If we in the West
really want to overcome racism, the first thing to do is to leave behind this
politically correct process of endless self-culpabilization.
The big news of the
last week was the deal between Turkey and European Union on how to contain and
regulate the flow of refugees. It brought a sigh of relief: The crisis is over.
Europe succeeded in stemming the Muslim invasion without betraying humanitarian
compassion. But did it? To see clearly what is wrong with this deal, let
us reach back to one of our great classics. In Canto VI of Inferno
(lines 77-89), Dante speaks to the glutton Ciacco and asks of the fate of the
men of good reason, men who dedicated their life to the good of the city:
And I continued
thus: “Still would I learn
More from thee,
further parley still entreat.
Of Farinata and
Tegghiaio say,
They who so well
deserved; of Giacopo,
Arrigo,
Mosca, and the rest, who bent
Their minds on
working good. Oh! tell me where
They bide, and to
their knowledge let me come.
For I am prest with
keen desire to hear
If Heaven’s sweet
cup, or poisonous drug of Hell,
Be to their lip
assign’d.” He answer’d straight:
“These are yet
blacker spirits. Various crimes
Have sunk them
deeper in the dark abyss.
If thou so far
descendest, thou mayst see them.”
Imagine we were to
visit the Hell now and find there in the Third Circle today's Ciacco, a
gluttonous Western European who ignores the plight of migrants, focused as he
is on continuing undisturbed his consumption. If we were to ask him “But tell
me, where are all those humanitarians who bent their minds on working good?”,
would he not snap back: “You will have to descend much deeper, their souls are
much blacker than mine!” Why? Is this reaction not too cruel?
The point is that,
self-critical as it may appear to be, the humanitarian reaction almost
imperceptibly transforms a political-economic problem into a moral one of
“refugee crisis” and of “helping the victims.” Further, rather
than attacking the silent, low-class majority as racist and ignorant of
the immigrants’ plight, or, at best, as stupid victims of racist big media
propaganda, would not the truly humanitarian reaction be to address their
actual concerns that express themselves in a racist way?
Lesson from Jacques Lacan
Jacques
Lacan wrote that, even if what a jealous husband claims about his wife (that
she sleeps around with other men) is all true, his jealousy is still
pathological. Why is this? The more pertinent question is not “Is his jealousy
well-grounded?” but “Why does he need jealousy to maintain his
self-identity?”. Along the same lines, one could say that, even if most of the
Nazi claims about the Jews were true (they exploit Germans, they seduce German
girls …)—which they are not, of course—their anti-Semitism would still be (and
was) pathological since it represses the true reason why the Nazis needed
anti-Semitism in order to sustain their ideological position.
And is it
not exactly the same with the growing fear of refugees and immigrants? To
extrapolate it to the extreme: even if most of our prejudices about immigrants
were proven to be true (they are hidden fundamentalist terrorists, they rape
and they steal), the paranoiac talk about the immigrant threat is still an
ideological pathology, it tells more about us, Europeans, than about
immigrants. The true question is not “Are immigrants a real threat to
Europe?” but “What does this obsession with the immigrant threat tell us
about the weakness of Europe?”
So there are two
dimensions here which should be kept apart. One is the atmosphere of fear—fear
of an upcoming struggle against the Islamization of Europe—with its own
absurdities: refugees who flee terror are equated with the terrorists they are
escaping from. Obviously, among the refugees are also terrorists, rapists, criminals,
etc., but the vast majority are desperate people looking for a better life (in
the same way that during the Cold War, among the refugees from the German
Democratic Republic were hidden STASI agents). Among Europe's xenophobes,
however, this is given a paranoiac twist—immigrants appear (or pretend) to be
desperate refugees, while in reality they are the spearheads of a new Islamic
invasion of Europe. By way of this twist, the cause of problems that are
immanent to today’s global capitalism is projected onto an external intruder:
instead of refugees who are ultimately the victims of global capitalism, we get
fundamentalist terrorists who threaten our way of life from outside.
Paranoid Europe
A suspicious gaze
always funds what it is looking for, “proofs” are everywhere, even if half
of them are soon proven to be fakes. One should especially emphasize this point
today when, all around Europe, the fear of refugees’s invasion is reaching
truly paranoiac proportions: people who haven’t seen not one actual refugee
react aggresively to the very proposal of establishing a refugee center in
their proximity; stories about incidents catch imagination, spread like
wildfire and persist even after they are clearly proven false. This is why the
worst reaction to the racist anti-immigrant paranoia is to ignore eventual
incidents and problems with immigrants, arguing that every critical mention of
immigrants only feeds the racist enemies. Against this reasoning, one should
point out, that it is such silence that really helps our racist enemies in that
it feeds the distrust of ordinary people—(“You see, they are not telling us the
truth!”)—boosting the credibility of racist rumors and lies.
