As before, this is a long post. See here for context.
“If
we want to defeat the extremism, we have got to defeat its ideas and
we have got to address the completely false sense of grievance
against the West.”
Tony
Blair, speaking in 2006
206,000
– Iraq Body Count's figure for total violent deaths in Iraq since
the invasion, supported by the Blair government.
On
22nd
May 2013 in Woolwich, south London, Fusilier Lee Rigby, a British
soldier, was murdered in the street by Michael Adebolajo and
Michael Adebowale. In an attack of harrowing brutality, Adebolajo and
Adebowale, attempted to behead the 25 year-old drummer with a
cleaver. They subsequently charged at police with this weapon and a
revolver and were shot, in both cases non-fatally. They were both
convincted of murder, and received long jail sentences.
It transpired that Adebolajo and
Adebowale were converts to Islam from Christianity. There followed a
good deal of soul searching in parliament and in the press about
'extremism'. Following the Rigby killing, David Cameron announced the
formation of a task force on extremism, chaired by himself and
including other ministers and security chiefsi.
This produced a report in December 2013, 'Tackling Extremism in the
UK', which borrowed the understanding of extremism used in the
Prevent strategyii:
Vocal or active opposition to
fundamental British values, including democracy, the rule of law,
individual liberty and mutual respect and tolerance of different
faiths and beliefs. We also include in our definition of extremism
calls for the death of members of our armed forces, whether in this
country or overseas.
It shouldn't need spelling out that
this definition is not only slippery, but could easily be used to
justify counting as extremist, and therefore the legitimate object of
state censure, a dazzling variety of political creeds. Revolutionary
socialism and anarchism are not safe, being opposed to 'democracy' in
the sense in which the report's authors intend that word, although
certainly not in a more expansive sense. Proponents of non-violent
direct action could fall foul of the stipulation that opposition to
the 'rule of law' is extremist. 'Individual liberty' is such an
ill-defined notion that it is hazardous to even speculate how wide
the net could fall here. Meanwhile, unless one is prepared to rule
out a priori that the UK could be involved in an unjust war –
to put it mildly, a morally questionable position – it is difficult
to see how one could avoid the belief that it some circumstances
calling for the defeat of its armed forces is fully justified. None
of these positions lead inexorably to the bombing of underground
trains or the murder of soldiers in the street. The liberality with
which British police forces have labelled political activists as
'domestic extremists', and monitored them accordingly, shows that
these are not merely abstract worriesiii.
One might be led to conclude that the problem with Adebolajo and
Adebowale was not that they were extremists, but that they were
cold-blooded killers. One of the problems, in fact, with the current
obsession with the language of extremism is that it makes such
commonplace ethical judgements sound exceptional.
The tendency of anti-terror
legislation to be subject to mission creep should make us wary here;
there is a history of measures first justified in terms of preventing
bombings ending up being used against protestors and other
activistsiv.
For the time being, however, the government have clear targets in
their sights. These are primarily certain Muslims. Thus,
There is a range of extremist
individuals and organisations, including Islamists,
the far right and others. As
the greatest risk to our security comes from Al Qa’ida and like
minded groups, and terrorist ideologies draw on and make use of
extremist ideas, we believe it is also necessary to define the
ideology of Islamist extremism.v
There follows what, one assumes, the
report's authors suppose to be just such a definition of this
ideology,
This is a distinct ideology
which should not be confused with traditional religious practice.
It is an ideology which is
based on a distorted interpretation of Islam, which betrays Islam’s
peaceful principles, and draws on the teachings of the likes of
Sayyid Qutb. Islamist extremists deem Western intervention in
Muslim-majority countries as a ‘war on Islam’, creating a
narrative of ‘them’ and ‘us’. They seek to impose a global
Islamic state governed by their interpretation of Shari’ah as state
law, rejecting liberal values such as democracy, the rule of law and
equality. Their ideology also includes the uncompromising belief that
people cannot be Muslim and British, and insists that those who do
not agree with them are not true Muslims.vi
This
passage is notable for reasons other than the curious suggestion that
the language of 'them' and 'us' around Western intervention in the
Middle East is the preserve of Islamist extremists; those with long
enough memories will recall George W. Bush's declaration to the US
Congress, “Either you are with us or you're with the terrorists”vii.
More generally, there is a long history of Occidental construction of
the Islamic 'east' as 'other', and in as much as the hateful
followers of Qutb do indeed demonise the West, they are occupying a
political dualism with a rich imperial historyviii.
Of deeper interest is the succinct statement of the problem state
power has with those it describes as Islamic extremists, their creed
is incompatible with 'liberal values such as democracy, the rule, of
law and equality', that is it is incompatible with citizenship,
with the commitments necessary for consent to the liberal state.
Moreover, it cannot cohabit with the state's main ideological
self-justification, nationalism: 'people cannot be Muslim and
British'. The state, as we will see, is a jealous god, admitting
rivals no more than does the God of the decalogueix.
There are many excellent reasons for despising the reactionary
butchers of Al Qa’ida; that they do not go along with the
self-justification of a Western order responsible for several orders
of magnitude more deaths than the amateur terrorists is not one of
them.
