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– Twenty-First Century Crusades?
Prediction 2:
Acts of terror increasing throughout
Europe
Islam in France: The French
Have Themselves to Blame
by Rachid Tlemçani
Starting on Christmas Eve 1994, when four Algerian Islamists hijacked an
Air France plane, France has suffered from a wave of violence carried
out by Islamists of Algerian origins. The hijacking incident ended
several days later when French commandos stormed the hijacked jet in
Marseilles, killing the four Islamists. In reprisal, the Armed Islamic
Group (Groupe Islamique Armée -- GIA) killed four Roman Catholic priests
and it was presumably the GIA that engaged in a sequence of violent acts
between July and September 1995, leaving in all thirty-five French dead
and more than two hundred were wounded in this jihad (sacred war). The
year 1996 did not witness spectacular incidents such as those of 1995,
but smaller ones continue to take place, and the police discover
underground cells and caches of arms.
| The French expressed
fear that their land might become "a space to conquer," just as
had been the case in the eighth century. |
Although this violence may appear to be an extension of the civil war
that has wracked Algeria since January 1992, in fact the rise of
Islamism in France is not an import from Algeria but is as French as is
that country's high unemployment. In large part, Islamism results from
French policies toward North Africa, and particularly from the
immigration policies of recent decades. To understand how this is so
requires knowing something about its context -- the nineteenth-century
background, the bias against Muslims, the complete failure to absorb
Muslims into French society, and the emergence of an ultra-nationalist
and anti-immigrant movement.
The rise of Islamism in France is not an import from Algeria but is as
French as is that country's high unemployment.
Historical Background
A long history lies behind this recent spate of violent acts. The first
important crisis of the Franco-Algerian relationship took place in
1793-98 when two Algerian merchants, Bacri and Busnach, arranged
shipments of grain and other goods to the southern French provinces and
to Napoleon's armies in Egypt and Italy. These shipments were not paid
for, a debt of some 10 million francs still remained outstanding in the
1820s. On April 27, 1827, when Husayn Dey, the ruler of Algeria, asked
French Consul Pierre Deval why King Charles X of France did not respond
to his inquiry about the French debt, Deval allegedly responded that the
king could not lower himself to correspond with the dey. The latter
struck Deval with a fly swatter and ordered him out of his palace.
Two weeks later, a French squadron appeared at the Algiers port
demanding an apology for this famous coup d'évantail; when the dey
refused the French commander's demands, he blockaded Algiers. Soon
after, King Charles appointed as his prime minister Prince Charles de
Polignac, an ultra-colonialist who saw an assault on the Barbary pirates
as the first step in a strategy to extend French civilization to the
other side of the Mediterranean Sea. On March 2, 1830, the king in his
inaugural session of parliament declared war on Algeria. To strengthen
the invasion, French emissaries crossed Europe invoking Christian
solidarity against Arabs and Muslims.
Thus was a mere question of debt transformed into a clash of
civilizations, which led to an exceedingly brutal invasion; and thus did
a minor diplomatic incident precipitate a military invasion and an
occupation that lasted until 1962.
Through those 132 years, French and Algerian processes of state-building
were deeply associated with each other. In the nineteenth century,
population pressures in France generated emigration of displaced
peasants to Paris, where, underpaid or unemployed, they contributed to
the chronic unrest of the French capital. The government deported to
Algeria many of the proletarian revolutionaries of 1848, encouraged
other Parisian workers to emigrate voluntarily, and deported still
others rounded up after the Napoleonic coup d'état of December 1851. The
southern shores of the Mediterranean, in other words, served as a safety
valve for surplus urban workers and "trouble makers." A century later,
the Algerian war of independence led to the fall of the Fourth Republic
in France and the rise of the Fifth Republic in 1958, plus the
subsequent emergence of Gaullism.
Since World War II, France has absorbed large numbers of immigrants for
economic reasons, especially from its former colonies. The 1960s saw a
steady influx of more than 100,000 workers a year. This immigration
amounted to 3 million foreign workers by 1970 and 6 million in the
mid-1990s. Without this cheap source of labor, France could not have
modernized its economy. Today, however, as it makes the transition from
an industrial economy to a service economy, France no longer needs
unskilled or semi-skilled foreign labor.
