Posted on 11/12/2005 3:55:38 AM PST by rhema
So much for the illusion. Just when modern Europe thought itself to have been successfully secularized, along comes a crew of scruffy Muslims to spoil the picture. ("Scruffy" was one of the nicer words used by French leaders last week to describe the rioters.) Both the French people and their overweeningly self-confident government are discovering that religion remains a crucial part of modern life after all.
Historic Christianity, of course, had already become all but irrelevant to many, at least in the big cities and centers of European culture. Most cathedrals have long since been reduced to drafty museums of past superstitions. Serious religious commitments by Christians have been measured recently in single-digit proportions of the population.
But no observers of the European scene last week could deny the strong religious component of what was driving one of the scarier uprisings in the recent history of the continent. Religion wasn't the whole issue, to be sure; class and culture and economics played important roles. Yet the strong Islamic theme was too dominant to be ignored.
But who could explain it accurately? If most politicians and most media people are ignorant of the fine nuances in their own religious traditions, how much more so with reference to Islam? If the differences in explaining evangelical Christianity range from Pat Robertson to Jimmy Carter, isn't it reasonable to expect that differences in explaining Islam are just as broadand just as ambiguous and confusing?
At first, both European and American media soft-pedaled the religious aspects of the costly unrest. So The Washington Post headlined with discreet political correctness: "Rage of French Youth Is a Fight for Recognition." But, as Canadian columnist Mark Steyn pointed out (Canadians might be a little scared themselves), it wasn't "Pierre and Jacques and Marcel and Alphonse" who were causing the trouble. It was Mohammed and his friendswho admittedly may have been poor and unemployed members of drug gangsbut who first and foremost found their identity in their relationship to Islam.
So in a front-page story last week, John Carryrou finally wrote bluntly in The Wall Street Journal: "The past year is proving to be a watershed in modern Europe's encounter with Islam. As a number of events have shownincluding last year's assassination of Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh by a Muslim radical and the home-grown terrorists who bombed the London tube this summerEurope has failed to deal with the Muslims within its borders."
In his article, Mr. Carryrou shows how even purported efforts by so-called moderate Muslim groups to restrain violence by young devotees of Islam have tendedinadvertently or otherwiseto highlight and perhaps even encourage ever more violent behavior. Concerning the Tabligh group, he says that while it publicly preaches a peaceful brand of Islam, French intelligence officials claim that up to 80 percent of Islamic extremists in France were once members of Tabligh. French officials call it the "antechamber of fundamentalism."
Indeed, the record shows that the very efforts of groups like Tabligh to work with young people have tended often to heighten their sense of identification with Islam rather than to meld them into the broader society of which they are a part. When unemployment, resulting from a variety of influences, ranges as high as 40 percent among some immigrant groups, such patterns quickly prompt the jobless folk to see their plight as a deliberate effort by society to victimize them because they are Islamic. The fact that Tabligh works out of a mosque all but guarantees that the young people it reaches out to learn instinctively to see the struggle as a religious one.
So it's not so much any specific content that they've been taught. It's not a particularly charismatic brand of teachers who have gripped them with a vision. Nor is it that the Quran has proven so convincing. Instead, it's a grim and empty life experience they've inherited that prompts them to claim a religious adherence whose meaning has primarily to do with what they don't have in life. And now, both oddly and frighteningly, that's how the secularists of Europe see them as well.
Great analogy!
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Many debate eto fore little number is left. Tribes of Ishmael will break their bones we in my country and other countries are not easy of anger; eto fore our old blood will come and all differences will be aside and then
.total war of which this humanity have not seen; we will destroy them Tribes of Ishmael. People whom never was born in countries of Europe fore Europe is continent intero stupid EU is still many countries in it; will never understand countries in Europe.
Prepare yourself for this conflict is about to escalate. You can not depend on man alone eto fore His Majesty Majesty of Majesty of Israel will intervene infore to safe humanity from self-destruction.
Politicians have lost their balance of right and wrong; humanity have lost balance of right and wrong eto fore have hope for in despair you find best friend.
Gentlemen and ladies this is war; this is not a theater nor Crime and Punishment nor War and Peace eto fore many more; this is reality wake up and stand up and fight. Grazie mille.
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thank you all/Dzieki wam
To paraphrase from nam, 'Moos in the wire!'.
Very well stated and written.
Or the children will be black belts and Olympic class shooters. There ARE secular alternatives.
later read.
The flu being caused by rioting molecules... ha!
Seriously, that was good for a laugh this evening. Very proper analogy.
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