Then
there is the focus on Islam. In spite of the politically correct
insistence that there are good Muslims and bad Muslimsx,
the latter being signed up to an Islamism that 'is based on a
distorted interpretation of Islam, which betrays Islam’s peaceful
principles', the report goes on to advocate community-level measures
to tackle extremism and encourage 'integration' which can only serve
to point to finger of suspicion at Muslims in general. 'Integration'
is a polite racist trope; appeals to the need for integration are
routinely framed so as to place the burden of integration on minority
ethnic and religious groupsxi.
It does not occur for one moment that, say, relatively well-off white
East Londoners moving to Essex citing as justification that 'the area
changed' might represent a failure to integrate.
Taking
Islam to Extremes
What though is extremism? This naively simple, yet contextually
vital, question rarely gets posed, still less answered. Extremism,
one supposes, is reckoned to be much like evil or a bad karaoke
performance, in that failure to recognise a case casts doubt on the
judgement, perhaps even the character, of the observer. Some
concepts, it might be insisted, are so basic that it is fruitless to
seek definitions or explications. Their possession is part of the
basic cognitive equipment we need to function as thinkers, or as
moral agents. Only sceptics or trouble-makers would be impious enough
to try their analytical luck here. This might well be true; it is,
meanwhile, certainly true that behind many such supposedly basic
concepts lurks ideology. This is undoubtedly the case with
'extremism'.
As it happens, a plausible definition of extremism is not hard to
think up. An extremist, surely, is just someone who does something in
an extreme fashion – taking it supremely seriously, allowing it to
take precedence over all other considerations, brooking no
moderation, making no allowances for the sensibilities of those who
do not share their passion. An extreme fan might name her firstborn
son after the entire Celtic squad. An extreme campanologist spends
every moment of their leisure time seeking out new towers in which to
ring. Similarly an extreme socialist wants socialism, proper
socialism, as soon as possible, and cuts no deals with reformists. An
extremist about anything is basically a super-charged practitioner of
that thing, distinguishable from the more louche non-extremists in
virtue solely of zeal and single-mindedness.
But
then again 'extremism' seems sometimes to be a matter of belief
rather than practice, to return once more to that deeply problematic
opposition. An extreme believer believes everything offered for her
assent by some belief system – a theory, a religion, or a political
creed. She does not water the system down in order to accommodate
herself to intellectual fashion. If there is a conflict between the
system and widely accepted ideas, the system wins. Moreover, in as
much as her beliefs have implications for her actions, she tries her
utmost to follow through these implications. She is systematic,
coherent, and integrated, a living insult to those who believe that
the truth always lies midway between two extremes, that compromise is
desirable, and that there is a danger in taking things too
far. What I have just
described as the extremist's opposite is, very arguably, the explicit
ideology of a good proportion of the English ruling class; moderate,
pragmatic, and dull, it was at times nonetheless the creed of an
Empire whose bloodshed makes al Qaeda look like an irrelevance.
What
then about the extremist Muslims by whom, politicians and media alike
would have us believe, we are so desperately threatened?
They are, if what I've said above is along the right lines, Muslims
who take Islamic practice and belief to extremes. But now we are off
on a train of thought whose conclusion is alarming: for if the
extremists who are rampaging across Syria and Iraq, or who plot the
slaughter of commuters, are to be understood as simply Muslims who
take their Islam more seriously than most, it follows that the
potential for all this carnage was always-already there in Islam. It
is, in other words, Islam itself that is the problem. This line of
argument finds enthusiastic champtions. Sam Harris, in a lecture
given at a Congregational Church at Berkley (not, it has to be said,
an obvious platform for the most hyperactive of the New Atheists)
said this,
"Religion" is a nearly useless term. It's a term like
"sports". Now there are sports like Badminton and sports
like Thai Boxing, and they have almost nothing in common apart from
breathing. There are sports that are just synonymous with the risk of
physical injury or even death … There is, I'm happy to say, a
religion of peace in this world, but it's not Islam. The claim that
Islam is a religion of peace that we hear ceaselessly reiterated is
completely delusional. Now Jainism actually is a religion of peace.
The core principle of Jainism is non-violence. Gandhi got his
non-violence from the Jains. The
crazier you get as a Jain, the less we have to worry about you.
Jain extremists are paralysed by their pacifism. Jain extremists
can't take their eyes off the ground when they walk lest they step on
an ant... Needless to say they are vegetarian. So the problem is not
religious extremism, because extremism is not a problem if your core
beliefs are truly non-violent. The problem isn't fundamentalism. We
often hear this said; these are euphemisms... The
only problem with Islamic fundamentalism are the fundamentals of
Islam.xii
It
might be remarked that the man who is supposed to be one of America's
foremost public intellectuals could have spared himself some
confusion over the usefulness of the word 'religion' by reading
Wittgenstein's well-known reflections on the word 'game'xiii.
But Harris' disingenuous shift in focus from religion, which in other
contexts he is quite happy to hammer uniformly, to Islam serves a
reprehensible dual purpose. On the one hand, it points the finger of
suspicion at each Muslim woman, man, and child on the planet. Like
dangerous psychopaths, we are to suppose, every single one of these
nurses a murderous potential in their heart. Who knows when it could
manifest its true nature? Perhaps we'd be better off without them;
certainly we don't want any more of them. It's a surprisingly short
step from the reflections of Harris and his ilk to the genocidal
logic of street fascists. On the other hand, the idea that there is
a problem with Islam that threatens peace, and therefore global
security, which gets support from the thought that extreme Islam is
proper
Islam, accrues credibility for the clash of civilisations narrative
which still informs US foreign policyxiv.
