Call Out the Women
Johann Hari had a good column the other day.
But in among the bad reasons for opposing multiculturalism – hinted at by Davis – there are some good reasons, and it is time we overcame our nervousness and heard them. I am the child of an immigrant myself, and I believe we should take more immigrants and refugees into Britain, not fewer. But it is increasingly clear that, forged with the best of intentions, multiculturalism has become a counter-productive way of welcoming people to our country. It promotes not a melting pot where we all mix together but a segregated society of sealed-off cultures, each sticking to its own.
Which used to sound good, or at least okay. Vibrant, colourful, pluralistic, all that (despite the lack of mixing, which is a contradiction that should have been glaring but mostly apparently wasn’t). Now it doesn’t sound so okay any more.
…funding for local projects – from community centres to schools – was invariably conducted on ethnic lines: a “Muslim” school there, a “white” community centre here. Nobody could bid for cash unless they were appealing to a particular “community” – rather than the community as a whole. Faith schools made the problem even worse. Places where different ethnic groups could meet and become friends, develop sexual relationships or have rows, simply did not exist. Since it was official multicultural policy that different cultures should be preserved rather than blended, spliced and interwoven, this all seemed rational. But there is another dysfunctional aspect to multiculturalism. In practice, it acts as though immigrant cultures are unchanging and should be preserved in aspic. This forces multiculturalists into alliance with the most conservative and unpleasant parts of immigrant communities.
Just so. What I’ve been saying here like a broken record. And not only as though immigrant cultures are unchanging, but also as if they are monolithic, as if every individual within each culture has exactly the same interests, needs and desires as every other. So convenient – the man wants to tell the woman and girls what to do, the woman and girls want to be told what to do. The man wants to subordinate, the woman and girls want to be subordinated. So convenient, and so very unlikely. Yet it is such an entrenched assumption. I heard it yet again – from a woman – on Talking Politics on Radio 4 on Saturday – ‘some families prefer the women not to work,’ she said. That’s a stupid way of putting it – as if families automatically spoke with one voice and wanted the same thing. Maybe everyone in a given family wants that, but you can’t just assume it – obviously. Sometimes – often – it’s simply a case of the man not allowing it. Other times it’s a case of the woman not being equipped to work because of not speaking English, not being trained, and the like, and the man keeping it that way. It’s simple-minded, blind, and sentimental to assume that locked-up women are in that situation because they want to be.
All this time, we could have been helping women and gay people from immigrant communities to enjoy the fruits of a free society. This would have created interesting and more progressive versions of Islam that would fight back against jihadism far more effectively than a thousand government initiatives or police raids. Instead, we have been inadvertently helping the conservative men who want to keep these groups in a subordinate position. We have been acting as though there is one thing called “Muslim culture”, and elderly imams or enraged, misogynistic young men are its only voice.
Bingo. Well, I do my best. I publish Maryam and Azam and Homa and Azar, and hope the major media will someday start asking them to talk on Radio 4 and write for the Guardian and the Independent. (The m.m. do at least talk to Irshad Manji a lot these days, which is definitely a start.)
A few weeks ago, it was driven home to me how wrong this is. I wrote about how the best way to defeat jihadists was to empower Muslim women, and I was inundated with e-mails from Muslim women, many explaining how the logic of multiculturalism weakened their hand.
That was this one.
The best way to undermine the confidence and beliefs of jihadists is to trigger a rebellion of Muslim women, their mothers and sisters and daughters. Where Muslim women are free to fight back against jihadists, they are already showing incredible tenacity and intellectual force. In Iraq, mass protests by women stopped the governing council from introducing sharia law in 2003. In Europe and America, from Irshad Manji to my colleague Yasmin Alibhai-Brown to Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Muslim women are offering the most effective critiques of Islamism. The jihadists themselves know that Islamic feminism is the greatest threat to their future…
And it doesn’t help, to have multiculturalists cheering victories for the subordination of women. As one of the emails Hari got shows…
My younger sisters go to Denbigh High School [in Luton] which was famous in the headlines last year because a girl pupil went to the High Court for her right to wear the jilbab [a long body-length shroud]. Shabinah [the girl who took the case] saw it as a great victory for Muslim women … but what happened next shows this is not a victory for us. My sisters, and me when I was younger, could always tell our dad and uncles that we weren’t allowed to wear the jilbab. Once the rules were changed, that excuse was not possible any more so my sisters have now been terrified into wearing this cumbersome and dehumanising garment all day against their wishes. Now most girls in the school do the same. They don’t want to, but now they cannot resist community pressure … I am frightened somebody is going to fight for the right to wear a burqa next and then my sisters will not even be able to show their faces.
Many on the left hailed Shabinah Begum’s victory as a victory for religious freedom. I disagreed at the time, and that email makes it appear that I was more right than I wanted to be. (I don’t think it was widely known at the time that Hizb ut-Tahrir was behind the Begum case.) Sometimes ‘religious freedom’ equates to the coercion of others – so is it still freedom then? I would say no.
