plik


ÿþRace & Class http://rac.sagepub.com/ Anti-Semitism and Islamophobia - new enemies, old patterns Sabine Schiffer and Constantin Wagner Race Class 2011 52: 77 DOI: 10.1177/0306396810389927 The online version of this article can be found at: http://rac.sagepub.com/content/52/3/77 Published by: http://www.sagepublications.com On behalf of: Institute of Race Relations Additional services and information for Race & Class can be found at: Email Alerts: http://rac.sagepub.com/cgi/alerts Subscriptions: http://rac.sagepub.com/subscriptions Reprints: http://www.sagepub.com/journalsReprints.nav Permissions: http://www.sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav Citations: http://rac.sagepub.com/content/52/3/77.refs.html >> Version of Record - Jan 10, 2011 What is This? Downloaded from rac.sagepub.com by monika bobako on October 4, 2011 SAGE Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, Singapore, Washington DC Anti-Semitism and Islamophobia  new enemies, old patterns SABINE SCHIFFER and CONSTANTIN WAGNER Abstract: The authors argue that to compare Islamophobia with anti-Semitism is not to equate them. But finding some parallels might help German society to combat a growing and dangerous anti-Muslim racism. Keywords: Germany, Muslims, racism, Shoah, stereotypes Across Europe activists and some academics are struggling to convey, both to their governments and their countries at large, the understanding that anti-Muslim racism/ Islamophobia is now one of the most pernicious forms of contemporary racism and that steps should be taken to combat it. Nowhere has that struggle been more difficult and poignant than in Germany. There, because of the necessary attempts to come to terms with the Nazi past and understand the dimension of the Holocaust, the horror of any form of anti-Semitism can blind people to new and different forms of racism. And even more than elsewhere, the contradictions of the Middle East get transferred to internal discussions about a new anti-Semitism. Yet there are attempts in Germany both to use anti-Semitism as a comparative with which to help understand Islamophobia and to expose the nature and extent of it. This Sabine Schiffer is head of the Media Responsibility Institute (IMV), Erlangen, Germany and author with Constantin Wagner of Anti-Semitism and Islamophobia: a comparative analysis (Wassertrüdingen, 2009). Constantin Wagner researches Islam in European textbooks at the Georg Eckert Institute and works for the IMV. Race & Class Copyright © 2011 Institute of Race Relations, Vol. 52(3): 77 84 10.1177/0306396810389927 http://rac.sagepub.com Downloaded from rac.sagepub.com by monika bobako on October 4, 2011 78 Race & Class 52(3) has not been without problems, as exemplified in the case of Marwa al-Sherbini. On 1 July 2009, this Egyptian pharmacist (who wore the headscarf) was stabbed to death in a Dresden courtroom by the man she was suing for having insulted her in a public park as an  Islamist ,  terrorist and  whore . In the ensuing tumult, bystanders were injured, including her husband, who was shot and wounded by a police officer who misidentified the assailant. Dr Sabine Schiffer of the Institute for Media Responsibility in Erlangen, who suggested that negligence in the court structures (stemming from Islamophobia) might have been a contributory factor in Marwa al-Sherbini s death and the police shooting of her husband, found herself the object of a charge of slander and facing a court case.1 Below she and colleague Constantin Wagner examine the issues which emerged around the highly contested conference held by the Berlin-based Centre for the Study of Anti-Semitism on  The Muslim as Enemy, the Jew as Enemy . Time and again, the comparison of anti-Semitism and Islamophobia/anti-Muslim racism generates public angst. The high point of this disquiet in Germany sur- rounded the conference  Feindbild Muslim  Feindbild Jude (The Muslim as Enemy, the Jew as Enemy) organised by the Berlin-based Zentrum für Antisemi- tismusforschung (Centre for the Study of Anti-Semitism) in December 2008. This reaction to such a comparison is understandable and justified to the extent that there can be real doubts as to whether the horrors of genocidal anti- Semitism  the Nazi Holocaust  should be relativised (that is, on the moral level) and there could be grounds for suspecting that to mention both phenom- ena in the same breath comes from faulty analysis. For example, if someone claimed that Muslims today were in the same position as Jews had been under Nazi rule. However, it is inappropriate to play Jews and Muslims off against each other as objects of racist discourses; to deny the existence of this new phe- nomenon of Islamophobia, which does indeed exist, or to dismiss as trivial all expressions of racism that fall short of total barbarism. To compare is not to equate, as Micha Brumlik (a famous pedagogue who analyses issues of Jewish identity, the Holocaust and anti-Semitism) and others have repeatedly emphasised. Quite the contrary. When comparing, one natu- rally also examines the differences between two things. To equate anti-Semitism and Islamophobia would not only be a moral problem, but an analytical one as well. But at the same time, reality forces those of us who deal with racism and seek to combat it to consider the phenomenon of Islamophobia. And, to the extent that there are parallels, why should we not try to learn from the findings of research on anti-Semitism? A few parallels and differences will be examined below. In so doing, it seems useful to distinguish between the analytical/conceptual level on the one hand and the empirical level on the other. Islamophobia There can be no doubt that, empirically, a phenomenon exists that we describe as  Islamophobia and others describe as  anti-Muslim racism or  hostility to Downloaded from rac.sagepub.com by monika bobako on October 4, 2011 Schiffer and Wagner: Anti-Semitism and Islamophobia 79 Islam . One criticism of the term  Islamophobia has been that it defames opponents of Islamist movements. But even if it is true that the term can be instrumental- ised, that is not sufficient cause to stop using it. After all,  racism , too, has vary- ing definitions, and is occasionally used in highly problematic ways. This does not mean that there is no point in continuing to use the term, and certainly would not justify denying its very existence. Looking at critical portrayals of Muslims from an anti-racist perspective, there can be no doubt that Islam is openly being attacked as Islam, and Muslims are openly being attacked as Muslims. The same applies to physical violence. Islamophobes often try to legitimise their racism by arguing that they have nothing against  foreigners in general, and even add to their credentials by explaining they are  pro-Israeli ; the problem, they explain, is Muslims. Such Islamophobia has recently begun to be studied in Germany and reported in a number of published pieces on racism and anti-racism.2 Given the enormous popularity of blogs such as Politically Incorrect, which publishes nothing but racist incitement specifically against Muslims, it is unde- niable that there is a racism that is directed primarily at (supposed) Muslims. The known racist blogs are merely the tip of the iceberg, and can build on very widespread, historically based anti-Muslim resentments.3 Although many images and points are familiar elements of  anti-immigration discourse and thus recognisable as elements of racism, the empirical phenome- non of  Islamophobia is not entirely coextensive with the definition of  racism (to the extent that there is a universally valid definition of the term). This is because centuries-old anti-Muslim views inform, shape and extend the current discourse. This gives anti-Muslim racism a specificity that distinguishes it from other racisms. Furthermore, Islamophobia can be considered a new form of racism, a  cultural racism . The target of Islamophobia is not an imagined  race , but a group perceived as a religious community. It is easier to incite hatred using sup- posed cultural as opposed to  racial characteristics and this also affects the intensity and nature of the  necessary resistance .4 Anti-Semitism Although anti-Semitic attitudes are much more heavily stigmatised in post-Nazi Germany than other forms of racism, it is by no means true that there is no longer any anti-Semitism. On the one hand, there are phenomena known to researchers as  secondary anti-Semitism and  structural anti-Semitism .  Secondary anti-Semitism refers to the cultivation of resentments against Jews not just by reference to the traditional prejudices that continue to exist, but also by using new motifs. One example of this is the idea that Jews, allegedly, pre- vent Germany from  putting its past behind it . This is an  updated form of tra- ditional accusations, such as greed and lust for power. Jews are once again painted as disrupting German national identity - but this time through Vergangenheitsbewältigung (the process of coming to terms with the [Nazi] past). Downloaded from rac.sagepub.com by monika bobako on October 4, 2011 80 Race & Class 52(3)  Structural anti-Semitism refers to ideas that are not explicitly directed at Jews, but are similar to anti-Semitic ideas in their concepts and argument. One example of this is the differentiation between and personification of  money- grubbing financial capital and  working productive capital (this refers to Hitler s terms  raffendes/schaffendes Kapital ). This personalising and abbreviation of Marxist social criticism is structurally anti-Semitic and can also promote hos- tility towards Jews. On the other hand, there are still explicitly anti-Semitic statements being made and