Whatever debate there might be about the relationship of Islam to
peace, I suggest the situation is clearer in the case of the
Pentagon. Sam Harris stands to the movement for global peace much as
does Tony Blair to the cause of modesty.
There
will be more to be said in a later chapter about the prevalent
suspicion of Islam, as well as about the claim, sometimes issuing
from within Islam itself, that the religion is in need of a
reformation. For the present, another aspect of the discourse around
extremism deserves attention. As this has been described up to this
point, extremism is a state of religious belief or practice. The
adjective 'extreme' serves to modify a term for a practice or
belief-system, as in 'extreme Islam'. But notice how static and given
the practice of Islam is taken to be in the dominant discourse about
Islamic extremism. There just is this thing, Islam, which has a
transhistorical essence, given in advance of human agency,
socio-political context, or the interplay of ideas: the only question
remains whether this essence will manifest itself in a moderate or an
extreme fashion. The burden of the state and the liberal
intelligentsia is that of attempting to stop Islam from manifesting
its immutable nature.
This
is a travesty of the truth about religions and how they are manifest
in history and society. Religions are human practices. They are
therefore, by their very nature located in history, and do not exist
apart from their particular instances. It's not as though there's
something called 'Judaism', and then there's this people doing these
things with this history. No, Judaism is
these people doing these things with this history. There is no
Platonic Form of Judaism, or Christianity, or Islam, standing over
and against the world of human beings, their thoughts, their prayers,
their feasts and their fastsxv.
As human practices they interact with, are conditioned by, and
themselves condition the structures and struggles, ideas and
ideologies of human societies as these develop, and are
revolutionised, historically. There is also, of course, continuity
through change. To be sure the Islam of 21st
century Brick Lane looks very different from that of 7th
century Mecca. But then the motor car looks very different from the
horse-drawn cart. The kind of religion opinion-formers are fond of
calling 'extreme' is not, so to speak, an ahistorical essence played
at maximum volume; instead it is the working out of a particular
history in a particular context.
Can
any sense at all be made of the concept of extremism, then, or should
it be given up as irreducibly ideological, if not straightforwardly
nonsensical, as unhelpful and inapplicable a concept as 'discerning
Coldplay enthusiast'? I think some sense can be salvaged on the
basis of the reflection that religious practices exist in societies
structured by class, overseen by state power, and infused with
ideology. There is, therefore, a status
quo, even if – as
at present – it is the contradiction-ridden status
quo of restless
capital accumulation, upon which the state struggles to impose the
necessary social order like an owner straining to control a vicious
dog. Religion must position itself with respect to this status
quo; to borrow
Sartre's phrase 'not to choose is to choose'xvi.
The religious organisation or individual that makes no conscious
political decision sides with the world as it isxvii.
But to the extent that religion opposes itself to the world as it is,
it is extremexviii.
By the very fact of its very existence in modern society, religion is
thrown into a state of conflict readiness with regard to that
society. If it follows through on this, even to the minimal extent
of calling into question aspects of existing society, it is in due
measure extreme, in terms of our first pass at a definition of
extremism. Religion becomes a tribunal over and above society, its
concerns take precedence over those of the moderate world in general.
This is, of course, perfectly compatible with that world itself
having given rise to this extremism by way of reaction. Ian Paisley,
denouncing Pope John Paull II (a man who himself had extremist
moments) as the Antichrist in the European parliament, was
undoubtedly an extremistxix.
There is, however, a tragic and bloodstained social history behind
this extremism – one notable feature of which is that the hateful
brand of religion Paisley dispensed was socially dominant, and
therefore not extreme in my terms, in parts of Ireland during the
20th
century, and served the purposes of the eminently reasonable and
moderate British state all the whilexx.
It
would be an injustice to extremists everywhere to close this section
in a manner that allowed Ian Paisley to function as the archetype of
the genre. To gesture towards the fundamental political ambiguity of
religious extremism, then (a topic to which we'll return at the end
of this chapter), I propose some words from a letter Martin Luther
King Jr wrote from Birmingham Jail, Alabama. They deserve quotation
at lengthxxi.
But
though I was initially disappointed at being categorized as an
extremist, as I continued to think about the matter I gradually
gained a measure of satisfaction from the label. Was not Jesus and
extremist for love: "Love your enemies, bless them that curse
you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which
despitefully use you, and persecute you." Was not Amos an
extremist for justice: "Let justice roll down like waters and
righteousness like am ever-flowing stream." Was not Paul an
extremist for the Christian gospel: "I bear in my body the marks
of the Lord Jesus."... So the question is not whether we will be
extremists, but what kind of extremists we will be. Will we be
extremists for hate or for love? Will we be extremists for the
preservation of injustice or for the extension of justice? In that
dramatic scene on Calvery's hill three men were crucified. We must
never forget that all three were crucified for the same crime -- the
crime of extremism. Two were extremists for immorality, and thus fell
below their environment. The other, Jesus Christ, was an extremist
for love, truth, and goodness, and thereby rose above his
environment. Perhaps the South, the nation, and the world are in dire
need of creative extremists.
