Intolerant Liberalism
Madeleine Bunting
The Guardian
8 October 2001
http://www.guardian.co.uk/waronterror/story/0,1361,565215,00.html
The west's arrogant assumption of its
superiority is as dangerous as any other form of fundamentalism
The bombs have hit Kabul. Smoke rises above
the city and there are reports that an Afghan power plant, one of only two
in the country, has been hit. Meanwhile the special forces are on standby,
and the necessary allies have been cajoled, bullied and bribed into
position.
That is not all that was carefully prepared
ahead of yesterday's launch of the attacks. Crucially for a modern war,
public opinion formers at home have been prepared and marshalled into line
with a striking degree of unanimity. The voices of dissent can barely be
heard over the chorus of approval and self-righteous enthusiasm.
It's the latter that is so jarring, and
it's a sign of how quickly the logic of war distorts and manipulates our
understanding. War propaganda requires moral clarity - what else can
justify the suffering and brutality? - so the conflict is now being cast
as a battle between good and evil. Both Bin Laden and the Taliban are
being demonised into absurd Bond-style villains, while halos are hung over
our heads by throwing the moral net wide: we are not just fighting to
protect ourselves out of narrow self-interest, but for a new moral order
in which the Afghans will be the first beneficiaries.
The extent to which this is all being
uncritically accepted is astonishing. Few gave a damn about the suffering
of women under the Taliban on September 10 - now we are supposedly
fighting a war for them. Even fewer knew (let alone cared) that
Afghanistan was suffering from famine. Now the west is promising to solve
the humanitarian crisis that it has hugely excerbated in the last three
weeks with its threat of military action. What is incredible is not just
the belief that you can end terrorism by taking on the Taliban, but that
doing so can be elevated into a grand moral purpose - rather than it
incubating a host of evils from Chechnya to Pakistan.
Is this gullibility? Naivety? Wishful
thinking? There may be elements of these, but what is also lurking here is
the outline of a form of western fundamentalism. It believes in historical
progress and regards the west as its most advanced manifestation. And it
insists that the only way for other countries to match its achievement is
to adopt its political, economic and cultural values. It is tolerant
towards other cultures only to the extent that they reflect its own values
- so it is frequently fiercely intolerant of religious belief and has no
qualms about expressing its contempt and prejudice. At its worst, western
fundamentalism echoes the characteristics it finds so repulsive in its
enemy, Bin Laden: first, a sense of unquestioned superiority; second, an
assertion of the universal applicability of its values; and third, a lack
of will to understand what is profoundly different from itself.
This is the shadow side of liberalism, and
it has periodically wreaked havoc around the globe for over 150 years. It
is detectable in the writings of great liberal thinkers such as John
Stuart Mill, and emerged in the complacent self-confidence of
mid-Victorian Britain. But its roots go back further to its inheritance of
Christianity's claim to be the one true faith. The US founding recipe of
puritanism and enlightenment bequeathed a profound sense of being morally
good. This superiority, once allied to economic and technological power,
underpinned the worst excesses of colonialism, as it now underpins the
activities of multinational corporations and the IMF's structural
adjustment programmes.
But recognising this need not be the
prelude to an onslaught on liberalism - just the crucial imperative of
recognising that, like all systems of human thought, liberalism has
weaknesses as well as strengths. We need to remember this: in the heat of
battle and panicky fear of terrorism, liberal strengths such as tolerance,
humility and a capacity for self-criticism are often the first victims.
In all systems of human thought, there are
contradictions that advocates prefer to gloss over. One of the most acute
in liberalism is between its claim to tolerance and its hubristic claim to
universality, which Berlusconi's comments on the superiority of western
civilisation brought embarrassingly to the fore two weeks ago. It was the
sort of thing many privately think, but are too polite to say, argues John
Lloyd in this week's New Statesman. He owns up with refreshing honesty
that in the conflict between Islam and Christianity: "Their values,
or many of them, contradict ours. We think ours are better."
Once this kind of hubris is out in the
open, at least one can more easily argue with it. These aren't just
academic arguments for the home front before the cameras start rolling on
the exodus of refugees into Pakistan. September 11 and its aftermath
launched both an aggressive reassertion and a thoughtful re-examination of
our culture and its values. Both will have a lasting impact on our
relations with the non-western world, not just Muslim world. It is that
aggressive reassertion that smacks of fundamentalism, a point obliquely
made by Harold Evans recently: "What do we set against the medieval
hatreds of the fundamentalists? We have our fundamentals too: the values
of western civilisation. When they are menaced, we need a ringing
affirmation of what they mean." The only problem is that
"ringing" can block out all other sound and produce nothing but
tinnitus.
There is a compelling alternative for how
we can coexist on an increasingly crowded planet. Political philosopher
Bhikhu Parekh starts from the premise that "the grandeur and depth of
human life is too great to be captured in one culture". That each
culture nurtures and develops some dimension of being human, but in that
process it misses out others, and that progress will always come from
dialogue between cultures. "We are all prisoners of our
subjectivity," argues Parekh, and that is true of us individually and
collectively, so we need others to expose our blindnesses and to increase
our understanding of our humanity.
Parekh argues that liberalism is right to
assert that there are universal moral principles (such as the rights of
women, free speech and the right to life), but wrong to insist there is
only one interpretation of those principles and that that is its own.
Rights come into conflict and every culture negotiates different
trade-offs between them.
To understand those trade-offs is sometimes
complex and difficult. But no one culture has cracked the prefect
trade-off, as western liberalism in its more honest moments is the first
to admit. There is a huge amount we can learn from Islam in its social
solidarity, its appreciation of the collective good and the generosity and
strength of human relationships. Islamic societies are grappling with
exactly the same challenge as the west - how to balance freedom and
responsibility - and we need each other's help, not each other's brands of
fundamentalism. If we are asking Islam to stamp out their fundamentalism,
we have no lesser duty to do the same.
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