MUSLIM DIASPORA AND IDENTITY POLITICS
By Kazi Anwarul Masud (former Secretary and
ambassador of Bangladesh )
Perhaps
the leaders of the world may wish to look back to the events of a century back
that caused the world millions of lives and untold misery of the First World War
(Oxford University International History Professor Margaret Macmillan-Rhyme of History).
Introspection into the causes of the First Great War could reveal whether it
was caused by the overweening ambitions
of Kaiser Wilhelm II and his ministers for a greater Germany with a global
reach that could challenge the naval supremacy of Great Britain or in the sheer
and seemingly unstoppable momentum of militarism? Or the War would never have
happened but for a random event of the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand heir-presumptive
of Austro-Hungarian throne ? Has the world changed
so much since the absolute predominance of the United States in global affairs has
been now replaced by multilateralism with a growing China and a restless Russia
under Vladimir Putin? Despite Robert Kagan and Niall Ferguson’s dream of an unchallenged American
might and unflinching belief in American Exceptionalism (no less believed by
President Barak Obama) Fareed Zakaria’s Rise of the Rest cannot be dismissed
out of hand. Margaret Macmillan wished “if
we can see past our blinders and take note of the telling parallels between
then and now, the ways in which our world resembles that of a hundred years
ago, history does give us valuable warnings”. Of
the many destabilizing factors the world now has to face the despicable
brutalities of the Islamic State, Boko Haram, al-Qaeda and their cohorts. Macmillan
finds it disturbing that while all of the world’s major religions—Buddhism, Hinduism,
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam—have produced their share of terrorists
prepared to commit murder and mayhem in their name “the young offspring of Muslim parents from
Pakistan and Bangladesh, even those born or raised in the United Kingdom and
North America, going off to make common cause with Syrian rebels, the Taliban
in Afghanistan, or one of the branches of al Qaeda in North Africa or Yemen,
despite sharing almost nothing—culturally or ethnically—with those whose cause
they have taken up”. Albeit there can be no
defense for the terrorism and despicable brutalities perpetrated by the terrorists
the international community should remain conscious of the risks of identity
politics by marginalized segment of societies on ground of religion. Alarming
reports continue to pour in of violence threatening to become structural in
Western societies where many people have started to look at Muslims, living for
generations in their adopted countries, with suspicion. When loyalty to the
country is questioned then the emergence of identity politics becomes
inevitable. Javier Solana, former Spanish Foreign Minister, Secretary General
of NATO, and European Union's High Representative for Foreign and Security Policy has
recently observed that ( Europe's Jihadi Generation-January 27 2015) the
story of exclusion has been repeated millions of times in the countries of
Western Europe, with immigrants and their families ending up poor and excluded.
In the worst-case scenario, they are recruited by extremist groups that seem to
offer what they are missing: a sense of belonging, identity, and purpose. After
a lifetime of marginalization, participation in a larger cause can seem worth
the lies, self-destruction, and even death that inclusion demands. Europe needs to take a good look at itself. It must
recognize that second- and third-generation immigrants are susceptible to the
blandishments of terrorist organizations because European citizenship has not
translated into social and economic inclusion. Chicago University Professor
late Iris Marion Young’s description of
the adherents of identity politics is to
secure the political freedom of a specific constituency marginalized within its
larger context in order to assert or
reclaim ways of understanding their distinctiveness that challenge dominant
oppressive characterizations with the goal of greater self-determination. Others
have added that what makes identity
politics a significant departure from earlier, pre-identarian forms of the
politics of recognition is its demand for recognition on the basis of the very
grounds on which recognition had previously been denied. The demand is not for
inclusion within the fold of “universal humankind” on the basis of shared human
attributes; nor is it for respect “in spite of” one's differences. Rather, what
is demanded is respect for oneself as different. Apart from the differentiation
cited by Bernard Lewis and Samuel Huntington, to name a few, Islamophobia and
Eurobia appear to have attracted the imagination of Europeans, mainly the
French as among European nations France has the largest number of Muslim
population accusing “among a generation of Muslims born in Europe, significant
number have nothing but contempt and disdain for their native lands and have
allegiance only to the Muslim ummah and the lands of their parents”. He
strongly criticized the Arab European League for rejecting any idea of
assimilation or integration into European society and the AEL founder Abu
Jahjah for terming assimilation as “cultural rape". Such obnoxious comment
challenging the loyalty of a citizen who had never seen the land of his/her
parents or ancestors should held in utter contempt. In the same vein John Rex (National Identity
in the Democratic Multi-Cultural State) suggests that national ideology
established by the majority community may face corrosiveness by immigration of
people from countries that have different culture and religion. He adds that
many such migrants are likely to have a dual loyalty to their nations of origin
and the nations amongst whom they settle. It is even more obviously true of
Indians, Pakistanis and Bangladeshis who migrate to Britain and, either
directly or via Britain, to the United States. Members of the various
sub-communities amongst these South Asian migrants may then feel that they
belong to transnational communities spread across the world from Fiji to
California. The question is how such transnational communities should be
conceptualized. The first thing to note is that the basic unit to which an individual
feels attached is an extended family seeking to improve its economic estate.