But if you talk to such “feminists” as Germaine Greer and Naomi Wolf, you’d know that genital mutilation and locking up the womenfolk is paradoxically empowering, creates strong bonds of sisterhood, and makes sex so much more meaningful (cuz it’s no longer an act between two individuals but a communal thing instead, with rules and rituals and age-old religious traditions standing behind it–the whole village is there, in effect, cheering you on! Plus the spirits of your ancestors, who like to watch).
Of course, Greer and Wolf themselves don’t lop off their labia or wrap themselves in ambulatory tents, but it’s fine for those exotic dark-skinned authentic third-world types who are so much more alive than the rest of us in the soul-dead West.
No, these “feminists” are pro-patriarchal as long as it’s abroad and NIMBY and someone else far away and not of my background.
As for the Amish, well, Ophelia linked to a horrifying piece a few months ago. Check the archives.
Exactly, they don’t own their members, but how easily that fact gets overlooked.
Yeah, the Amish thing shocked me quite a bit. I had thought (based on what? nothing much) that they were peace-loving enough that the isolation and communalism were reasonably harmless. Boy, was that wrong. A good idea – the importance of forgiveness – ends up meaning that family rapists get to go on raping, and the victims just have to keep forgiving. And the isolation means there is no one to turn to.
Here’s an article on the Amish matter.
Oops. Cross post.
Karl, could you provide a reference for the Greer/Wolf pro-genital mutilation line?
“The first generation of Chinese have not integrated at all and are best seen as Chinese expatriates rather than as new UK citizens.”
So much like British ex-pats.
“Karl, could you provide a reference for the Greer/Wolf pro-genital mutilation line?”
For Greer, check out “The Whole Woman” in which she defends female genital mutilation as an anti-patriarchal, sisterhood-empowering ritual, and damns birth control as an evil invention of the soulles Western technocracy. She also thinks the African practice of “dry sex” makes doing it so much more real, man. See also Margaret Talbot’s devastating review in The New Republic (May 31, 1999).
Don’t know if Naomi Wolf has gone quite as loony as GG, but she has made claims of moral equivalence between FGM and the dieting-and-plastic-surgery mania in the West. And last year, after visiting an ultra-orthodox Jewish girlfriend who was living a sequestered and segregated existence in some ultra-orthodox fortified settlement in Israel/Palestine, she came away breathlessly praising the hot sexiness of being wrapped up and shut up. Apparently, sex with ultra-orthodox he-men is so much realer than sex with the porn-enfeebled wimps of decadent America. Still, I’m much more willing to overlook Naomi’s nonsense because Naomi herself is a totally hot babe!
Thanks, Karl. Germaine does have a tendency to be loopy, bless her, but I don’t think that ‘claims of moral equivalence between FGM and the dieting-and-plastic-surgery mania in the West’ is too wierd a position to take. And you’re right about Naomi.
Thanks for all that, Chris – amazing stuff. Where will it be at Red Star? Or you could send me the link when it’s published and I’ll post it.
Chinese isolation: Chinese in America excel in this, at least for the first few generations. They even stay separate form tother Chinese. The Wah Ching youth gang on the West Coast was formed by immigrant youth from Hong Kong in the 60’s in response to harrassment and intimidation they were suffering from Chinese-Americans from the Toisaan area, less than 100 miles away back in China! This is another aspect of “maintaining” one’s culture – maintaining all the old ethnic feuds. In the States this was a specialty of the Irish. [Edit]
There isn’t much more to say about the Amish. All I can say is, I can see why Hitler was so popular back in the old country.
Jim: You are sadly mistaken about the people round here. Perhaps you’d find more congenial company over at Pat Buchanan’s blog.
“Perhaps you’d find more congenial company over at Pat Buchanan’s blog.”
Karl, you are rude. It is no secret that Hitler was popular in Germany, and there are still people there who say he was not all bad, and it is no secret that collectivst and utopian strains in a culture are conducive to totalitarianism, and if you read my commnet as approving of that kind of thing in any way, you were sloppy.
I was referring to the portion of your post that Ophelia deleted, as well as an earlier comment you posted. Anyone who talks blythely about “euthanizing” undesirable ethnicities and salivates over the prospect of a mass slaughter of European Muslims is definitely barking up the wrong tree around here. Hence my suggestion that you go tell it to Pat Buchanan.
“Salivating”?
I don’t approve about a lot of things in Europe, and they attitudes towards minorities rank high among them. I also don’t apporve of the moral snobbery.
So maybe it isn’t just rudeness, amybe it is also a tin ear.
Yes, how snobbish (not to mention strident) of me to wonder about someone who jokes(?) about “euthanizing” troublesome segments of the population. I really need to lighten up.
I was referring to the portion of your post that Ophelia deleted, as well as an earlier comment you posted. Anyone who talks blythely about “euthanizing” undesirable ethnicities…
Did Jim really say that? If true, that’s very disturbing. If false, he ought to have denied it. Personally, I find even jokes about such things to be strictly out of bounds in civilized company.