More than that: as the French confront Islamism, some of them see
Muslims once again on an inevitable collision course with the West.
While this problem echoes conflicts going back to the Byzantine Empire,
the Crusades, and modern European imperialism, the issue has changed. It
used to concern control of territory; now it's primarily a matter of
demographics. The Muslim population is growing more than five times
faster than the European one, to the point that the world Muslim
population will probably match the Christian by the year 2020. Europeans
fear that sheer population size will be used as a strategic political
weapon; then, coupled with the growing military capability of the Muslim
world, this will pose a serious challenge to Europe. French
intellectuals -- even those on the left -- agree on the existence of an
"Islamic threat" to Western civilization.
While the European confrontation with Islamism echoes ancient conflicts,
the issue has changed. It used to concern control of territory; now it's
primarily a matter of demographics.
France vs. FIS
This outlook has clear foreign policy implications: it explains why
France is the main enemy of FIS. When four Algerian terrorists hijacked
an Air France plane in December 1994, the GIA issued a revealing
statement, calling on Paris to end its "unconditional political,
military and economic aid" to the Algerian government.
The sharp tensions that so often characterize the main decisions of
French foreign policy (concerning, for example, Rwanda, Bosnia, and
nuclear testing in the South Pacific) are absent when the subject is
Algeria. French governments, whether the previous socialist government
of François Mitterrand or the current Gaullist one of Jacques Chirac,
agree on the need to provide help to the military-led government in
Algiers. The slaying of the terrorists then turned the commandos who
stormed the airliner into national French heroes. French opposition to
an Islamist takeover has been consistent from the very beginning of the
Algerian crisis. Mitterrand did not condemn the repression of student
riots in October 1988, in which some five hundred teenagers were killed;
and he heaved a sigh of relief when elections were suspended in January
1992 to prevent the Islamists from taking power. Pasqua, the former
interior minister (and the official who directed Algeria policy much
more than did Foreign Minister Juppé), denied the possibility of a
"moderate" Islamism. He went so far as sharply and publicly to criticize
the U.S., British, and German governments for "leniency" and
"complacency" with regard to the Algerian Islamists. The interior
minister's prominent role sent an implicit message that Algeria is a
domestic French issue.
At the same time, this hard-line French policy toward radical Islam in
Algeria puts it at odds with both its European partners and the United
States. Juppé unapologetically acknowledged these differences: "One of
the tasks we have assigned ourselves is to make the situation a little
better understood, since we claim, as far as the Algerian file is
concerned, to have a certain experience or expertise."
Bias against Muslims
Perhaps even more important, French fears of Islam explain why Algerians
living in France face a variety of problems, including legal bias
against them, against their places of worship, and against their wearing
the clothes they choose.
Legal issues. Accordingly, the French authorities started to tighten up
on the entry of North African immigrants in the early 1970s. Already in
1974, the borders were closed, and immigration became very difficult.
Family reunion (regroupement familial), a very long bureaucratic
procedure, is the only legal device available to those wishing to
immigrate. A voluntary repatriation scheme was initiated in 1977; in
1980, the law was changed to allow French-born North Africans to be
deported. The 1980 law forced approximately 4,000 migrants a year to
leave; many of them had long lived and worked in France and had children
with French citizenship. In 1986, Minister of the Interior Charles
Pasqua approved a measure to remove the right of due process for
immigrants facing deportation, and a year later, 17,000 such
deportations took place. To top it off, hundreds of illegal people have
been deported every month in the 1990s. In March 1993, Pasqua introduced
further restrictions on immigration, with the widely quoted rationale
that "France no longer wants to be a country of immigration." When the
anti-foreign campaign in Algeria became more violent in 1993, Pasqua
warned of further restrictions if French citizens were targeted by
terrorists.
The wave of violence in 1995 forced Prime Minister Alain Juppé's
government to reinforce an emergency plan, code named "Vigipirate," to
mobilize as many as 40,000 police officers, including more than 5,000
soldiers, to security tasks throughout the country. Security agents
check bags in the main government buildings and department stores.