They
were, and they still are.
Radicalisation
– the root of terror?
In
tandem with the frequent outings the word 'extremism' has enjoyed in
recent years, its partner 'radicalisation' has often been wheeled out
for added effect. Consider the case of Mohammed
Emwazi, a young man who grew up in West London and worked for a while
in the IT industryxxii.
Emwazi is better known by his tabloid nickname 'Jihadi John', given
to him initially by some of his hostages, before his true identity
was generally knownxxiii.
A fighter with ISIS, Emwazi has appeared in a number of the harrowing
beheading videos which have become that group's best known form of
propaganda. He is implicated in the murders of numerous people. Once
his identity and background were revealed, there was an astonishing
level of collective soul-searching over how it was that such an
ordinary-sounding early life had led up to such horror (the
suppressed premise here, that ordinary people don't do grotesque
things, deserves a good deal more interrogation than it has had).
One
option when seeking explanations of individual evil is to suggest
that the snake was always in the garden, that contrary to appearances
there was always some demonic urge to destroy hidden away in that
person's soul. As we've already seen, a name some contemporary
liberals give to this is 'Islam'. Freud, on the other hand, thought
the phenomenon was rather more general than we might care to imagine,
as arguably did St Augustine. Be that as it may, there is something
quite comforting for the status quo in the supposition that
Emwazi and his brutal ilk were rotten from the word go. We, whether
'we' are policymakers, generals, intelligence bosses, capitalists,
educators, or society in general, are thereby absolved from any sins
of omission. There is nothing we could have done to halt an evil that
is as without cause as God himselfxxiv.
That his observation that Emwazi had been a 'beautiful young man'
driven into the arms of ISIS by the actions of the security services
shattered this comforting illusion of radical evil, explains the
outrage directed at Asim Qureshi of the campaigning group Cagexxv.
This
outrage went right to the top of parliamentary politics. Commenting
on Qureshi's remarks, David Cameron said,
It
is completely reprehensible to suggest that anyone who carries out
such brutal murders – they are the ones responsible and we should
not be seeking to put blame on other people, particularly those who
are working to keep British citizens safexxvi.
The
fallacious assertion that explaining behaviour involves
excusing that behaviour is a familiar conservative response to
the proposal that social accounts of individual wrongdoing are
available, as we've already seen. Yet official ideology is not
consistent at this point, for at the very same time politicians and
opinion columnists were castigating Cage's account of the birth of
Emwazi's violence, they were scrabbling around in the known fragments
of his biography, desperately trying to devise a story of their own.
The question which haunted these attempts was 'when was Emwazi
radicalised?', the hope being that an answer to this might point the
way to preventing future radicalisations.
Educational
institutions became the objects of intense scrutiny. Emwazi's former
headteacher was dragged out to reassure us that, he 'showed no signs
of radicalisation' whilst at schoolxxvii.
His university received far more attention. The Daily Mail
carried reports of gender segregated meetings and support for the
9/11 attacks at the University of Westminster – although their
source was professional anti-extremist, UKIP election strategist and
founder of the Student Rights group, Raheem Kassanxxviii.
Others claimed discrimination against LGBT people at Westminster by
Islamic extremists and described being made to feel 'uncomfortable'
by 'pro-politically Islamist (sic) views'xxix.
Universities
have been the focus of a good amount of the discussion about
prevention of radicalisation. This antedates the rise of ISIS by
many years and has its immediate origins in the response to 9/11 and
the July 2005 London bombings ; witness the 2005 release of the
Social Affairs Unit's so-called Glees Report, which suggested that
twenty three UK educational institutions were at particular risk of
nurturing terroristsxxx.
The target has proved a slippery one, and a lot of attention has been
given to, for example, gender segregation at meetings, the connection
of which to political violence, it is fair to say, has not been
established. Even less concrete are accusations that 'extreme'
Muslims make others – lesbian, gay, and transgender people – feel
uncomfortablexxxi.
This network of insinuation, fear, and the need to defend 'our'
(liberal, pluralist, sexually open) values against 'them' looks like
nothing more than racism. And that is exactly what it is, as the next
chapter will suggest. In the meanwhile, I do not want to be
misunderstood: it is vital that the gains of feminism and LGBT
liberation be defended. That is not to be done, however, through bans
on opponents, still less by throwing accusations at an already
discriminated against religious minority. It is scarcely ever
registered that there are Muslims, visible Muslims, whom a primed
observer might think 'radical' or 'extreme', who are also women or
gay. Still less frequently is it considered that these people might
have voices of their own. There are lesbians who wear the hijabxxxii.
There are lesbian and gay Palestinian Muslims who object to the
pinkwashing tactic of portaying the state of Israel as a vanguard of
liberal freedomxxxiii.The
concept of intersectionality has yet to arrive in the
anti-radicalisation camp. In any case, whatever the weavers of moral
panic about radicalisation might have us believe, the freedoms gained
since the 1960s have white-skinned opponents in the Conservative
Party, UKIP, the media, and, for that matter, the Established Church
with far more power to effect reaction than a speaker at a
university Islamic society. It is the Bullingdon Club at the
University of Oxford, not the Islamic Society at the University of
Westminster which poses the greater threat to our future happiness.
