http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alexander-gorlach/europe-rising-islamophobia_b_6414264.html
What Is Behind Europe's Rising Islamophobia?
Posted:
01/05/2015 11:57 am EST Updated: 03/07/2015 5:59 am EST
BERLIN
Recent arson attacks on mosques in Germany and Sweden, along with the emergence
of a movement called the "Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of
the Occident," prompted German Chancellor Angela Merkel to deliver a
"never again" New Year's message to her compatriots in anticipation
of Monday's demonstrations in Dresden. Warning against supporting PEGIDA, she
said
"their hearts are cold, often full of prejudice and even hate."
What is behind this most recent aggressive burst of
anti-Islamic sentiment? How should we view it?
The landmass of the Occident spans the territory of many
countries; its meaning becomes apparent only in juxtaposition to its
counterpart, the Orient. It has more frequently perished in countless texts,
speeches and films than all actually existing empires throughout human history
combined. In short: The Occident is a fiction and that quality has always made
it a powerful canvas for the projection of human fears and desires.
The Occident lies towards the Western sunset. Its lands
are those of nightfall: heavy, full of melancholy, straining for the final rays
of daylight, and hesitantly expecting the pale light of the rising moon. During
the Middle Ages, stone-carved creatures of the imagination flanked the walls of
Europe's cathedrals and conjured up images of nightly evils: When night falls,
darkness envelops the souls of men and threatens them with extinction. The hour
of sunset signals the advent of corporeal and spiritual danger. It takes
tremendous power to hold demons at bay and to weather the temptations of the
night. Two paradigms thus help to map the terrain of the Occident: the fear of
darkness, and the belief in the divine light.
Christian churches are built with East-facing chancel
windows; on Easter Sunday, the first daylight enters through the colored glass
and bathes the barren nave in celebratory light. The organ intones, and the
church bells ring out: He Has Risen. Indeed, the liturgy of Easter Sunday
presents us with the most condensed enactment of the Occidental yearning for
light, for another day, and for triumph over the demons of darkness.
Ex
oriente lux
the sun rises in the East. That's why Europeans have always
looked longingly beyond their horizon: Towards the East, towards Jerusalem.
The Occident became conscious of itself as a unified
entity when Jerusalem fell to Islamic conquest. The longing for Jerusalem was
thus also a longing for order and unity at home: One emperor, one pope, one
center and one horizon that provided order to the world. At that time, the
Occident was still being formed from the rubble of the Roman Empire, and forged
during the tumultuous centuries of the migration of the peoples.
"Alemannic" which is the etymological ancestor of the term
"German" in romance languages simply means "all men."
The longing for Jerusalem unified the Occident's diverse cultures for the first
time.
Once again, we can look towards medieval cathedrals for
architectural indicators of shared cultural sentiments: The domes of Europe's
great cathedrals were shaped to resemble the imagined cityscape of worldly
Jerusalem; their spires pointed towards heavenly Jerusalem. Christianity became
the unifying identity of the Occident.
THE OCCIDENT NEEDS THE ORIENT
But unity remained fragile. New dangers lurked nearby,
especially at the borders. From the South, Muslim armies threatened the
continent. From the North, Normans invaded. Later came the Huns, then the Turks
(whose conquest was only stopped at the gates of Vienna). Southern Spain
remained in Muslim hands for centuries. Rome, the
caput mundi
, continued
to be an attractive target for invaders from the Orient. The Occidental fears
became manifest sometimes obsessively so in fears of Islam. For
centuries, the religious competitor to the East robbed European emperors and
popes of their sleep. Over time, Islamophobia became part of the collective consciousness
of the Occident.
What is feared today is not the loss of any particular
country to foreign conquest, but the loss of an imagined entity that binds us
together. The Occident is a central piece of our mental maps and our cultural
inventory. That's one reason why seemingly everyone from "the Old
World" has at least an instinctual opinion about it. People harbor within
themselves a sense of shared meaning the semantic sediments of the Occident.
When those opinions are voiced, they often fall short by
the standards of reason and academic science. They are instead informed, in a
very visceral sense, by fears of decline and by memories of cultural
blossoming. Those fears culminate in the belief that our cathedrals will
eventually turn into mosques, that their bells will fall silent and will be
replaced by the cries of the muezzin. But fears lead to hyperbole. Let us
remember that foreign conquests have failed for many centuries (and not for
lack of trying!), and thus proclaim with conviction that danger can be averted
again.
Fear of decline, and the celebration of an imagined
unity: Those are the parameters that govern contemporary discourses about the
Occident not as arguments but as discursive foundations. Indeed, the
Occident is as much a fiction as the Orient. Both terms reflect the wishes,
dreams and aspirations of our forefathers. They were shaped in earlier epochs
over the course of generations and centuries.
The history of the Occident is not unlike the history of
a cathedral: Every generation has tinkered with the structure and amended it.
The foundations were set down during the time of Charlemagne, the aisles were
added during Romanticism, a new spire was built during the Gothic period,
ornate chapels appeared during the Baroque era. When fire struck, it was
rebuilt. It had to be: How could a city exist without its central reference
point?
The time of dusk: Fever, madness, gloriole, hyperbole.
Death appears imminent until the rise of dawn. In old hymns, sleep is recast as
the antechamber of death. No wonder, then, that religious pathologies and
political and religious ideologies have repeatedly swept across the continent.
Their danger remains acute. But to the arsonists I say: The Occident has never
been able to sustain itself. It always required the light of the Orient as
inspiration and an external reference point.
"The Occident has never been able to sustain itself. It always
required the light of the Orient as inspiration and an external reference
point."
During the Middle Ages, a veritable cult developed around
the "three wise men" who came from the Orient and whose earthly
remains are said to be contained in relics at the cathedral in Cologne.
Ex
oriente lux
or, as the gospel of Matthew puts it: "We have His star
when it rose, and have come to worship Him." In old paintings, the three
wise men resemble representatives from late antiquity's three known continents:
One European, one African, one Asian.
Thinkers like Erasmus of Rotterdam turned Christian
traditions into undogmatic humanism, bent on eradicating the denominational
borders within Christianity. Their effort proved to be a quick flicker: The
fanaticism of the Reformation and fights over the correct interpretation of
Christian dogma put an end to it. The Occident descended into centuries of
spiritual and intellectual darkness. At the end of the 20th century, and after
two World Wars, it is in the process of reinventing itself.
As Christianity teaches us, the dead have a way of rising
again. Today's discussions remind us that the Occident is not finished yet. But
we must not fool ourselves: The legacy of the term is a double-edged sword that
can mean nothing and everything at the same time. It was born of emotion and
shaped by the highs and lows of history. It is useless as an analytical
reference point and cannot supply answers to concrete political questions.
Both the community of Christendom and the unity of the
Occident were political ideas. The cost of their realization was paid in blood.
But what is the Occident today? It is the community of peoples who have
sustained the term in their collective consciousness and have continually
amended its meaning.
The Occident extends beyond Christendom and beyond
Europe. The term only works if avoids self-enclosure and remains perpetually
open towards the outside towards the Orient, Africa and Asia as indeed it
used to be. Its contemporary potential lies in continuing the work of Erasmus
of Rotterdam: The formulation of global, humanistic and inclusive ethics.