Identity checks on the street of two million individuals take place with
skin color and personal appearance very much kept in mind (as during the
Algerian war of independence). These security checks raise questions
about the French government's commitment to the protection of civil
liberties for resident North Africans. Detention and deportation of
suspect activists without charge or trial contravenes both their civic
rights and international law.
In November 1993, for example, the authorities unceremoniously deported
a (non-French-speaking) Turkish imam who preached that, in the matter of
wearing headscarves, "God takes precedence over French law." On August
31, 1994, the interior ministry deported thirteen Islamist activists to
the West African country of Burkana Faso (formerly, Upper Volta),
completely bypassing the normal channels of French justice. Jean-Louis
Debré, the interior minister, said in September 1995 that France plans
to expel 20,000 illegal immigrants every year, stepping up the current
figure by 50 percent. Other steps taken against Muslims also contravene
the law. Government authorities slapped a rare ban on a book on April
28, 1995, Yusuf al-Qaradawi's The Lawful and the Prohibited in Islam,
finding it "contrary to national values." Starting on November 9, 1993,
and then repeatedly during 1994 and 1995, the police conducted a series
of raids and arrested alleged supporters of the Islamic Salvation Front
(FIS) and Algerians in general (including myself), on the assumption
that Algerians are potential terrorists. It hardly needs stressing that
these abuses would not be tolerated in the United States.
Mosques. While mosques have mushroomed in France, so that they number
approximately 1,200, proper mosques with minarets number only six in
France -- this despite the Muslim community's numbering over 4 million,
out of a total population of 56 million, making it the second largest
religious community in France. Most mosques are no more than prayer
rooms, many of them located in basements. Mosques provoke undue anxiety
on the part of the Christian French. Take the story of the Grand Mosque
in Lyons. When the idea of building this mosque was first broached in
1979, it prompted a heated debate. Jean-Marie Le Pen's National Front
fiercely opposed its building on the assumption that this mosque would
become a breeding ground for extremist activities. Indeed, the Lyons
mosque helped fuel the growing strength of his newly created
ultra-nationalist party. Against all odds, the mosque's cornerstone was
laid in 1992 and then only because King Fahd of Saudi Arabia took a
personal interest in the structure. The Saudi government contributed
two-thirds of its $6 million cost (in contrast to the local Muslim
community's collecting only $60,000) and lobbied hard for permission to
build the edifice. In October 1994, France's second largest place of
Islamic worship finally opened. But the Lyons mosque hardly won a warm
welcome; coming at a time of escalating violence in Algeria, the French
perceived it as a triumph of radical Islamism as voiced by Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini, a fear to some extent well founded; and a symbol of
hope in the event of a huge influx of immigrants from Algeria. The
French expressed fear that their land might become "a space to conquer,"
just as had been the case in the eighth century. In fact, this mosque,
like the country's five other real mosques, offers a focal point for
Muslims on Fridays and religious days. The Grand Mosque in Paris has
even emerged as a popular symbol of reconciliation among France's
religions and ethnic groups.
Abdelhamid Chibane, the Lyons mosque's grand mufti, has lately been
accused of indulgence toward Islamist militants. It seems that Chirane,
an Algerian-born scholar who has spent the last thirty years in France,
did not react when Islamists handed out fliers in the mosque component
calling for the violent overthrow of the Algerian regime and the
establishment of Islamic republics in Muslim countries.
The headscarf controversy. The most publicized confrontation with
Islamists erupted in December 1989 around the question of laïcité, or
the separation of church and state. It began when a high school
principal banned three girls from wearing an Islamic-style headscarf
inside the building on the grounds that this practice violated a
tradition of secular education in France. The socialist government urged
that the girls be persuaded to take off their scarves -- but be allowed
to wear them if they insisted. When a government council ruled that the
issue would be left to local school officials to decide, some girls were
suspended by their principals.
