Azar Majedi, the head of the Organisation of Women's
Liberation, asks some pertinent questions in a speech in Canada
on Sharia Courts and Women's rights.
Is the recognition of two or more sets of values, laws and rights
conducive to a harmonious society? Are we not going back in reversing
what has been hard won rights for citizens particularly women in
the modern context? Are we to accept the patriarchal value system
experienced by women in some communities because of diversity this
could hardly be called voluntary? Should not citizens have universal
rights which are paramount as opposed to community sectarian interests?
Has empowerment of the leaders of local religious communities created
a monster reducing the rights of some members of their communities
in the realms of marriage and some aspects of education?
Azar Majedi says: “We have long witnessed
in the past decades, a glorification of culture as a primary issue
dictating people’s lives and rights. Culture has come to take precedence
over human rights, equality, liberation, rights of individuals,
children’s right and women’s rights – concepts and issues which
have been long been argued and have prominence in modern and civil
societies. The birth of cultural relativism its recognition in the
society as a credible concept is the result of this process.”
Azar Majedi goes on to query: “I
ask you why an arbitrary concept as culture must be so glorified
that takes precedence over prominent issues such as freedom, equality,
and justice? Why should people be categorised and placed in different
pigeon holes according to culture and religion? These should be
private matters. There is no justification for assigning such prominent
status to culture, which overshadows any sense of justice, equality
and freedom, the achievements of long battles fought by freedom
loving people and socialist for more than two centuries.”
(http://www.iranian.com/Opinion/2005/January/Canada/)
Whenever some of us attempt make an objective critique of the
whole issue the accusation of Islamophobia is thrown at us as cultural
relativism is pushed down our throats – a new monster for us to
fight. Perhaps Agnes Poirier of the French daily Liberation (29
July 2005) points out that the nation-building ideals of the French
Revolution were deployed to bring down with the monarchy, aristocracy
and regional languages. As the revolutionary France started fighting
off its reactionary neighbours, that identity took shape.
Poirier goes on to mention that in 1905 they separated the State
from Church. The State, free from dogmatic religious values, would
be able to teach all the children of France - whatever their social
and religious background - the “esprit” critique and how to question
all revealed truths. This is what laicite (secularism) is all about,
you leave your religion and all sorts of social division at home
in order to enter the public space on an equal footing with the
rest of society. In any case those ideals seem to have now run up
against the recent events events in the northern suburbs of Paris
- the revolt of disaffected young Afro Caribbean, Senegalese and
young Asian or Magrebian youths -,thus threatening the bourgeois
revolution’s recipe for inter communal harmony. Egalitarian society
in the French context as in all large urban complexes elsewhere
has a long way to go.
All the pronouncements about the colonial legacy, tired old solutions
of “empowerment”, pouring in massive tranches of funding to bolster
deprived areas are simply not enough. Neither is the pushing for
secularism is enough for a free society, except to say that religion
is a personal and private thing. Certainly statist sponsored religion
does not offer any pointers to a new Enlightenment or more specifically
to development of new social relations.
If the concept of multiculturism and diversity has reached its
limits and usefulness, this is not simply or only the result of
Messrs Blair’s, Chirac’s or George Bush’s policies. What is more
fundamental is the structural problems in Capital itself that have
been manifested in the past three decades or so. Changes in the
requirements and imperatives of capital as an economic system have
largely spawned the wide polarisation in our inner cities and suburbs.
The motor that has driven the system has had to replace its means
for accumulating value in declining production to other sources
in its drive to expand. We must not be thrown off course by what
Blair, Chirac or Bush are doing, but be quite clear about the enemy
we are fighting.
The whole question begs a concerted approach that lies deeper
than the current panaceas on offer about “going back to the Family
and its values” or a resort to religious manifestations of varying
kinds. Multiculturism and diversity as ideologies may have had good
intentions at the start but are now failing those very people that
have took to the streets as well as the victims of “honour killings”.
These have been trotted by the “left” out precisely because there
is a void that is not being filled to project any real alternatives.
The continued reformist preoccupations with reformism of nationalising
property and production, and with tinkering about with civil society
and culture continues to act as a brake on any serious discussion
on the social relations of capital and the need to change it.
Hegel, in his preface to the ‘Phenomenology of Mind’, makes a
critique of the “abstract negation” that now prevails today as post-modernist
ideology. The anti-modernity of post-modernism opens it up to tailending
reaction fundamentalisms, especially those which parade themselves
as anti-imperialist. Hegel concept of “determinant negation” was
concretised by Marx as determinant negation of capitalism. As the
2005/6 Perspectives of the US News and Letters Committees put it:
“The failure by Post – Marxists to transform the production relations
because they fetishized property forms has led many to act now as
if the most we can reach for is to transform the political and cultural
superstructure of capitalism. In BOTH cases transforming alienated
labour and the capitalist mode of production is left untheorised.”
6 December 2005
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