AM
Leave a comment