The scarf has rapidly become an arena of combat for radical
fundamentalists fighting secularism in France. In September 1994, a
confusing ministerial recommendation was enacted that bans "ostentatious
signs" of one's religious beliefs. The Federation of National Education
supported this edict without restriction but it drew strong protests
from groups that represent immigrants or civil-liberties organizations
-- as well as from extremist fundamentalists. For many Muslim girls (and
their parents), the scarf is not an "ostentatious sign" of faith but
serves as a form of passive resistance against the exclusion and
marginalization they face. Forty or so girls have been expelled from
schools in four French cities for wearing Islamic headscarves, something
that is not against the law in other Western countries (for example,
England or Denmark). With the rise of the FIS, the number of Algerian
girls wearing the headscarf has increased, as have the passions
expressed in the media.
The Failure to Integrate Muslims
Beurs
The second generation of North African origin, nicknamed the beurs,
express frustration and despair at being second-class citizens. In a
society that has more than 13 percent unemployment and that has become
increasingly hostile toward immigrants, especially North Africans, they
have little hope of upward mobility. According to many, France has never
fully accepted North African immigrants, and the second generation
perhaps even less than the first. That they speak French fluently and
readily absorb French culture does not make them welcome in France as
earlier waves of immigrants had been, including the Jews and
Protestants, Italians and Russians. Even those Algerians who are
relatively well integrated into French society, and who think of
themselves as French or Westernized, find themselves sometimes treated
differently than the indigenous French people. Most North Africans feel
they are trapped in a hopeless downward spiral of joblessness, racial
discrimination, and clashes with police. What the inner cities are to
the United States, the banlieus (suburbs) are to France.
For example, on September 29, 1995, at the end of a long manhunt, French
television viewers watched as the police cornered Khaled Kelkal, a
24-year-old beur accused of involvement in terrorists acts, into a dark
street in Lyons. In the course of a shootout, the police killed him.
Afterwards, one police officer kicked his body; to make matters worse,
another screamed "Finish him off! Finish him off!" Many Algerians, while
accepting the need to go after Kelkal, found the police actions
excessive; "They shot him to death like a dog to teach all of us a
lesson," was a widely heard comment.
It is an overstatement to say that French suburbs are swept by a radical
Islamist wave; Algerians in France are no more Muslim than the French
are Catholic. Islamists arrested for terrorist acts were born not in
Algeria but in France; they had enrolled in French schools where,
socialized in the shadow of Le Pen's National Front, they learned about
"our ancestors the Gauls" with blue eyes and blond hair. Undoubtedly,
some of them learned the arts of guerrilla warfare under Western
auspices, part of the effort to defeat the Soviets in Afghanistan. These
men returned to France and Algeria, where they fought for the GIA and
engaged in attacks so savage they are beyond imagination. The crackdown
of urban guerrilla cells during the spring of 1994 did not prevent the
wave of violence that took place in mid-1995, for the fighters are
immersed like fishes in the water in the Arab enclaves bordering the
larger cities. In these enclaves, television satellite dishes, which
mushroomed after the Kuwait war, help Muslim communities receive Arabic
programming from overseas, including Islamist speeches.
Organizations
By the end of the Mitterrand period, racial and ethnic integration had
failed at every level of French society. This failure explains the large
and increasing number of Islamic associations in France that attempt to
"re-Islamize" Muslim communities. In the 1970s and early 1980s, these
associations, such as Jama`at at-Tabligh (Society for the Spreading of
Islam), financed essentially by the petrodollars of Saudi Arabia and
Kuwait, were involved in social and cultural activities (such as helping
school dropouts and drug addicts, and giving financial assistance to
needy families).