The second thing to note, however, is that faced with competition abroad these
families may also feel that, amongst other competing families the markers of
religion, language and shared customs may serve to indicate that some of the
other competing extended families are also their potential allies in taking
collective action in countries of settlement. While this may not mean a tight
structured organization of the migrant community on ethnic lines, it does mean
that individuals are conscious of ethnic boundaries. The response to
immigration by established societies to the presence of these minorities might
take one of three forms. It may involve attempts to assimilate the minorities
on equal terms as citizens; it may seek to subordinate them to a dominant
ethnic group as second class citizens or, it may recognize cultural diversity
in the private communal sphere while maintaining a shared public political
culture. The refusal by European nations among the developed economies to
recognize cultural diversity or multiculturalism by Angela Merkel, Berlusconi, and
Giscard D'Estaing among other politicians strengthens resistance from the
minority ethnic groups. The inevitable result of attempted subordination by the
majority community has brought about chaos in the global society already
afflicted with a real possibility of survival if the projections of climate
change scientists were to be proven right notwithstanding the dissention on the
question of historical responsibility of carbon emission. It is time, as Javier
Solana points out, to accept that religion is not only a belief system; it is
also an institution, a language, and even a kind of market actor, competing for
supporters. Radical terrorist groups attempt to consolidate their distorted
version of “true” Islam as the only institution, imposing their language to win
the entire Muslim market. Indeed, it was the failed transitions in Syria,
Libya, and Yemen after the Arab Spring revolts that fueled the Islamic State’s
emergence. Millions of young people, disillusioned by decades of social
paralysis, unemployment, and brutal dictatorships, had dared to expect better.
One simply cannot wish away more one billion Muslims through force. George Bush
and Tony Blair tried and failed. In their book Cutting the Fuse by Robert Pape and James K. Feldman found increased suicide attacks from 2004 and 2009 compared to a total of 350
during the period of 1980 through 2003. Increased suicide attacks has been
attributed to anti-Americanism, U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East, and
in particular, the invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan where most of the attacks
have taken place. Besides contrary to popular notion that the attackers come
from poor and uneducated background they were opposed to foreign occupation and
in the case of Iraq they perceived American presence as assisting subordination
of the Sunnis by the Shias. Though decades might have passed since the
"arrival" of the first generation of immigrants the native Europeans
may still be considering the socio-economic costs of immigration. In the case of Britain, for example, the
Office of Budget Responsibility feels that immigration "does tend to
produce a more beneficial picture" for the Government’s finances. The
Budget Office advised that Britain would need more migrants to finance the
rising cost of pensions, social care and National Health Service. Without
immigration national debt will soar to 175 % of the GDP in the next fifty
years. In the case of the US recent studies demonstrate that the higher
earnings of legalized workers yield more tax revenue, more consumer buying
power, and more jobs. American Immigration Council positively views
immigration. Recent studies suggest that the economic value of a new
legalization program would be substantial, amounting to tens of billions of
dollars in added income, billions of dollars in additional tax revenue, and
hundreds of thousands of new jobs for native-born and immigrant workers alike.
In short, a new legalization program for unauthorized immigrants would benefit
everyone by growing the economy and expanding the labor market. But critics are
there to contest the benefits of immigration. In a vicious commentary against
"immigrationists" The Guardian( May 17 2009) review of Christopher Caldwell’s Reflections on the Revolution in Europe:
Immigration, Islam, and the West—observed that Caldwell cut to shreds the conventional wisdom of the
"immigrationist" ideology - the view that mass immigration is
inevitable and in any case a necessary injection of youth into our ageing
continent. He demolished the economic and welfare- state arguments for mass
immigration and pointed out that in most countries there was no desperate need
for extra workers in the 1950s - in Britain's case, Ireland still provided a
reserve army of labor". But Professor
Bruce B. Lawrence of Duke University found Caldwell’s
diatribe as a full-throttle polemic
meant to raise alarms, stoke fears, and tame a danger at once unseen and
misunderstood yet pernicious and widespread. The danger is Islam, the villains
are Muslim immigrants, the terrain is the West, and the outcome is certain
defeat for European culture by the tide of Muslim immigration. One hopes that the Muslims, and in particular
Muslim Diaspora in the West, would not have to tread "the path of progressive
alienation" and become a second class citizen in the country of their
birth. The international community must realize and act in the belief that
religion is a private matter for the individual and those trying to bring about
an age of darkness have to be confronted and destroyed.
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