The other dimension
is the tragi-comic spectacle of endless self-culpabilization of a Europe that
allegedly betrayed its humanity, of a murderous Europe leaving thousands of
drowned bodies at its borders. This is a self-serving exercise with no
emancipatory potential whatsoever. Furthermore, the accent on humanitarian
catastrophe deftly de-politicizes the situation. No wonder Angela Merkel
recently said: “Do you seriously believe that all the Euro states that last
year fought all the way to keep Greece in the Eurozone—and we were the
strictest —can one year later allow Greece to, in a way, plunge into chaos?”
This statement clearly renders the basic lie of her humanitarian position: it
is part of a stick-and-carrot approach, with humanitarian help as a bonus for
politico-economic surrender.
We should apply to
the humanitarians who bemoan “the end of Europe” the great Hegelian lesson:
when someone is painting a picture of Europe’s overall and utmost moral
degeneration, the question to be raised is in what way such a stance is
complicit in what it criticizes. No wonder that, with the exception of
humanitarian appeals to compassion and solidarity, the effects of such
compassionate self-flagellation are null. A couple of years ago, Danish
Leftists ironically talked about “white woman’s burden”—their duty to have sex
with immigrant men who suffer sexual deprivation. One should not be surprised
to see some “radicals” proposing the same solution for Germany and all of
Western Europe?
Politically correct self-flagellation
If we in the West
really want to overcome racism, the first thing to do is to leave behind this
politically correct process of endless self-culpabilization. Alhough French
philosopher Pascal Bruckner’s critique of today’s Left often approaches
ridicule, this doesn’t prevent him from occasionally generating pertinent
insights. One cannot but agree with him when he detects in the European
politically correct self-flagellation the inverted clinging to one’s
superiority. Whenever the West is attacked, its first reaction is not
aggressive defence but self-probing: what did we do to deserve it? We are
ultimately to be blamed for the evils of the world, the Third World
catastrophes and terrorist violence are merely reactions to our crimes… the
positive form of the White Man’s Burden (responsibility for civilizing the
colonized barbarians) is thus merely replaced by its negative form (the burden
of white man’s guilt): if we can no longer be the benevolent masters of the
Third World, we can at least be the privileged source of evil, patronizingly
depriving them of their responsibility for their fate (if a Third World country
engages in terrible crimes, it is never their full responsibility, but always
an after-effect of colonization: They merely imitate what the colonial masters
were doing, etc.):
We need our
miserabilist clichés about Africa, Asia, Latin America, in order to confirm the
cliché of a predatory, deadly West. Our noisy stigmatizations only serve to
mask the wounded self-love: We no longer make the law. Other cultures know it,
and they continue to culpabilize us only to escape our judgments on them.
The West is thus caught in the typical superego predicament
best rendered by Dostoyevsky’s famous phrase from his The Brothers Karamazov:
“Each of us is guilty before everyone for everyone, and I more than the
others.” So the more the West confesses its crimes, the more it is made to
feel culpable. This insight allows us also to detect a symmetric duplicity in
the way the Third World countries criticize the West: If the West’s continuous
self-flagellation for the Third World evils functions as a desperate attempt to
re-assert our superiority, the true reason why the Third World hates and
rejects the West is not the colonizing past and its continuing effects but the
self-critical spirit which the West displayed in renouncing this past, with the
implicit call to others to practice the same self-critical approach. Bruckner writes, “The West is
not detested for its real faults, but for its attempt to amend them, because it
was one of the first to try to tear itself out of its own bestiality, inviting
the rest of the world to follow it.”
Western standards, the good and the bad
The Western legacy
is effectively not just that of (post)colonial imperialist domination, but also
that of the self-critical examination of the violence and exploitation that the
West brought to the Third World. The French colonized Haiti, but the French
Revolution also provided the ideological foundation to the rebellion that
liberated the slaves and established the independent Haiti; the process of
decolonization was set in motion when the colonized nations demanded for
themselves the same rights that the West took for itself. In short, one should
never forget that the West provided the very standards by means of which it (as
well as its critics) measures its criminal past. We are dealing here with the
dialectic of form and content: When colonial countries demand independence and
enact the “return to roots,” the very form of this return (that of an
independent Nation-State) is Western. In its very defeat (losing the colonies),
the West thus wins, imposing its social form onto the other.
When Leftist
liberals endlessly vary the motif of how the rise of terrorism is the result of
Western colonial and military interventions in the Middle East, so that we are
ultimately responsible for it, their analysis, although pretending to be
respectful towards others, stands out as a blatant case of patronizing
chauvinism that reduces the Other to a passive victim and deprives it of any
agenda. What such a view fails to see is how Arabs are in no way just passive
victims of European and American neocolonial machinations. Their different
courses of action are not just reactions, they are different forms of active
engagement in their predicament: expansive and aggressive push towards Islamization
(financing mosques in foreign countries, etc.), open warfare against the West,
etc., all these are ways of actively engaging in a situation with a
well-defined goal.