As a sign of the proliferation of associations, the Union of Islamic
Organizations in France (UOIF) brought together just thirty associations
in 1980 and approximately 200 in 1995. The UOIF attempts to win hallal
meat (the Islamic equivalent of kosher) in school and factory cafeterias
with substantial numbers of Muslims and tries to institutionalize the
teaching of Arabic in certain schools. The Union of Young Muslims (UJM),
a grassroots organization in Lyons, attempts to get North African
Muslims more involved in local politics. FIS militants created the
Fraternité algérienne en France (FAF) in 1991, preaching violence as the
only language that Algerian officials understand and denouncing neither
the slaying of intellectuals or foreigners in Algeria. Their bulletin,
(called initially Critère, then Résistance, and finally Etendard) has
not, however, been well received among Algerians, who do not appreciate
its political stands. On the other hand, the Haut Conseil à
l'intégration (High Council for Integration), established in 1990 to
regulate problems of "integration," remains today a mere bureaucratic
institution. Its failure has allowed Islamist militants to recruit from
a vast pool of angry, alienated, and unemployed Arab youngsters, some of
whom are ready to engage in acts of terrorism. Their life in the suburbs
is a Hobbesian "all against all" existence of vice and violence. To
develop a "French Islam" that is compatible with the French concept of
laïcité, the authorities in January 1994 established the Institute of
Theology at Nievre, which aims at promoting a "secular Islam" and at
educating French-born imams to replace those brought from abroad. The
UOIF and other organizations hope to control its teaching and syllabus.
The National Front
The National Front, founded in 1972, has emerged in the 1990s as the
primary challenger to the Fifth Republic and its status as a liberal
democracy. The common denominator of Le Pen's militants, like those
backing any ultra-rightist party, is their hatred of immigrants, who are
blamed for society's ills, like crime and unemployment. Within a single
decade, support for this party rose from 1 to 16 percent of the
electorate, even as all the other parties lost ground. The party's
ideological influence is greater than its raw numbers suggest, for one
out of three persons of voting age admits to agreeing with some of Le
Pen's ideas, namely, the expulsion of three million Arabs. These ideas
have become paramount in today's political discourse, even among parties
of the Left.
This ultra-nationalist party represents a coalition of colonial war
veterans, Vichy nostalgics, and fundamentalist Catholics. The growing
fracture sociale of rising unemployment, social exclusion, and racial
tension permits the National Front to attract those disappointed and
alienated. A substantial number of those who used to support the
Communist Party and the Socialist Party now support the proponents of
xenophobic autarky. The areas where Le Pen has substantially progressed
are strongly working-class, such as the defunct mining region of Nord-Pas-de-Calais.
Le Pen's social base is shifting from the upper middle class to the
lower middle class and the Lumpenproletariat. Between 1988 and 1995,
blue-collar support for the Socialist Party fell from percent 42 to 21
percent, while that of the National Front grew from 16 to 27 percent.
The Left as a whole is unable to reproduce itself in areas that were in
the past its reservoirs of support.
The rise of Islamism explains why the immigration issue, peripheral in
the 1970s and the 1980s, has become so central to French politics today.
Old discussions about immigrant workers now concern solely Muslims or
Algerians. The French justify their treatment of foreigners less on the
basis of skin color than fear that their culture threatens French
civilization and identity. Muslims are frequently accused of being an
alien presence, fundamentally at odds with a "host society" presented as
too merciful and tolerant. Immigrants are no longer rejected as
unskilled but as different, so different they cannot be assimilated.
To recapture the support of voters lost to the National Front, the
Chirac government (as well as its leftist opposition) has embraced harsh
measures against Arab communities. It dispatches more money to the
police to fight violence in the suburbs. Rather than create more jobs
for young members of minority groups, the government favors more
effective tools to fight social violence and terrorism. This "iron fist"
policy in fact implements Le Pen's politics, just as the Socialists
implemented the Right's politics in the past. If the socioeconomic
crisis is further exacerbated, Le Pen could take power through
democratic means, much as Hitler did in 1933. If he does, then the "old
French stock" (français de souche) will seek their own "final solution,"
in this case meaning the deportation of foreigners, Algerians in
particular.
The rise of the National Front is symptomatic of an identity crisis that
has raised fundamental questions about France itself. Who is français de
souche? Are Algerians born in France eligible to claim citizenship and
then for political participation? Felt throughout the West, this crisis
attains its purest expression in France, where cultural difference in
the public sphere is seen most negatively, as most antithetical to the
French tradition and to social cohesion. The "right to be different"
rarely goes beyond the simple tolerance of other cultures.
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