The
focus on universities gets official sanction from the Home Office
Prevent strategy. Called in full 'Preventing Violent Extremism',
although in fact explicitly encompassing in its remit 'non-violent
extremists', Prevent is the UK government's post-9/11 strategy for
combatting radicalisation. 'Further and higher education
institutions' are a key area of its operationsxxxiv.
A report by the Association of Chief Police Officers explains the
rationale for the attention to universities,
The
UK has experienced a number of terrorist incidents since 2001, some
of which had a great impact or had
the
potential for a great impact. They affect the lives of those
involved, those who view them through the
media
and they also affect the economy significantly. Analysis of the
perpetrators indicates that the average
age
at the time of their arrest was 25; most were educated in British
schools and colleges and many had
studied
at British universities. Most exhibited degrees of vulnerability,
prior to being radicalisedxxxv.
The
report also factors in opposition from academics and students to the
operation of Prevent at universities. In order to understand this, it
is important to understand that levels of suspicion of the police
were already high at British universities in 2012, the year of the
report's publication, owing to the actions of police around the wave
of action against fees and cuts that had taken place in 2011xxxvi.
Students had been arrested, searched, kettled, and battered;
widespread police surveillance, often by plain clothes officers, had
taken place, and much of this had happened under the remit of
countering extremism (even to the extent that counter-terrorism
officers had been involvedxxxvii).
The discourse of countering religious radicalisation does not occur
in a political vacuum. Specific concerns about Prevent clustered
around the stigmatising of Muslims; there were reports of university
staff being asked to inform on 'depressed or isolated' Muslim
studentsxxxviii.
The present author spent much of his university career feeling
depressed and isolated – hardly an uncommon condition amongst young
adults – but that was a while ago, and anyway skin colour and
creed xxxix
would
probably have kept me from the state's no doubt laudible concern for
students' mental well-being.
I
was, however, radicalised at university, politically and religiously.
Politically, I had absorbed a general left-wing outlook from my
family, and turned up at university having read a bit of Marx and
rather more Tony Benn. In the subsequent years, I went on
demonstrations, discussed political theory with reformists and
revolutionaries alike, encountered levels of poverty and racism from
which I'd been sheltered in childhood, and in many other ways was
formed into the kind of person who writes a book like the present
one. Then again, I began to think about religious ideas, and their
relationship to the political, in new waysxl.
This is what happens at universities: people meet ideas, have new
experiences, are changed, and, sometimes, radicalised. I certainly
don't regret my own radicalisation for one moment; the existence of
social spaces which permit radicalisation is precious, and we should
defend it against both the neoliberal vision of universities as
training schemes for middle managers and the Prevent vision of them
as places where unwelcome questioning is curtailed.
But
what is it to be radicalised anyway? The word 'radical' derives from
the Latin radix,
meaning 'root'. But the root of what?
To become a radical, that is to be radicalising, might be thought to
involve coming to believe that the world, or a certain society, or a
certain religious organisation needs to change at
the root, that the
fundamentals need to change. On the other hand, a religious radical
could be imagined to be someone who advocates a return to the roots
of a religion –
renewed attention to foundational texts, or figures, or traditions.
Typically, in fact, the religious radical is a radical in both
senses. On the basis of a re-reading of the relevant religious
tradition, she advocates wide-ranging changes to the world about her.
That is true of those pioneers of civil rights in the US who
appropriated the Exodus narrative in the light of their own
experience; it is also true of the likes of Emwazi (even if, given
the aforementioned Quranic ignorance of many young reactionary
Muslims, it is probably more honest to speak of a
reading of the
Quran, rather than a re-reading
in most cases). As always, however, reading is socially located. That
a reader views a text as liberating, or oppressive, as validating
politics of the left, or of the right, is conditioned by any number
of contextual factors, and cannot be simplistically attributed to the
text considered in abstraction from society. There are of course
limits, whatever those drunk on the sillier excesses of postmodernism
might think. Someone who reads Mein
Kampf as an
anti-racist tract is just wrong, not a creative interpreter. Not
least amongst our current problems is some that opinion formers, on
the basis of a heady mix of barely repressed racism and philistinism
about religious texts, think that the Quran belongs in a similar
category to that evil book.
The
radical, much like the extremist, thinks that the world is in need of
fundamental change, that mere reformist tinkering around at the edges
won't suffice. She is correct. The devil is where he always lurks, in
the detail. But the fact that the deluded reactionary Mohammed Emwazi
and those brave Christian anarchists who seek to decommission
military hardware are both religious radicals is no more a reason to
reject all religious radicalism than the fact that Jane Austen and
Piers Morgan are both writers is a reason to stop reading booksxli.
The Violence of Moderation
It is not, in
any case, as though moderation wasn't complicit in a violence of its
own. The extremist challenges an order characterised by capitalist
economic relations and the modern state, typically justified in terms
of the standard liberal bullet-points 'freedom', 'democarcy',
'enterprise', 'pluralism', and so on. In so doing, she opposes a
set-up which, for all its undoubted benefits, is integrally tied up
with routinised violence on a scale without rival anywhere in human
history. Modern society was born out of bloodshed, of religious
reformation backed by force of arms, of revolution, terror, and the
forcible creation of a propertyless class (the standard Marxian term
for which, 'primitive accumulation', does little to convey the human
suffering involvedxlii).
