The Swiss Minaret Initiative: Assuming our Responsibilities

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Even for the referendum’s backers, the result came as a shock. Advance polls had shown levels of support as high as 34%. But fully 57% of Swiss voters (with a high rate of participation) backed an initiative that speaks volumes about Swiss fear and mistrust of Islam and of Muslims. The SVP/UDC (Swiss Peoples Party) used the issue of minarets and of their visibility both as a symbol and a pretext for a campaign which saw the party claim that Islam “was intrinsically incompatible with Swiss values and culture” and depict Muslims as “intent on expanding, colonizing and, finally, Islamizing Switzerland.”

The language was often coarse, inaccurate, even xenophobic and racist, but the voice of the SVP/UDC (the only party to support the initiative against the opposition of all other Swiss political parties) was heard; a majority of my fellow citizens ultimately threw their support behind a shameful and blatantly discriminatory measure. It is by no means certain that the results will be approved by the European Court of Justice, but we must face the facts: a people, whose country counts all of four minarets, and which has been far less affected than its neighbors by social ills, has opted to call into question its millennium-old tradition of respect for religious freedom by discriminating against one specific religious community. Switzerland’s Muslims, most of whom are Bosnians, Kosovars and Turks, have never been a source of serious problems; the authorities could well have looked forward to a successful and mutually enriching process of integration.

So, what exactly has happened in Switzerland? The SVP/UDC ran a campaign based on fear, using posters that can only be described as scandalous in the images they displayed, particularly the one depicting minarets as missiles obscuring the Swiss flag, alongside a woman wearing a burqa: a perfect synthesis of the stereotypes that led to the success of the initiative. In the face of this heavy-handed, vulgar and dangerous operation, we must assume our responsibilities: how could such an initiative succeed against the opposition of the entire political establishment, with the exception of a single party.

Switzerland’s Muslim citizens must hear the message: their fellow citizens fear and mistrust them. Time has come for them to become more involved and more active in society, and to stop acting only in self-defense on issues related to Islam. It is time for all Swiss citizens of both sexes, as well as permanent residents, to participate in social questions (education, employment, the economy, politics, culture, ecology, etc.) in a positive, constructive manner. It is time for them to normalize their presence by their human, ethical, pluralist and citizenship-based contributions to all major social and political debates. It will take time, but perceptions change on contact with living beings, and not by simple declarations of good intentions.

Our political leaders must also accept responsibility for the catastrophic result of the referendum. Though almost all major parties opposed the SVP/UDC initiative, their own stance on the “Muslim question” has been anything but clear-cut. While they opposed the initiative, they systematically hedged their own position, seemingly obliged to add that Islam presented a problem in terms of violence against women, of “integration”, etc. It was precisely this message that the Swiss people heard: over and above minarets, Islam and Muslims are a problem! It is of vital importance that the country’s political parties clearly dissociate themselves from the politics of mistrust, from the rhetoric of “integration” after three generations, and, finally, from the reluctance to accept the fact that Islam is a Swiss (and a European) religion, and that the overwhelming majority of Muslim citizens and residents are and will be a positive force for the society’s future. It is time for Switzerland’s political parties to assume their responsibilities, to offer a courageous, constructive and inclusive vision; to reconcile the politics of equality with the management of diversity. They can hardly criticize the SVP/UDC for being populist when they have nothing to offer in terms of social policy, and when at election time they fall back on the same old reliable themes of insecurity, immigration, or even identity and “Swiss” (or European) values. The lack of vision and courage that afflicts all the traditional political parties in Switzerland, and throughout Europe, has opened a royal road to the most populist, farthest rightwing political forces.

The media, and the journalists who work for them, must begin to ask themselves serious questions about their own strategy, if it can be called that. For in the final analysis, in the name of “freedom of expression” driven by the popularity index, a climate has been created that leaps from controversy to controversy, feeding into a general sense of dissatisfaction, of insecurity. The proliferation of talk shows; the failure to explore questions thoroughly; the reduction of information to sound bites stripped of context: these are the factors that shape the feelings and emotions of the public, that incite people to fear, withdrawal and rejection of the “other.” Populism is always the victor whenever debate is absent or takes place in circumstances where simplistic and superficial claims inevitably overwhelm intelligent, reasoned discussion. Democracy is not simply a matter of all being able to express themselves, but of everyone being able to do so in circumstances that protect the critical spirit, and that resist manipulation of public instincts and emotions that may prove difficult to control. If we are not vigilant—let history be our witness—racism of the worst kind can instill itself democratically in a society that does not regulate mass media in an ethical, responsible manner. For journalists, ethical responsibility means freeing themselves from the dictatorship of ratings and quick profit; fear, controversy and stigmatizing the “other” means more readers, viewers or listeners. How easy it is for us to criticize the way our societies have evolved when populist parties have adopted the logic inherent in our contradictions.
Responsibility must be shared. The road will be a lengthy one. In my most recent book, “What I Believe”, I argue that at least two generations will need to pass before we can overcome today’s fears and tensions. At minimum, the citizens of Switzerland and of Europe must assume their responsibilities, and commit themselves to openness, to the attempt to better understand the “other” in all his complexity, his values and his hopes. This is a responsibility we share. To assume it fully, we must cease our lamentations and take up the struggle together, in the name of the new “we” that defines us, in defense of our acquired rights, of the equality of all human beings and of their dignity. This we must do in the name of a principled refusal of populism in all its forms, of rejection that offers us a future of racism and conflict we know all too well. This is our shared responsibility providing we choose not to remain silent and over-cautious; providing we refuse to accept the victim’s role.