attacks taking place. In 2008, 1,089 anti-Semitic crimes were recorded in Germany. Between 2000 and 2008, approximately 470 desecrations of Jewish cemeteries were recorded. Approximately 10 per cent of all Germans agree with anti-Semitic statements, such as that Jews have too much influence, Jews are more likely to use underhanded methods than others, or that Jews are peculiar and do not quite fit in with  us .5 While such views may not be held across the board, there is a definite tendency for abuse of Jews to be expressed less openly and explicitly than other prejudices. In Germany, there is a stigma attached to propounding clear anti- Semitic views and to attacks on Jews (as Jews)  although this taboo is occasion- ally broken. Post-Shoah, anti-Semitism in Germany is mostly indirect, overwhelmingly in the form of secondary and structural anti-Semitism. Muslims, on the other hand, are abused more openly than any other marked group. To claim that fear of Muslims  unlike fear of Jews  is legitimised by referring to Islamic fundamentalism, does not pass muster. This use of alleged fact is, in itself, racist, because it rests on a fundamental, racist generalisation  the acts of very few individuals are explained in terms of their religious background and then attributed collectively to all Muslims. This group is evaluated based on the accumulation of (negative) facts. This pattern is familiar from other racist dis- courses, including, in particular, anti-Semitism. Anti-Semitic discourse is the example par excellence of how an apparently coherent racist system  which appears to be regularly confirmed  can arise over centuries. Parallels, similarities  and divergences Collective constructions, dehumanisation, misinterpretation of religious imperatives (proof by  sources ), and conspiracy theories are the patterns that we find in both anti-Semitic and Islamophobic discourses. The frighteningly clear parallels are unmistakable when one analyses styles of argument and even images. To an extent, the exact same metaphors and ideas are used to incite hatred against Muslims as were and are used to incite hatred against Jews. This can be seen in the many parallel terms, such as  Islamisation and  Judaisation . Particularly in times of crisis, identity can be constructed by designating sub- jects and groups that allegedly constitute an internal and/or external threat as  foreign . While it was already a classic anti-Semitic motif in the nineteenth cen- tury that  the Jews identified with  their race and not with the country of which Downloaded from rac.sagepub.com by monika bobako on October 4, 2011 Schiffer and Wagner: Anti-Semitism and Islamophobia 81 they were citizens, we see a similar motif in the discussions of  Muslim parallel societies . This goes so far as to reactivate the clearly anti-Semitic metaphor of  a state within a state , this time in relation to Muslims. In this way, the fact that one belongs to a religious community becomes a total identification, as if  being Muslim were the sole and decisive factor explaining all of a Muslim person s actions and attitudes. Despite the commonalities in the arguments and argumentational styles, there is a difference on the conceptual and analytical level between the internal logic of  anti-Semitism and of  Islamophobia . Both Jews and Muslims have historically been perceived as a danger for  the Christian West , though in differing ways. The  Turks at the gates of Vienna (part of collective memory) has long been a popular motif both in relation to the immigration of Muslims and with regard to  Islamisation . The Moors in Spain were always  foreign in the sense of  outsiders . Opposing them and driving them out was not only permissible, it was required. Thus, they fit the classic notion of the foreigner in the racist worldview  the external, visible enemy. Jews, on the other hand, were primarily viewed as an  internal enemy. Modern anti-Semitism faced an enemy which was  invisible  because of assimilation. This was combined with the idea of destroyers from within who needed to be exterminated rather than driven out. Thus, the Crusades were directed against an actual and/or perceived external enemy, while anti-Judaism and anti-Semitism were directed inward. In this regard, anti- Semitism is located on a different historical continuum from Islamophobia. Furthermore, it should be noted that Muslims tend to be viewed as inferior, while anti-Semites generally view Jews as superior. Thus, Jews were always considered the representatives of modernism, whether in the form of liberalism, capitalism, or communism, while Muslims are perceived as  backwardness incarnate. Here it can be seen that both Muslims and Jews are seen as the coun- terpart to an ideal, though in different ways. Additionally, there are differences with regard to explanatory content. Anti-Semitic discourse seeks