It is sustained through force: think of the frequent wars, ever more
technologised, that characterise our existence; and then think of the
common, unremarkable, violence by means of which property relations
are policed. The half-starved homeless person being bundled into a
police van for taking food from a supermarket whose annual profits
run into the millions is an icon of the true nature of 'moderate',
'non-violent', everyday life. When profit-as-normal is threatened, by
the inept counter-violence of riots or insurrection, still more by
the threat of revolution, then out come the water cannon, tear gas,
and plastic bullets; out come the 'real' bullets, the
states-of-emergency, and the internment. Out comes, in the last
resort, fascism, a phenomenon which cannot be adequately understood
until it is realised that, contrary to its own official ideology, its
function is to preserve capitalist social relationsxliii.
Ordinary life is founded on violence, and moderation, in that it
tailors thought and practice for ordinary life, serves to legitimate
that violence.
It is important to
think through the ensnarement of moderation by violence, since there
is a good deal of conceptual slippage from extremism to violence, to
the extent that the 'violent' in 'violent extremism' can sound like
tautologous excess. Once the violent nature of actuality is unmasked,
new extremist options become available. It is true, of course, that
some extremists end up in nihilistically kicking against an order
they cannot escape in their own terms, reflecting back that order's
intrinsic violence in a concentrated form – thus ISIS, for whom no
amount of condemnation is too harsh. Yet, there is always the
possibility that a form of extremist opposition to life-as-normal
could have as one of its ends the cessation of the mundane violence
capitalism requires for its reproduction – thus one kind of
socialist tradtion.
Rethinking
moderation requires also that we rethink moderate religion. Remember
that, for the standard liberal account this is the good
sort of religion, less damaging to human beings than the extreme
variety. In the story of Margaret Clitherow, we saw how the birth of
what would now be considered paradigmatically moderate religion was
violent to an extent that would give the most depraved jihadi a run
for his money. Moderate religion is, in the main, religion that has
repressed its violent origins, much as liberalism is that political
ideology that, whilst justifying itself by its capacity to sustain
social peace, is premised on the systematic forgetting of the bloody
birth of that 'peace'. The ascendence of bourgeois rule typically
involved religious violence: whether that was the violence of
reformation, or violence against religion as such, as in the French
Terror.
Isn't this too hasty,
though? A familiar liberal creation myth for the modern state has it
that our present political arrangements arose in response to
religious violence, and serve to protect us against the return of
that violence. As Judith Shklar, quoted by William Cavanaugh has it,
liberalism...
was born out of the cruelties of the religious civil wars, which
forever rendered the claims of Christian charity a rebuke to all
religious institutions and parties. If the faith was to survive at
all, it would do so privately. The alternative then set, and still
before us, is not one between classical virtue and liberal
self-indulgence, but between cruel military and moral repression and
violence, and a self-restraining tolerance that fences in the
poewrful to protect the freedom and safety of every citizenxliv.
One doubts that
those on the receiving end of drone attacks or truncheon blows dealt
by modern states are quite as convinced of the absence of 'cruel
military and moral repression' as Shklar seems to imply they should
be. It is only from a certain perspective that the move from the
Inquisition to Hiroshima is any kind of progress at allxlv.
Cavanaugh himself makes a powerful case, albeit one which in the
details doesn't entirely escape the romantic medievalism of the
Radical Orthodoxy
school, that not only does the liberal myth of origin downplay
economic and political factors (one wouldn't, from reading Shklar,
think that liberalism had anything to do with middle class
ascendancy, which – in its own perception – it doesn't) but also
anachronistically imputes a modern concept of religionxlvi.
Rather, the so-called Wars of Religion were not so much caused by
'religion' as they were the birth of religion, understood as a
particular part of life, within the modern division of reality
described in the previous chapter.
So much for the
birth of modern moderate religion. What about the present? So much as
it fails to subject existing violence to criticism, allowing perhaps
for the occasional expression of concern for 'the poor', moderate
religion is complicit in that violence. 'Moderate religion' here
denotes not only the typical stance of churches in modernity; it also
covers the approved varieties of Islam, eager to 'integrate', and
rightly viewed with suspicion by those young Muslims who quite
rightly question the value of integrating into a society that offers
them the prospect of an uninteresting nine-to-five job by way of
compensation for the daily experience of racism, and similar forms of
Judaism. Perhaps the darkest complicity of moderate religion in
violence lies in its widespread preparedness to countenance war. It
was the assent of the Kulturprotestantismus
of
the early 20th
century to the First World War that caused that century's greatest
Protestant theologian, Karl Barth, to reject liberal theologyxlvii;
much as the support of the SDF for the same war caused Rosa Luxemberg
and Karl Liebnicht to break with that party. The annual display of
religious solemnity alongside regimental colours at cenotaphs ought
to remind us just how little opposition socially acceptable religion
has made to mass slaughterxlviii.
