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Secularism and hypocrisy: official France mourns
pope and bans Muslim scarf
By Barry Grey and Antoine Lerougetel
26 April 2005
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The response of the French government and media to the death
of Pope John Paul II has, among other things, exposed the utter
hypocrisy of the campaign waged by the entire political establishment
against the right of Muslim girls to wear head scarves in public
schools. That reactionary crusade, waged in the name of secularism,
culminated only a year ago in the enactment of a law banning head
shawls from public places such as schools.
Political and media luminaries of the official left no less
than the establishment right, from President Jacques Chirac to
the leadership of the Socialist Party, waxed indignant that Muslim
children were tarnishing the secularist traditions they claimed
to hold dear. The presence of head scarves in the schools threatened
to undermine the very foundations of the French Republic, they
declared.
The secularist façade of the anti-Muslim campaign was
buttressed by an appeal to feminist sentiment. In making it a
crime for Muslim girls to observe the strictures of their religion,
the opponents of the shawl claimed to be waging a struggle against
the oppression of women, symbolised by the head scarf. This feminist
angle provided a further rationale for the opportunists of the
far left, including Lutte Ouvrière and the
Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire, to join the government
crusade, lending credibility to the absurd and reactionary notion
that womens rights can be secured by repressive laws against
particular religious observances.
That this campaign dovetailed with the attack on all things
Muslim by the far right not only in France, but throughout Europe,
was conveniently ignored. So too was the longstanding special
treatment extended by the French Republic to the Catholic Church.
Reality was stood on its head, as the democratic and secularist
principle of freedom of thought and expression, including religious
observance, was trampled onin the name of democracy and
secularism! With this law, moreover, the state established an
ominous precedent, arrogating to itself the right to intervene
in the most personal and private affairs of individuals.
But that was last year, and those were Muslims. When his Roman
Catholic holiness Pope John Paul II expired earlier this month,
President Chirac and Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin jumped
at the chance to sprinkle republican water over the corpse.
Chirac and Raffarin, accompanied by wives and government ministers,
attended mass at Paris Notre Dame Cathedral to honour the
pontiff. Raffarin declared, The government solemnly associates
itself with the homage paid to Pope Jean Paul II. National
flags on public buildings, including public schools, were ordered
to be flown at half-mast; prefects were required to attend
funeral services ... in memory of His Holiness, and urged
to pay a visit of condolence to the bishop. TV commentators
repeatedly referred to the pope as the Holy Father.
No attempt was made to square this genuflection before the
Church with the previous crusade for secularism. Why
should there be, since everyone who matters already
knew that yesterdays proclamations in defence of secularism
had been thoroughly disingenuous? Even before the popes
demise, leading figures in and around the government had gone
out of their way to flaunt their Catholic convictions. Former
finance minister Nicolas Sarkozy, for example, demonstratively
made the sign of the cross at a public boat launching.
Nor were there significant protests from the Socialist Party
camp, which only months before was vociferously denouncing the
religious poison being injected into the body politic by scarf-bearing
girls.
There were protests from some quarters, including those who
pointed to the glaring contradiction between the glorification
of the pope and the ban on Muslim head scarves. The FCPE (Federation
of Councils of Parents of Pupils), one of the
two main parents associations, issued a press statement
on April 4, which declared: A year after the promulgation
of the March 2004 law on the wearing of religious signs in primary
and secondary schools, secular activists are aghast at the media
deluge which anticipatedoften in an indecent mannerthen
accompanied the death of the pope, and this especially in the
state broadcasting services... What is the significance, in particular,
of the exceptional flying of the flag at half-mast at the front
of the schools? How will young people interpret this double-standard
secularism that bans the wearing of the veil, but authorizes political
and media excesses in relationship to the death of the pope?
The magazine of the main secondary school teachers union, the
SNES (National Union of Secondary Education), asked:
How, when the government obliges collèges and
lycées to fly flags at half-mast a year after passing
the law banning pupils from wearing religious signs, can one not
see a provocation in giving signs of allegiance to one religion?
TV and radio stations and the press received large amounts
of correspondence criticising the nature and volume of their coverage.
The daily Libération reported an avalanche
of emails and letters of complaint.
If the law banning the head scarf was not motivated by secular
principles, then what was it really about? It was a discriminatory
attack on the poorest and most oppressed sections of French society.
The entire campaign for the law was a deliberate diversion from
the growing social crisis in France, whose working population
faces mass unemployment, falling living standards, and a government
assault on the welfare state.
The law has exacerbated ethnic and religious tensions and facilitated
increased state repression. To date, 47 girls have been excluded
from their schools. Some 550 have been pressured into removing
their head scarves, and many hundreds have chosen to leave school
and attempt to complete their education through correspondence
courses. Some, for which there are no statistics, have just given
up. Three Sikh boys have also been excluded from school for insisting
on covering their hair.
Mothers wearing the veil have been prevented from accompanying
children on school trips. Veiled women have been banned from public
buildings, and their right to work in public and even private
enterprises has increasingly been challenged.
Such attacks, needless to say, only encourage religious backwardness,
along with intolerance and bigotry.
See Also:
France: National Assembly
bans Muslim headscarves in schools
[18 February 2004]
France: The anti-Muslim
campaign and the phony debate on secularism
[13 August 2003]
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