to explain not only a part of reality (as do other racist discourses) but the entire world. Thus,  the Jew can be seen to be pulling the strings of virtually any evil: capitalism and communism, Washington and Moscow, godlessness and the most devout faith. Anti-Semitism is a total, universal theory. It is important to understand these differences in order to be able to unpick and combat the respective analyses. However, the differences in resentment  against inferiors, on the one hand, from those perceived as omnipotent, on the other, between the external and internal enemy  relate to a conceptual level. Things are not always this clear in (racist) reality. Empirical shifts Although this analytical distinction still tends to be valid, there have recently been empirical shifts that make it more and more necessary to use findings from the study of anti-Semitism to analyse Islamophobia. Downloaded from rac.sagepub.com by monika bobako on October 4, 2011 82 Race & Class 52(3) In addition to being represented as the external enemy, Muslims appear more and more as the  internal enemy in racist discourse, a figure most clearly personified, even today, by  the Jew . This can be seen in the treatment of Islamism as a matter of internal security. A growing number of Muslims are German citizens, and therefore no longer  foreigners or  external enemies . Additionally, more and more Muslims are targeted by accusations that they are  in camouflage , particularly those who seek to participate actively in civil society or professional life. They are presumed to be loyal to  their own group , based on their religion. This breaks through the traditional classifica- tion, with Muslims now being promoted to an  internal enemy in the para- noid imagination. The idea of the superior privileging of the  Other is applied more and more frequently to Muslims. The debates about  special rights , whether with regard to the right to wear a headscarf at work or participation at school, show no sign of stopping. Both in popular debates and in various publications, the idea is being expressed that Germany is being  Islamised , with substantial financial support from the  Near East , through the purchasing of land, building of mosques, and influence in the media. Islamophobic conspiracy theories are quite popular in the relevant blogs. These conspiracy theories do indeed seek to explain various political develop- ments, and not just individual phenomena. While a closed anti-Semitic world- view begins from an attempt to explain the world, in the case of Islamophobia, there is the tendency to explain more and more facts from social life by refer- ence to the religious background of Muslims. Thus, any number of problems, from youth violence to homophobia, appear to be explicable by reference to  Islam . Based on these shifts and adoptions, we must acknowledge that other marked groups may also fall into the role historically assigned primarily to Jews  an element of negation that destroys healthy collectives. This requires, first of all, a group that is  marked as such. Today, we see that actual and apparent Muslims are perceived  as Muslims with increasing intensity. Concepts like ethnic plu- ralism (towards the Right end of the spectrum) and multiculturalism (which tends to be used on the Left) can even help along this racist process of marking out a religious group as  the Other . This practice of marking, in itself, must be understood as a racist thought pat- tern that leads to further steps of attributing negative characteristics, defamation and discrimination. The act of physical racial violence carried out by an indi- vidual is the end product of a whole process of racialisation which begins with the stereotypes that society as a whole generates and perpetuates through laws, the media, the education system, and so on, in popular discourse. Conclusion Among other things, anti-Semitism and Islamophobia differ in post-Nazi Germany with regard to the degree of openness with which they are expressed. Downloaded from rac.sagepub.com by monika bobako on October 4, 2011 Schiffer and Wagner: Anti-Semitism and Islamophobia 83 And, in terms of  traditional interpretations of racism, they have separate  one might say complementary  functions. In this regard, it is important to examine the differences in how anti-Semitism and Islamophobia operate analytically; this also helps in discovering the ways in which they shift and how they get adopted. Both phenomena exist empirically, and have a function as racist  false  explanations of the world. It is obviously absurd to claim that Muslims today are in the same situation as Jews were  back then . In comparing anti-Semitism and Islamophobia, we should not relativise the Nazi Holocaust  instead, the goal should be to recognise racist mechanisms before even the threat of a comparable situation arises. The thesis