Reflections on the Revolution in Europe: Immigration, Islam and the West.
Malik, Mustafa
Reflections on the Revolution in Europe: Immigration, Islam and the
West, by Christopher Caldwell. Doubleday, 2009. 422 pages, with notes,
bibliography and index. $24, hardcover.
In the spring 2004 issue of Middle East Policy (Vol. XI, No. 1), I
argued that, while earlier groups of immigrants assimilated into
European societies, "Muslims are unlikely to do so." A
majority of those who commented on it thought I didn't get it. They
basically said that modernity would eventually assimilate Muslims into
European societies, as it had other waves of immigrants. Remy Leveau, a
French sociologist whom I have known for years, wondered if I had
"spoken too soon."
A recent book also makes the argument I did. In his Reflections on
the Revolution in Europe, Christopher Caldwell predicts Muslims will not
assimilate into native European societies and will "retain the
habits and cultures" they acquired from Islam. He notes that Muslim
immigrants and their European-born offspring "feel at home in
Europe." But, while the offspring of Christians who had migrated
from one European country to another assimilated into host societies by
second and third generations, a trend toward Muslim assimilation
"went into reverse" by the second generation.
Caldwell says European Muslims, now about 20 million and increasing
rapidly, will change the continent's cultural ethos. They are
"anchored, confident and strengthened by common doctrines,"
while the dwindling white native population languishes in "an
insecure, malleable, relativistic culture." The author, an American
conservative, quotes German jurist Udo di Fabio as lamenting:
Why in God's name should a member of a vital [Islamic] world
culture want to integrate into Western culture, when Western
culture ... no longer has any transcendental idea, is approaching
its historical end? Why should he get caught up in a culture marked
as much by self-doubt as by arrogance, which has squandered its
religious and moral inheritance on a forced march to modernity, and
which offers no higher ideal of the good life beyond travel,
longevity and consumerism?
During my research trips through Europe I have found native liberal
intellectuals the most resentful of the continent's growing Islamic
space. Among the not-so-liberal Christian believers, the growth of
Muslim communities has triggered a twofold reaction. One group,
mentioned by Caldwell, is led by Pope Benedict XVI. These Christians
view Islam as a threat to global--and especially European--Christianity.
They would wish to rally European Christians, religious and secular, to
resist the spread of Islamic culture in Europe. The pope has also lined
up some liberal intellectuals for this mission. Jurgen Habermas, the
atheist German philosopher, declared after a meeting with Benedict:
"Christianity, and nothing else, is the ultimate foundation of
liberty, conscience, human rights and democracy, the benchmarks of
Western civilization."
Other Christian believers consider liberalism, rather than Islam,
the main threat to Christianity. They are collaborating with Muslims in
what they view as a common struggle of all faiths against Godless
liberalism. Among them is the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams.
In February 2008, the head of the Anglican Church said Britain could
implement parts of Islamic law, the sharia, in marital and other issues
in Muslim communities.
In the early 2000s, the French Catholic clergy (and some Jewish
rabbis) were supporting Muslim protests against public hostility and
government strictures. Father Jean-Marie Gaudel, adviser to the French
Catholic Bishops Conference, told me in Paris that Muslims, Christians
and Jews "drink from the same moral well" of the Abrahamic
tradition. They should "join hands" in strengthening
societies' moral values. In Marseilles, I saw white fathers
defending the right of Muslim girls to wear headscarves to public
schools, taking a stance that was opposed by the liberal establishment.
I haven't checked their positions since the ascendancy of Pope
Benedict.
Caldwell is an editor at the American neoconservative publication
The Weekly Standard, and he makes no secret of where he stands.
"Islam," he says, "is a magnificent religion that has
also been, at times over the centuries, a glorious and generous culture.
But, all cant to the contrary, it is in no sense Europe's religion
and in no sense Europe's culture." However, the author
doesn't make a convincing argument as to why "Europe's
culture" can't accommodate Islam. Hasn't Europe been
hospitable to liberal, Christian, Greco-Roman, Slavic, Germanic and
Celtic cultures? Some of these cultures clashed violently with one
another. Caldwell doesn't delve into the underlying variables that
have pitted Europe's white social mainstream against its Islamic
sub-society.
A growing number of philosophers, anthropologists and social
scientists have been exploring these variables, however. Peter Berger,
one of my favorite social anthropologists, argues that liberalism has
relativized Western societies, and by so doing, has diminished the
certainty and plausibility of Western values and cultural norms.
"Relativism liberates," he says, "but the resulting
liberty can be painful" as it challenges people's
long-nurtured assumptions and norms, driving them into the quest for
"liberation from relativism" (A Far Glory." The Quest for
Faith in an Age of Credulity, 1992). They become attracted to new
systems of beliefs and worldviews. I agree and see Islam's robust
institutions thriving in this drift of mainstream European culture.
Some Western thinkers posit that liberalism has failed to achieve
its main goal: bringing happiness into human life through secular and
material means. They note that consumerism, hedonism, anomie and so
forth, which are fruits of the liberal-materialist Weltanschauung, have
robbed man of real happiness and fulfillment. Alastair MacIntyre
attributes this predicament to liberalism's "inability to
provide any post-Christian means of understanding [man's] situation
in the world" (Secularization and Moral Change, 1967).
Caldwell says the parts of Europe that are taking on an
"increasingly Muslim character" are expanding inexorably, and
he calls it a "revolution." His failure to explore the roots
of this historic phenomenon stems from his unwillingness or inability to
look into it from outside the traditional Western vantage points.
Happily, others are making outside-the-box inquiries into
"post-Christian [and post-liberal] means of understanding" the
evolving Western civilization and culture. I call them the John the
Baptists of a new epistemic paradigm and hope that the messiah of that
paradigm is waiting in the wings.
Mustafa Malik is a writer and journalist living in Washington, D.C.