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The muddied waters of identity
Geoffrey Wheatcroft The Boston Globe
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 25, 2005
BATH, England Here are two happy and hopeful snapshots of modern
Europe: In 1998, the French soccer team beat Brazil in the final of the
World Cup thanks to two brilliant goals from Zinédine Zidane, the sublime
"Zizou" who was born in Marseilles the son of Algerian immigrants. Then in
2002 the English cricket team was led to victory against India by Nasser
Hussein, himself born in Madras but brought to England as a boy.
Heart-warming stories of successful immigration and assimilation, these
might be thought; tributes to Europe's own melting pot. But there's another
side to the story, and there are much bleaker snapshots.
Last July young English-born Muslims carried out devastating suicide
bombings in London, killing scores of innocents. Then this autumn the dismal
outer suburbs of Paris were swept by riots that sent shockwaves through the
whole country. Those British Asians come from a community that is passionate
about cricket, and many of those riotous French boys of North African or
black African descent are soccer fanatics who must have dreamed of emulating
Zizou.
So for one thing, sports are not quite the healing balm we had once hoped
for. And for another, it looks at the moment as though a sour wisecrack
applies more aptly in Europe than in America: The only thing that melted was
the pot.
Events such as these have stimulated a debate on the British liberal left.
Although there is a liberal tradition of sympathy for third-worldliness,
racial equality and multiculturalism, the left's touchstone is above all the
welfare state. Writing in the London magazine Prospect, which he edits,
David Goodhart has argued that his fellow social democrats should recognize
a contradiction between the welfare state and the "diversity" beloved of
progressive opinion.
It can be summarized as "Sweden versus America": a universal welfare state
based on a homogeneous society with intensely shared values, or, as in
America, a much less homogeneous and more individualistic society that
believes in self-worth and lacks the same sense of obligation between
citizens.
America has always been a land of immigration - and of cheap labor. Its
explosive industrial development was fueled by the labor of immigrant
peasants from all the corners of Europe, and to a remarkable degree these
newcomers accepted the American gospel of equality through toil and dignity
through reward.
Unlike America, Europe had until recently no experience of large-scale
immigration from outside the continent. Just as the British were said to
have acquired their empire in a fit of absent-mindedness, so postwar Europe
acquired a large new immigrant population without really thinking about it.
In the case of England, France and Holland, it was a legacy of empire.
This highlighted the different attitudes to the idea of nationhood in
different countries. German identity was founded on the Volk, while the
French republican version was founded on the patrie. German immigration law,
dating back a hundred years, is well-nigh racial in inspiration. Anyone can
claim German nationality who can prove German descent, but it was has been
very difficult indeed for anyone else to become German.
And it was Germany that notoriously coined the name "guest workers" to
describe the immigrants who began arriving from Turkey in the 1950s. The
phrase unambiguously intended that these workers would go home like other
guests - but they didn't.
In France the official attitude was quite different. France had a long
history of migration and assimilation, and also believed in a mission
civilisatrice, which meant among other things that little boys from
Martinique to Senegal to Indochina might achieve the highest honor of all by
becoming Frenchmen.
Another French republican ideal was laicism: not the passive secularism of
the First Amendment but an active hostility to religion. France may at least
be said to have been even-handed about this - forbidding Muslim girls to
wear head scarves to school is no harsher than closing monasteries and
expelling Catholic religious orders, as the Third Republic did early last
century.
If the British Empire never quite preached its civilizing mission, it did in
fact successfully assimilate in some ways. An Englishman who visits Antigua
and Barbados finds things now quite unknown in our own damp little island -
large crowds at cricket matches and packed Anglican churches.
And yet there has been another factor, what the columnist William Pfaff
calls "ghettoization through political correctness." People were encouraged
to think of themselves as members of a specific community, black or Muslim,
rather than as citizens of the country in which they lived.
That was the exact opposite of the American tradition, whereby immigrants
were taught to identify with flag and constitution. It is highly significant
that the Blair government has now deliberately adopted the American model.
Those seeking British citizenship are for the first time expected to show
some knowledge of British history and culture, and then take a pledge of
allegiance to crown and country.
We all have multiple identities and mixed loyalties, national, religious,
political, social. Yet radical Islam has muddied the waters of identity,
along with that PC ghettoization, which evaded the truth that anyone can be
assimilated to the basic values of an adoptive country.
Games like soccer and cricket are among England's greatest gifts to the
world, but not as great as what George Orwell called the defining
characteristic of the English nowadays: We don't kill each other because of
our beliefs. Is it really racist or repressive to suggest that anyone living
among us should accept that principle?
(Geoffrey Wheatcroft's books include ''The Controversy of Zion'' and,
most recently, ''The Strange Death of Tory England.'' A version of this
article first appeared in The Boston Globe.)
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