9 Commentaires

  1. That’s true: interaction and participation is important for better relationships with non-muslims. Let people see muslims are human beings with same questions as theirs. At the same time: when interaction and contribution takes place based on honousty that may lead to confrontations as well given the difference in values on some (not all) matters. Is that okay or is confrontation to be avoided?

  2. This is a sad state of affairs. People fear what they do not know, what makes it even worse is whatever they do know about Islam is only fear. When will the world wide Ummah wake up and realize that helping the non-Muslim community around them is the only way to quell these fears. The values of Islam are universal, they are not only for Muslims, they should be shared with people of all faiths. Muslims need to open up their hearts and celebrate with people of other faiths their common values, goals and aspirations. We need to end our isolation and fear that any exposure to the “outside world” will make us all unbelievers. Have faith in your faith, have faith in Allah and get out there and be a positive example for the world, not just your community. This is what we are here for. This is the only way to show our worth to the world. When we achieve this, the world will stop fearing Islam.

  3. Your message of social responsibility, openness and fearless expression of faith in the One source of grace and humane compassion should spread wider and more quickly around the world.

    The waves of understanding will ripple outward from Switzerland if serious people find a way to overcome this frightening undemocratic initiative in the land of peaceful neutrality.

  4. @Dr. Steven

    Do you believe that such a thing as “peaceful neutrality” exists in this world?

    There is always a politic involved in every confluence of actions, politic as a managing of difference, not an acceptance of difference, or a tolerance of difference. A managing of difference.

    The Swiss voted democratically out of concern for the continuity of and the rights of their society and culture.
    Their decision should be respected.

    • @Alise:
      If the majority of Germans thought that it was Ok to Gas the jews, was that acceptable, hence the decision of the german ppl should be respected? Or perhaps the majority of white americans thought it was acceptable to lynch african americans, should this decision also be respected? What are the limitations to ‘respecting’ such atrocious popularist antagonistic laws, and what safety net is put in place to protect ALL citizens of a country from blatant discrimination based on fear-mongering? As an Australian, i am proud to say that such discriminatory ideas have been flatly rejected by the majority of this democratic country, and those outsiders who have tried to spread population demographic hate in our community have basically been told to go back home (An Israeli professor ironically).
      Democracy is fine until it infringes on the rights of others…..

    • @Truthseeker
      Your argument would have made more sense if you had mentioned the undisputed presence of synagogues and other symbolic-functional religious architecture in Switzerland. Why are these displays of religious identity allowed, and not minarets? Instead, you offered two weak analogies to the minaret controversy, presumably with the thought that legislation prohibiting a particular display of cultural and religious identity via architecture is comparable to mass genocide or outright murder.

      Speaking of cultural genocide and discrimination/disenfranchisement of ethnic groups, you fail to mention Australia’s Stolen Generations. Are there any countries that may legitimately claim a history free from discriminatory practices?

      Thank you for your response.

    • @Alise: U seem to have misunderstood the point im making Alise, and that is such antagonistic laws and blatant discrimination against specific groups in a country can progress to outrite murder and genocide if the discrimination is not stopped in its tracks.This was obviously not a simple matter of Islamic architecture, lets not play around with semantics here. The question posed to the swiss is wut next? Sterilising muslim women to make sure Muslim numbers remain low? Extreme? Yes. possible? definitley wen u mix fear mongering and hate speech to the masses. And that is the responsibility of the countries leadership to assume such a role to keep the countries values/ethics/freedom for all in check. Yes, Australia as does other countries in the world does have a history against its indiginous population. It is not something that Australians are proud of (well, except our conservative parties who some of which actually deny any wrong doing, the same sorta parties that came up with the anti-mineret ideas, ironic once again). Australia has matured and moved on. Still alot of work to do, but no-one goes around singling aborgines and denying them their cultural/religious/nationalistic rights. Australia is a successful multicultural society. People from all over the world live here and have made australia the fantastic place it is today. It is one of the only countries who were not affected by the recession. That has good employment for all. Is the land of opportunity that has anti-discrimination laws to protect all its citizens, and as such, all its citizens love their home regardless of the parents ethnicity. Europe it seems has a long way to go to progress sadly….

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