The Dominican friar, Herbert McCabe, defending his support for
revolutionary politics against the objection that violence is
antithetical to Christian theology writes,
[I]n
this matter we should not lose our sense of humour. There is
something especially ludicrous about Christian churchmen coming
round to the belief that violence is wrong. There is probably no
sound on earth so bizarre as the noise of clergymen bleating about
terrorism and revolutionary violence while their cathedrals are
stuffed with regimental flags and monuments to colonial wars. The
Christian Church, with minor exceptions, has been solidly on the side
of violence for centuries, but normally it has only been the violence
of soldiers and policemen. It is only when the poor catch on to
violence that it suddenly turns out to be against the gospel.xlix
Moderate religion
blesses bombs, yet we are told that religion must be moderate to keep
us safe from extremist violence.
There is no alternative?
Writing about the
politics of anti-extremism in the context of the post-9/11 'war on
terror', Arun Kundnami observes,
Extremism
is a term particularly amenable to naturalising the status quo. Since
at least the French Revolution, politicians have used the accusation
of extremism to denounce enemies on their flanks, and to present
themselves as occupying a moderate center.l
To be an
extremist is to be opposed, in some way, to things as they are. Yet
the word 'extremist' is loaded with normative force. To call someone
an extremist is both to identify their position as lying beyond the
bounds of the customarily accepted and to offer a rebuke. When the
present becomes unpalletable for large numbers of people, a first
recourse of those with a vested interest in it is to label anyone who
proposes even reforms an 'extremist'. One of the things I recall from
the Tony Benn diaries mentioned above is an incident in a train
buffet car. Some drunk 'business executives' were there with Benn: 'I
queued up... and they were saying 'There's that fucking extremist, Mr
Benn'... and kept up an absolute barrage of insulting remarks'li.
It wasn't simply the drink talking; the men were articulating a view
common enough in the tabloid press, and for that matter in the higher
eschelons of the Labour Party.
These days we're
scared not with the thought of pipe-smoking socialists, but of
suicide bombers. The alarming associations of the word 'extremist'
have been ratcheded up several notches. Yet it remains a warning to
those who stray too far from the centre, too far from safety. The
left needs to be aware of the ideological work done by this most
treacherous of words, to stop adding to its reservoir of force by
deploying it against our own enemies – far too often, for instance,
anti-fascist groups will describe the BNP and EDL as 'extremists';
it's not as though there's a shortage of other insults that could be
deployed to equal effect. Above all we should reclaim the word. The
world stands in urgent need of extremists, the right kind of
extremists, religious or otherwise. For as long as moderation remains
the only option Margaret Thatcher stands vindicated, 'There Is No
Alternative'. There is an alternative, extremism, and it has never
been needed more.
i'David
Cameron launches anti-terror task force to tackle extremism', Press
Association, 26th
May 2013.
ii'Tackling
Extremism in the UK : Report from the Prime Minister's Task Force
on Tackling Radicalisation and Extremism'. HM Government. December
2013.
iii'The
day I found out I'm a Domestic Extremist', Jenny Jones MLA, Daily
Telegraph, 20th January 2015.
ivSteve
Cooke, 'Animal rights and environmental terrorism', Journal of
International Terrorism Research 4(2), 2013.
v'Tackling
Extremism in the UK'
viibid.
viiSpeech
to US Congress, 20th September 2001. The line is not
without its own theological resonances, c.f. Matthew 12: 30.
viiiSee
especially Edward Said, Orientalism, (Harmondsworth: Penguin,
2003).
ixChapter
3 below.
xThe
terminology here is paraphrase. But 'good Muslim' and 'bad Muslim'
are actually used in Angel Rabasa, Cheryl Bernard, Lowell H.
Schwartz and Peter Sickle, Building Moderate Muslim Networks
(Santa Monica, CA.: RAND
Corporation, 2007).
xiOn
integration see Arun Kundnami, The Muslims Are Coming :
Islamophobia, Extremism, and the Domestic War on Terror.
(London: Verso, 2014), p. 75 ff. Also LENTIN/ TITLEY
xiiSam
Harris, Lecture at the First Congregational Church, Berkley, CA.
November 10th, 2010.
xivThe
key text here is Samuel P. Huntington, 'The Clash of
Civilizations?', Foreign Affairs 72(3), 1993.
xvThis
position is not appropriately described using the over-used term
'anti-essentialism'. It is no part of my claim that religions don't
have natures, but rather than these are formed, and changed, in
human history. See Marx's views on human nature in the Theses
on Feuerbach .
xviSartre
xviiThus
Desmond Tutu: 'If you are neutral
in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the
oppressor. If an elephant has its foot on the tail of a mouse
and you say that you are neutral, the mouse will not appreciate your
neutrality.' Quoted William Quigley, Ending Poverty as we know it
: Guaranteeing the right to a job at a living wage
(Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2003), p.8.
xviiiTo
theorise this slightly more carefully: whether or not religious
practice is extreme is relative to a context of assessment.
