Cartoons, Voltaire and the Non-Clash of Civilisations

Cartoons, Voltaire and the Non-Clash of Civilisations

Who said politics was boring, as Mark Warner the ex Governor of Virginia said recently we are not witnessing a battle between right and left, or between conservative and liberal but between the past and the future. In the battle of ideas around the cartoons controversy, the Muslims are advocating the future whereas the West remains wedded to the past.

Of course it’s not pitched like that, for most people the West remains the bastion of intellectual progress, vibrancy and enlightenment. For them the Muslim attitude towards the Danish cartoons has an uncanny resemblance to their own dark ages, a period characterised by oppression, material backwardness and stagnation. The philosophical differences are not confined to what they perceive as fanatical Muslim censorship. Issues such as women’s rights in Islam, the calls for the establishment of Shariah or Muslims overt religious devotion also sit uncomfortably with the secular liberal order. Most commentators in the West believe that such Islamic values belong more to the first century than the twenty first.

However the cartoons issue is the latest example to demonstrate that the west is losing its inner confidence, compromising its core beliefs and constantly alluding to a past utopian enlightenment age. For most people the idea of a ‘clash of civilisations’ is an anathema, but even if you don’t like the word ’clash’ as it may imply perpetual war, even a pre-requisite to a ‘dialogue of civilisations’ is that both civilisations stand up passionately for their core beliefs. In the cartoons controversy, we haven’t seen that, the Muslims have collectively stood up for their beliefs, yet the Western response has been anemic to say the least. Don’t get me wrong; I have profound philosophical differences with secular liberalism and absolute freedom of speech, yet even I can respect its viewpoint when coherently articulated. Freedom of speech is the cornerstone of Western civilisation, of individual liberty, of free market capitalism, of material humanism and of representative democracy; it is the foundation on which the entire secular liberal ideology resides. Voltaire’s infamous aphorism of defending to death the right for people to speak is an integral part of the West’s cultural DNA. Yet throughout the cartoons issue, you would have thought freedom of expression was an optional extra traded away to ensure a return to an arid status quo.

But surely the West did defend its beliefs I hear you say, as much as the Muslims defended theirs. Of course some did, but the main pillars of Western society didn’t and for very unprincipled reasons. The US and British governments who claim to be bringing Western values to Iraq couldn’t even defend their ideological cousins in Denmark, for fear of losing even more popularity in the Muslim world. Most newspapers and TV stations in the US and Britain did not reproduce the cartoons not because they were not newsworthy but because of fear of reprisals. Even in continental Europe, there were mixed messages with the French President condemning the publication of the images, so much for the sanctity of free speech in La Republique. The abandonment of free speech wasn’t confined to governments and the fourth estate; big business the other major pillar of Western society was also driving a horse and carriage through the sanctity of free speech. Nestle showed their ‘solidarity’ with their corporate colleagues in Scandinavia, by taking out advertisements in Saudi newspapers stating they weren‘t Danish. Lastly there were no widespread demonstrations by the Western public mirroring those seen by the Muslims to defend the concept of freedom of speech, so much for a clash of civilisations.

Of course the cartoons issue is just the latest example of Western civilisation’s sacrifice of key principles for expediency, following Guantanomo Bay, the illegal Iraq war, draconian anti-terror legislation and Abu Ghraib. The Muslim world as opposed to its opportunistic and dictatorial leaders have shown the future, a world where principles, values and sacred beliefs are put ahead of economic interests, cheap popularity and political expediency. Many may disagree with the small amount of violence accompanying the worldwide demonstrations from Jakarta to Tunis, however we cannot ignore the passion of those demonstrating. Principle, passion and sacrificing for a higher purpose are moribund concepts in the secular West. Muslims in there millions across the globe have shown the world that there are things worth fighting for, other than oil and reconstruction contracts. Voltaire must be turning in his grave

Sajjad Khan
Editor New Civilisation Magazine

Comment:

It seems this writer hits hte nail on the head when it comes to western principles versus Ilsmaic principles.

Re: Cartoons, Voltaire and the Non-Clash of Civilisations

Europeans cry for freedom of speech in defence of the cartoons - yet are completely silent as a David Irving is jailed in Austria for something he said 17 years ago.

Re: Cartoons, Voltaire and the Non-Clash of Civilisations

And Muslims stay silent (in comparison to the cartoon reaction) as Muslims kill one another and destroy one another's mosques. Misplaced priorities?

Re: Cartoons, Voltaire and the Non-Clash of Civilisations

Nice article..

Re: Cartoons, Voltaire and the Non-Clash of Civilisations

Principle, passion, pride, solidarity. All that and a dollar will buy you a cup of coffee.

The problem is, we are experiencing a Muslims awakening. They are taking to the streets speaking up for what they believe, finding their voices, and touting thier virtues. So Muslims are awake. Then what?

The Far East is not nearly so bellicose, and without all the chest thumping they are racing to the front of the Third World. While the Arab street finds it's voice, it's economies are floundering, it's political leadership is grossly inept, it's educational systems are in tatters, and poverty is in huge supply. For all the noise and fury, there is no economic revolution, instead the same tired dependence on oil, and precious little innovation. Who wants to set up a factory next to a KFC in Pakistan, when it is less likely to be burned in Taiwan?

Worse yet, French street riots, cartoon riots, Mosque bombings, Anti-Jewish rants serve to isolate Muslims from the rest of the world. So here we have a feel good article here touting Muslim values, and puffing up the Muslim vision of the world. Lots of noise and fury, very little real work getting done.

Great, wake me when it actually makes a difference in the lives of Muslims...

Re: Cartoons, Voltaire and the Non-Clash of Civilisations

Ohioguy: nice post.

I also like the gist of the article however. There is a subtle point being made. I do take pride in the fact that the entire Muslim world mobilized against the hate speech advocated by the Danish. Where is freedom of speech when Muslim girls are prevented from wearing headscarves to school? Muslims are very sensitive to picking up the slightest hypocricy from the West.

Yes our passion still does not give us liberal democracies but a small step before the longest of journies...

Re: Cartoons, Voltaire and the Non-Clash of Civilisations

We do?

a) Most muslims don't view the killing of Shias as a high value, and so when it does occur we emote on the event as we do whenever we see mass criminality on TV...cringe, and hope it doesn't hit home.

b) Protesting is USELESS against these types, this is the job of law enforcement. In a situation that is being manipulated by outside players...with one being dominate...guess who's responsibility that is?

Nice try at deflecting the issue. We're not buying it.

Re: Cartoons, Voltaire and the Non-Clash of Civilisations

On the contrary, the violence is on the fringe of the Muslim world. That it has lashed out at America simply means that the Americans will ignorantly view the Muslim world through it's own experiences with them: through it's occupation of Iraq and through the attack on it on 9/11.

The fact is, progress is being made here and there, even on a local level. Much work remains to be done, sure enough.

The fact is, lack of Muslim development has NOTHING to do with the cartoon reaction. Deflection is unbecoming of those who honestly seek dialog. It's nothing more of a convoluted way of telling us to shut up...refusing to talk to us unless we address irrelevant issues related to us.

Re: Cartoons, Voltaire and the Non-Clash of Civilisations

That's a good point, but the duplicity in that stance is obvious.

Namely, Muslim countries enforce dress codes themselves. The way France framed the anti-Hijab issue was that of enforcing it's own dress codes. We then can't rightly condemn France for doing something we do ourselves (i.e. enforce Hijab, or to a greater extent "modest" dress).

It's easier for, say, a Pakistani to simply say "get out of the country if you don't like it" than to take to the streets.