Islamophobia and the Cartoons
Statement of Socialist Resistance
Piers Mostyn
Cartoons have been published in a number of European papers attacking the Muslim religion and Muslims. Whether dressed up as “criticism,” “satire” or “humour” they are undoubtedly provocative—humiliating and offending Muslims through caricatured representations of the Muslim Prophet. Whether or not this was intended or even understood initially is now of little relevance. By the time of their reproduction in several countries it must have been.
Across the globe there have been a storm of protests that have resulted in a number of deaths. Initially debated as an issue centring on the content of the cartoons and their intent, it has predictably shifted to a focus on “extremism” in the Muslim community.
This is not an abstract question concerning religion and its criticism—reducible to debates over philosophy, theology, secularism or free speech—despite the mainstream media’s presentation.
With some exceptions, disputes over religion also tend to have a specific political meaning and dynamic, particular to the period and the place in which they occur. History is littered with examples from the 15th and 16th century European wars of supremacy in which Catholicism and Protestantism were ideological badges in a struggle for hegemony between nascent imperial powers to the waves of anti-Semitism from the 12th century to the holocaust and so on.
Today the background is one of a febrile global atmosphere of imperialist wars on Muslim countries, Islamophobia stoked up by the media, a wave of physical attacks on the Muslim community, the incessant witch hunting of “extremists” and draconian state assaults on civil liberties directed against that community. Behind this lies a political polarisation in which the far right has gained strength and mainstream political discourse (incorporating social democratic as well as rightist parties) routinely includes xenophobia, repression of migrants and so forth.
In this context the objective dynamic of the cartoons and their continued republication is one of racism against an oppressed community.
There is nothing new about this type of racism. It is more commonly known as bigotry. It has been seen in the North of Ireland where the caricaturing of Catholics in speeches, cartoons and the like as “papists” has to be understood as part of a sectarian ideology underpinning the protestant ascendancy upon which British rule is based. Such an understanding stands irrespective of the fact that Catholicism and in particular it’s hierarchy around the pope is reactionary and oppressive.
Unfortunately there were some who stood to one side - simply denouncing “sectarianism” in all communities in an abstract sense, often in the name of some “pure” form of secular class politics, and failing to defend the community under attack. This ended up, perhaps unwittingly, gutting the issue of it’s politics by allowing it to be portrayed as simply a “communal” or “religious” conflict between communities without emphasising the role of the state and imperialism.
In present circumstances the duty of all who oppose the war and racism and stand for civil liberties is to defend the Muslim community. This remains the case irrespective of the fundamentalist character of some of those who have protested against the cartoons or reactionary states that have hijacked the issue both of which should be denounced.
The current climate is fuelled by right wing, racist elements that have jumped on the bandwagon of Islamophobia and are deliberately using a legitimate “freedom of the press” as a Trojan horse for their own reactionary agenda. The rest of the establishment has either encouraged this or been powerless to confront it due to it’s complicity with or failure to oppose the recent imperialist wars and authoritarian attacks in which precisely the same community has been the prime target.
Part of this rightist agenda that needs to be challenged is the implication that the Muslim communities are in some way responsible for the racist tirade. As though “extremists” can have some how provoked it. To accept this is to ignore the political context. It is as wrong as to claim that the 9/11 attacks provided some justification for the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq.
It is simultaneously necessary to defend freedom of speech. Again this is not an abstract question and cannot be done outside of an anti-racist perspective that acknowledges the political context. Censorship of the media, particularly by the state, must be opposed.
There has to be freedom of speech on religion as on all questions of politics, philosophical outlook and morality. This is why it has been necessary to oppose the legislation proposing to criminalise the incitement of “religious hatred” that is currently being debated in the British parliament. This is not the solution. Censorship and criminalisation will only strengthen the very state power responsible for stoking up the Islamophobia in the first place.
The way to combat such racism and bigotry is through mass organisation and united front mobilisation, learning the lessons of the anti-war movement’s defence of the Muslim community and civil liberties. This will marginalise and discredit those peddling it.
Mobilisations should be around slogans that will maximise mass support and unite communities through opposition to racism and Islamophobia, defence of minority communities and linking these questions to opposition to the “war on terror” and attacks on civil liberties of which they form an integral part. Slogans that restrict defence to support for Islam or a particular interpretation of it will exclude all those from other faiths and those with none, as well as ignoring the fact that all faiths and communities comprise many different strands and are not homogenous.
There should be no curb on freedom to criticise Islam (or other religions) including by those within that community. All religions include elements that are reactionary and oppressive in particular to women and those of different sexual orientation. This needs to be challenged. It is also right to challenge the involvement of religion in the state and in education—to defend secularism.
But it is perfectly possible for such debate to respect the right of all to practice their own religion, to have pride and dignity in their culture, community and identity whilst standing firm against the racist and Islamophobic agenda and defending the Muslim community.