Wahabism is not extreme relative a perspective internal to Saudi
society; once one's purview is a just about still Western-dominated
global order, it is extreme.
xixA
theopolitical intervention which is preserved for posterity on the
internet:
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2014/09/12/ian-paisley-pope-antichrist_n_5809840.html
Accessed 21st March 2015.
xxWAR
AND AN IRISH TOWN . Against those, including Richard Dawkins, who
point to the Irish conflict as an instance of the harm done by
religion, it is worth emphasising that the division of the Irish
national question along religious lines is a relatively recent
imperial import. Early Irish nationalists, notably Wolfe Tone, were
Protestants.
xxiThe
whole letter, dated April 16th 1963, is available
on-line:
http://coursesa.matrix.msu.edu/~hst306/documents/letter.html
xxiiAlexandra
Topping and Nishaat Ismail, 'Who is Mohammed Emwazi? From 'lovely
boy' to Islamic State killer', The Guardian, 2nd
March 2015.
xxiiiMegan
Levy, 'How London rapper L Jinny became Jihadi John, suspected of
beheading James Foley', Sydney Morning Herald, 5th
August 2014.
xxivOn
the theological resonances of the concept of evil at work here see
Terry Eagleton, FIND REF (HOLY TERROR?)
xxv
'Who is Mohammed Emwazi?'. A Cage report on Emwazi is available at
http://www.cageuk.org/article/youre-going-be-followedlife-will-be-harder-you-story-mohammed-emwazi
. Accessed 23rd March 2013.
xxvi'David
Cameron condemns Cage over blaming MI5 for radicalisation of Jihadi
John', Daily Telegraph, 27th February 2015.
xxviiSam
Rkaina, 'Mohammed Emwazi : Jihadi John's former headteacher says he
'was bullied but showed no signs of radicalisation', Daily
Mirror, 2nd March 2015.
xxviii'Jihadi
John's old university was a 'hotbed of radicalism where students
celebrated 9/11, claims ex-pupil – and hate preacher was even due
to speak there tonight', Mail online, 27th February 2015.
On Kassam see
http://www.spinwatch.org/index.php/blog/item/5502-the-extreme-anti-extremist-raheem-kassam-s-climate-sceptic-greencease-project
. Kassam was employed as UKIP's election strategist for the 2015 UK
general election.
xxixhttp://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2015/02/27/extremist-students-consis_n_6767440.html
Accessed 23rd March 2015.
xxxAnthony
Glees and Chris Pope, When Students Turn to Terror : Terrorist
and Extremist Activity on British Campuses (London: Social
Affairs Unit, 2005).
xxxiOn
some of the political concerns around the appeals to 'feeling
unsafe' and 'feeling uncomfortable', now endemic in the left around
British universities, see
http://anonymousrefused.tumblr.com/post/99047385737/for-your-safety-and-security
xxxiiSee,
for instance,
https://blackfeministsmanchester.wordpress.com/2013/02/04/my-hijab-is-rainbow/
Accessed 27th March 2015. See also Liz Fekete, A
Suitable Enemy : Racism, Migration and Islamophobia in Europe
(London: Pluto, 2009), Ch. 3.
xxxiiihttp://electronicintifada.net/content/eight-questions-palestinian-queers-are-tired-hearing/12951
Accessed 27th March 2015.
xxxiv'Prevent
Strategy', HM Government, June 2011.
xxxv'Police,
Prevent, and universities. Guidance for police officers and police
staff to help Higher Education Institutions contribute to the
prevention of terrorism', Association of Chief Police Officers,
May 2012.
xxxviFor
a sense of this see SPRINGTIME
xxxviiA
phenomenon which seems to be ongoing:
http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/is-prevent-being-used-to-hassle-student-protesters-156
. Accessed 24th March 2015.
xxxixRyan
Gallagher and Rajeev Syal, 'University staff asked to inform on
'vulnerable' Muslim students', The Guardian, 29th
August, 2011,
xlThis
was the result of reading a lot of liberation theology. I now think
there are insuperable problems with this school of thought, and my
own views are now broadly along the lines of Herbet McCabe, 'The
class struggle and Christian love' in God Matters (London:
Continuum, 1987), pp. 182-98. I will remain forever grateful,
though, to liberation theology, whose concern with 'the poor',
served to innoculate me against a New Labour which was, in Peter
Mandelson's words, 'intensely relaxed about people getting filthy
rich'.
xliiMark
Neocleous, War Power, Police Power (Edinburgh: Edinburgh
University Press, 2014), Ch. 2 is particularly insightful here.
xliiiMark
Neocleous, Fascism, (Buckingham: Open University Press,
1997).
xlivJudith
Shklar, Ordinary Vices (Cambridge, MA.: Harvard University
Press, 1984), p 5. See also John Rawls, 'Justice as Fairness:
Political not metaphysical', Philosophy and Public Affairs
14(3), pp. 223-51, especially p. 249 ff.
xlvIn
another sense, of course, there is very genuine and praiseworthy
progress from the kind of society which gave rise to the Inquisition
and mid-20th century American society, its just that this
very real progress is inseparable from progress, in Adorno's words,
'from the slingshot to the atom bomb'. Negative Dialectics
(London: Routledge, 1973), p. 320.
xlviWilliam
T. Cavanaugh, Theopolitical Imagination: Discovering the Liturgy
as a political act in an age of global consumerism (London: T&T
Clark, 2002), Ch. 1.
xlviiOn
Barth's theology and politics see Timothy Gorringe, Karl Barth :
Against Hegemony (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999).
xlviiiOf
course, the normal response from the moderates here is 'we're not
celebrating war, we're honouring the dead'. The comeback is
appropriately scriptural, 'they know not what they do'.
xlix'The
class struggle and Christian love', p. 196.
l
The Muslims Are Coming, p. 68.
liTony
Benn, The Benn Diaries : Single Volume Edition, editted by
Ruth Winstone (London: Arrow, 1985), p.485.
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