close
Thursday March 28, 2024

Multiculturalism: a defence

By John Wight
March 07, 2017

In the age of right wing populism we currently find ourselves in, multiculturalism has come to be identified with the liberal elite, with liberalism, and identity politics, identified with ‘swarms’ of poor, unwashed refugees and migrants from the Third World invading the West to deracinate and desecrate everything sacred about Western civilization. Multiculturalism is, the right argues, synonymous with globalization, globalism and a global elite that is intent on destroying something they refer to as ‘Judeo-Christian civilization’.

It’s the sort of end of days verbiage you may, until recently, have associated with far right websites, blogs and magazines. But now, today, it’s in the mainstream, spouted by none other than Trump’s chief political adviser, his brain, Steve Bannon.

In 2016 Bannon delivered a  speech to a gathering of US conservatives, during which he excoriated the EU for allowing “the complete collapse of the Judeo-Christian West in Europe”.

Trump’s ‘Muslim travel ban’, his attacks on migrants and minorities, is no accident. It is driven by the ideology of the far right, which, as with the newly installed President’s inauguration speech, paints a doomsday scenario in which the Judeo-Christian West is being swamped by ‘the other’ – by swarms of people carrying with them the bacteria of alien cultures, religious beliefs, and races. It is precisely why progressive forces throughout the West need to make a stand in defence of multiculturalism.

Specifically, a fresh offensive is required against the rise and spread of Islamophobia, which thanks to the policies of Western governments and the poison spouted daily by right wing commentators over many years, has become the accepted form of racism among polite society.

The inference they have successfully drawn among large swathes of people is that Islam is a regressive religion, practiced by people of an alien culture, wherein fundamentalist ideas are the norm.

9/11 came as a shot across the bows of the received truths that had prevailed in the West for so long. The North-South hemispheric divide had seen the consumer boom enjoyed in the West paid for in the despair and unremitting poverty suffered throughout the developing world.

The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq that followed 9/11 resulted in a further increase in radicalization throughout the Muslim and Arab world, and the emergence of Islamophobia at home.

In recent times, the voices on the right, and even some on the left, which have asserted that there is a tendency towards radicalism within Islam, drawing the conclusion that the regressive impulses within the religion and its culture are incompatible with Western society, have succeeded in painting multiculturalism as a failed and indeed dangerous concept.

It is not. Instead multiculturalism embraces the working class of our time, and as such it provides the locus of the only potential resistance that offers hope of a desperately needed alternative to either the nativist bigotry of Trump or the Clintonian liberalism that paved the way for Trump.

The working class is not a product of race, religion, culture or creed. There is no white working class. In fact the very words are an insult to those who understand only two possible options when it comes to the working class.

As Marx reminds us, what is required is “not political change, but a human transformation carried through by a class outside and beneath existing society, a class with only a human title.” “Human title,” the man said – not racial, ethnic, religious, or cultural but human.

 

This article has been excerpted from: ‘In defense of multiculturalism’

Courtesy: Counterpunch.org