that the Nazi Holocaust, while historically singular, is capable of repetition is not a new one in the study of anti-Semitism and the Shoah. The fact that we must assume that a total catastrophe is capable of repetition must be treated sepa- rately from the fact that the Shoah is a historically singular phenomenon, and that victims and perpetrators can be named specifically. However, memory alone will not suffice, particularly because we know today that the destruction of the Jews in the Third Reich would not have been possible without a decades-long and centuries-old preparatory anti-Semitic discourse. Based on the historical imperative to deconstruct racist discourse before it is too late, a racist discourse that threatens to become highly dominant in society must be exposed as such. To this end, we must also expose and analyse the occasion- ally frightening parallels to anti-Semitic discourse. While there is still evidence of anti-Semitic explanatory styles and resentments, anti-Islamic voices are becoming more and more influential in public discourse. The achievement in the study of anti-Semitism of examining Jewry and anti-Semitism separately must also be transferred to other racisms, such as Islamophobia. We do not need more information about Islam, but more infor- mation about the making of racist stereotypes in general. In order to do this, it is necessary to understand that the ideas and images of a  foreign group say more about the group that produces them than about the group marked as the  out group . References 1 See Liz Fekete,  Germany: freedom to speak on racism under threat , IRR News (23 February 2010);  Freedom of speech upheld for German academic , IRR News (31 March 2010). 2 See for example Sabine Schiffer, 2005, Die Darstellung des Islams in der Presse (Würzburg, Ergon, 2005); S. Schiffer and C. Wagner, Anti-Semitism and Islamophobia  a comparative analysis (Wassertrüdingen, HWK, 2009); Iman Attia (ed.), Orient- und Islambilder (Münster, Unrast, 2007); Thorsten G. Schneiders (ed.), Islamfeindlichkeit (Wiesbaden, VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, 2009); Wolfgang Benz (ed.), Islamfeindschaft und ihr Kontext (Berlin, Metropol Verlag, 2009); Kay Sokolowksky, Feindbild Moslem (Berlin, Rotbuch, 2009). 3 This was examined in the article on  The portrayal of Muslims in the German media see <http:// www.migration-boell.de/web/diversity/48_2529.asp>; <http://www.migration-boell.de/ web/diversity/48_1231.asp>; <http://www.bpb.de/publikationen/PEULKO,0,Der_Islam_ in_deutschen_Medien.html ff>. Downloaded from rac.sagepub.com by monika bobako on October 4, 2011 84 Race & Class 52(3) 4 It is impossible  even theoretically  to dispense with the element of alleged belonging to a group perceived as a  race : thought through to its conclusion, this racial/biological framing posits a biological solution  physical extermination. The alleged belonging based on cultural concepts at least theoretically allows for  defection . Unlike anti-Semitic projections, anti-Muslim racists do not construct  Muslims as an alleged  blood community or  race , or claim that this racial background is responsible for the negative characteristics. This is, however, an essen- tial element of genocidal anti-Semitism. Unlike anti-Semitic ideology, Muslims have at least a theoretical possibility for  distancing themselves from certain phenomena. However, this is increasingly coming into question. Although wars abroad and discriminatory practices at home are justified using Islamophobic discourse, which is occasionally frighteningly similar to anti-Semitic metaphor and imagery, the complete physical destruction of Muslims is not the goal of anti-Muslim racists, especially since  Islam is generally perceived as an external enemy. 5 See Arbeitsstelle Rechtsextremismus und Gewalt (o.J.),  Antisemitismus in Deutschland 2009: eine Chronik , p.3, <http://arug.de/component/option,com_docman/task,doc_download/ gid,27/>. Downloaded from rac.sagepub.com by monika bobako on October 4, 2011

Wyszukiwarka

Podobne podstrony:
Four New Hypnotic Language Patterns
Big Media and The New World Order The Murdoch Empire
MEPCB1 Cross reference tables between old and new regulations of MARPOL Annex I
MEPCB1 Cross reference tables between old and new regulations of MARPOL Annex I
New hybrid drying technologies for heat sensitive foodstuff (S K Chou and K J Chua)
IEEE Finding Patterns in Three Dimensional Graphs Algorithms and Applications to Scientific Data M
Aristotle On Youth And Old Age, On Life And Death, On Breathing
Operation And Function Light Anti Armor Weapons M72 And M136
ConcRT Patterns and Practices
Pagan Patterns and Designs
Syntheses, structural and antimicrobial studies of a new N allylamide
nut charge, anti de sitter space and entropy
Arsenic and Old Paint
Old Process, New Technology Modern Mokume

więcej podobnych podstron