What the European
emancipatory legacy should be defended from is thus primarily Europeans
themselves, namely the anti-immigrant populists who see Europe threatened by
the over-tolerant multicultural Left. It is easy to say that Muslim immigrants
who violate our rules should be thrown out and sent back from where they come
from—but what about those among ourselves who violate our emancipatory legacy?
Where should they be thrown? One should be more attentive to the hidden
proximity between them and fundamentalist Islamists, especially in view of the
sudden, convenient discovery of women’s and gay rights by anti-immigrant
populists. The obscenity of the situation is breath-taking: The very people
who, in our countries, continuously mock and attack abortion rights and gay
marriages are now reborn as defenders of Western freedoms! Suffice it to recall
Europe’s staunchest defender against the Muslim threat, Viktor Orbán,
the rightist prime minister of Hungary. In autumn 2015, he justified closing
the border with Serbia as an act of the defense of Christian Europe against
invading Muslims. Is this the same Orbán who, back in the Summer of
2012, said that in Central Europe a new economic system must be built:
[A]nd let us hope
that God will help us and we will not have to invent a new type of political
system instead of democracy that would need to be introduced for the sake of
economic survival. … Cooperation is a question of force, not of intention.
Perhaps there are countries where things don’t work that way, for example in
the Scandinavian countries, but such a half-Asiatic rag-tag people as we are
can unite only if there is force.
The irony of these
lines was not lost on some old Hungarian dissidents. When in 1956 the Soviet
army moved into Budapest to crush the anti-Communist uprising, the message
repeatedly sent by the beleaguered Hungarian leaders to the West was: “We are
defending Europe here.” (Against the Asiatic Communists, of course.) Now, after
the collapse of Communism, Hungary’s Christian-conservative government paints
as its main enemy Western multi-cultural consumerist liberal democracy, for
which today’s Western Europe stands, and calls for a new more organic
communitarian order to replace the “turbulent” liberal democracy of the last
two decades. Orbán has already expressed his sympathies with the
»capitalism with Asian values, «so if the European pressure on Orbán
continues, we can easily imagine him sending a message to the East along these
lines: “We are defending Asia here!” (And—to add an ironic twist—from the
West European racist perspective, are not today’s Hungarians descendants of the
early medieval Huns? Attila is even today a popular Hungarian name.)
Is there a
contradiction between these two Orbáns: Orbán the friend of Putin
who resents liberal-democratic West and Orbán the defender of Christian
Europe? There is none. The two faces of Orbán provide the proof (if it
were needed) that the principal threat to Europe comes not in the shape of
Muslim immigrants but its anti-immigrant populist defenders. (The same goes for
the Polish government elected last October that wants to protect Polish
traditions from the EU multicultural pressure: it is more and more obvious that
its true enemy is Europe itself, its emancipatory core.)
Two faces of the same threat
So it’s not a question
of maintaining a “proper balance” between Muslim fundamentalists and Christian
anti-immigrant populists—they are the two faces of the same threat.
Multicultural identity politics with its respect for the Other’s way of life
essentially stigmatizes others in their identity—this is the feature shared by
the two opposing stances, the one that perceives Islam as a threat to our way
of life and the one that perceives Muslims as a friendly other and the
difference that separates us as an enriching difference. Our very predominant
reaction to the Muslim Otherness, keeping them at a distance (of hatred or
respect), thereby helps the “threat” to become reality.
This is why there is
no place for a negotiated compromise here, no point at which the two sides may
agree (“Okay, anti-immigrant paranoiacs exaggerate, but there are some
fundamentalists among the refugees.”). Even the minimal accuracy of the
anti-immigrant racist’s claims does not serve as a true argument for his
paranoia, and, on the opposite side, the humanitarian self-culpabilization is
thoroughly narcissistic: liberal humanitarians ultimately talk only about
themselves, they are totally closed to the immigrant Neighbor. Everything “bad”
about the other is dismissed either as our (Western racist) projection onto the
other or as the result of our (Western imperialist) mistreatment (colonial
violence) of the other. What lies beyond this closed circle of ourselves and
our projections (or, rather, the projections of our “repressed” evil side onto
the other)—in other words what we encounter as the “authentic” other when
we truly open ourselves up to this good innocent other—is also an ideological
fantasy, what Hegel called a Gedankending, a creature of our mind.
So the task is to
talk openly about all unpleasant issues without a compromise with racism, i.e.,
to reject the humanitarian idealization of refugees which dismisses every
attempt to confront openly the difficult issues of the cohabitation of
different ways of life as a concession to the neo-Fascist Right. What
disappears in this way is the true encounter with a real Neighbor in his/her
specific way of life. Descartes, the father of modern philosophy, noted that,
when he was young, foreign people’s manners anc beliefs appeared to him
ridiculous and eccentric; but then he asked himself what if our own manners
also appear to them ridiculous and eccentric. The outcome of this reversal is
not a generalized cultural relativism, but something much more radical and
interesting: we should learn to experience ourselves as eccentric, to see our
customs in all their weirdness and arbitrariness. In his Everlasting Man,
G.K. Chesterton imagines the monster that man might have seemed to the merely
natural animals around him:
The simplest truth
about man is that he is a very strange being; almost in the sense of being a
stranger on the earth. In all sobriety, he has much more of the external
appearance of one bringing alien habits from another land than of a mere growth
of this one. He has an unfair advantage and an unfair disadvantage. He cannot
sleep in his own skin; he cannot trust his own instincts. He is at once a
creator moving miraculous hands and fingers and a kind of cripple. He is
wrapped in artificial bandages called clothes; he is propped on artificial
crutches called furniture. His mind has the same doubtful liberties and the
same wild limitations. Alone among the animals, he is shaken with the beautiful
madness called laughter; as if he had caught sight of some secret in the very
shape of the universe hidden from the universe itself. Alone among the animals
he feels the need of averting his thought from the root realities of his own
bodily being; of hiding them as in the presence of some higher possibility
which creates the mystery of shame. Whether we praise these things as natural
to man or abuse them as artificial in nature, they remain in the same sense
unique.
Is a “way of life”
not precisely such a way of being a stranger on the earth? A specific “way of
life” is not just composed of a set of abstract (Christian, Muslim, Hindu …)
“values,” it is something embodied in a thick network of everyday practices:
how we eat and drink, sing, make love, how we relate to authorities.
Religion as a way of life
Islam (as is true
for any other substantial religion) is a name for an entire way of life—in its
Middle East version, it relies on a large family with strong authority of
parents and brothers (which is not specifically Muslim but more Mediterranean),
and when young members, especially girls, from such families get involved with
their peers from more individualist Western families, this almost inevitably
gives rise to tensions. We “are” our way of life, it is our second nature,
which is why direct “education” is not able to change it. Something much more
radical is needed, a kind of Brechtian “extraneation,” a deep existential
experience by means of which it all of a sudden strikes us how stupidly
meaningless and arbitrary our customs and rituals are—there is nothing natural
in the way we embrace and kiss, in the way we wash ourselves, in the way we
behave while eating.
The point is thus
not to recognize ourselves in strangers, not to gloat in the comforting falsity
that “they are like us,” but to recognize a stranger in ourselves—therein
resides innermost dimension of European modernity. Communitarianism is not
enough: a recognition that we are all, each in its own way, weird lunatics
provides the only hope for a tolerable co-existence of different ways of life. Stranger
in a Strange Land, Robert A. Heinlein’s sci-fi classic from 1961, tells the
story a young human man born and raised on Mars who comes to Earth and finds
that human culture is totally alien. Maybe, this is the situation of all of us.
Does this mean that
we should resign ourselves to a co-existence of isolated groups of lunatics,
leaving it to the public law to maintain some kind of minimal order by way of
imposing rules of interaction? Of course not, but the paradox is that we should
go through this zero-point of “de-naturalization” if we want to engage in a
long and difficult process of universal solidarity, of constructing a Cause
which is strong enough to traverse different communities. If we want universal
solidarity, we have to become universal in ourselves, relate to ourselves as
universal by way of acquiring a distance towards our life-world. Hard and
painful work is needed to achieve, not just sentimental ruminations about
migrants as a new form of “nomadic proletariat.”
What is to be done,
then? To begin with, what about a couple of totally feasible pragmatic
measures? Short-term: the EU should establish receiving centers in the
nearest-possible safe locations (northern Syria, Turkey, the Greek islands),
and then organize a direct transport of accepted refugees to their European
destination (via ferries and air bridges), thereby putting out of business
smugglers turning around billions of dollars, as well as ending the humiliating
misery of thousands wandering on foot through Europe. Mid-term: apply all
means, public and secret, from Wikileaks style information war to ruthless
pressure on countries like Saudi Arabia, to stop the war or at least to expand
conflict-free zones. As for the long-term solution that would attack the causes
of the crisis, a much more radical transformation is needed.
In short, what is to
be done is more or less the exact opposite of the recent deal on refugees
between the European Union and Turkey, a shamelessly disgusting act, a proper
ethico-political catastrophe. Is this how the “war on terror” is to be
conducted, by succumbing to the Turkish blackmail and rewarding one of the main
culprits of the rise of ISIS and in the war in Syria? The
opportunistic-pragmatic justification of this deal is clear (bribing Turkey is
the most obvious way to limit the flow of refugees), but the long-term consequences
will be catastrophic.
No comments:
Post a Comment