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October 3, 2006 10:54 AM
The Brief Dutch Sharia Eruption![]() — Or — How political expediency has replaced political correctness in the Netherlands Pieter Dorsman reports on the issue of Sharia law replacing the constitution in the Netherlands: “If a situation could arise where a majority could agree to shred a constitution in favor of religious law – and one from the Middle Ages at that - than doesn’t a democracy have an obligation to devise mechanism whereby such choices could be neutralized?” When Ayaan Hirsi Ali published her autobiography, entitled “My Freedom”, last week she commented that immigration and integration issues in The Netherlands were far from being solved; that more confrontations by opposing sides in the debate were likely. It is therefore remarkable that the key players in the Dutch election campaign so far have stayed away from this particular hot button and focused on more mundane issues such as universal childcare and retirement benefits. There are a number of possible reasons for this. One is that those that have initiated that particular debate are either dead (van Gogh, Fortuyn) or have left the country (Hirsi Ali herself). Their political heirs have not exactly been able to grab the limelight and if they did, it was often too controversial (Verdonk, Wilders). Other explanations are that the voters have opted for a more pragmatic “let’s ignore it for now” approach, a position gladly mirrored by many Dutch politicians. Nobody seemed to realize that when Donner was talking about a nation that opted for abandoning liberal democracy in favor of implementing Sharia it was one that would likely be very different from the one that the Dutch inhabit today. Donner’s scenario was thus highly speculative and even if it were to come to fruition, would, to use Mark Steyn’s estimate, not occur until the year 2050. Even then the demographic projections of today would have to materialize, and we would have to assume that all Muslim immigrants in the lowlands would remain unintegrated, rejecting all the great things that a free democracy had to offer. So, Donner’s theoretical approach should have given commentators some pause and most could have argued, “Well, the man is technically right, but we will have to ask ourselves if we should get all that excited about it today?” But that didn’t happen. Donner more than anyone – he was, after all, the man ultimately in charge of the prosecution of Van Gogh’s killer and the jihadist Hofstad Group – should have realized how sensitive an issue like this is. In retrospect he should have qualified his statements to some extent. Still, the reactions to his statement revealed once more that the raw emotions over Islam run very deep in the Netherlands. They show that no matter how excellent the budget surpluses and tax reductions, the Dutch people remain, at the end of the day, deeply fearful over a future nation where Sharia law may indeed start to play a significant role in Dutch life. A good example of this occurred last week when a project developer in the city of Rotterdam launched a plan to build an Islamic hospital where men and women – staff and patients – would be strictly separated. It did not exactly receive a warm round of applause and caused some to dust off that long forgotten word of ‘apartheid’. What is even more interesting is the debate that ensued over the boundaries of voting in free democracies. If a situation could arise where a majority could agree to shred a constitution in favor of religious law – and one from the Middle Ages at that - than doesn’t a democracy have an obligation to devise mechanism whereby such choices could be neutralized? A democracy, it was argued by some, needs teeth, even if that means that democratic choices could somehow – a clear mechanism was of course never offered – be rejected. It was both interesting and surprising to see the nation’s eminent historian, H.W. von der Dunk, float the idea of a ‘qualified democracy’ where citizens would have to pass a certain test before they could be eligible to vote. It would keep the easily influenced masses out of the voting booth and, so the argument goes, it would leave some wiser men and women in charge of the decisions that affect a society. Whatever the merits, it was for the Dutch to talk about extra-democratic measures to protect democracy. This discussion was unhead of until very recently and quite possibly something that will remain on the radar screen for as long as the prospect of Sharia law or more jihadist terror remains present. Donner in the meantime has resigned, not over his Sharia commentary, but over his political responsibility for a fire on Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport that killed eleven people, most illegal immigrants, in a cell block where fire regulations had been sloppy. His controversial remarks however have once more revealed the very deep unease and to some extent the cluelessness that continues to haunt Dutch society when it comes to the far reaching consequences of integrating a different culture into their own. The fact that the storm over Donner’s comments died down as quickly as it started either reflects their highly theoretical nature or the far reaching implications they have for defining the Dutch democracy of tomorrow. It is probably a combination of both, but I am tilting towards the latter. When the times are relatively good, there usually is little appetite for politicians to wade into these unpredictable waters. It can turn against you, and in the Europe of today it could even kill you. No, it is not the now largely defunct political correctness that is covering up the debate over religion, culture and integration. It is political expediency. The price of which, as always, will have to be paid further down the road. Previously at Politics Central by Pieter Dorsman: The Divided Dutch Right: Or how an opportunity to effect change is being squandered. Pieter Dorsman has a guide to Dutch Politics @ DUTCH POLITICS 101. He studied law and obtained a Master’s degree in Economic and Social History at the Erasmus Universiteit in Rotterdam, The Netherlands. After graduation he joined Barclays Bank PLC in London where he worked in the corporate banking and risk management divisions of the bank. In 1992 he was attached to Barclays’ structured finance team in Hong Kong and in 1994 he joined UBS where he was responsible for project and corporate finance mandates in Asia, primarily in Indonesia, China and Thailand. In 1999 Pieter and his wife Irene left Hong Kong and moved to Vancouver where they run their own consulting firm, Redpeaks Management Inc. that advises early stage hi-tech companies on their financing and business strategies. They have two daughters, Nora and Maeve. A Production of Pajamas Media, the Best of the Blogs, and POLITICSCENTRAL. Return to PAJAMAS MEDIA here. ——— Comments (4)Mike Perry :Perry de Havilland :Democracy is vastly over-rated. The USA is often described as a democracy but in truth it is really a Constitutional Republic, in which the will of the public (i.e. their ability to vote in people who will then enact laws they want) is limited by constitutional restraints and separated powers. But none of that means a thing unless there is a culture willing to make that arrangement stick because anything that can be written (such as that greatest work of the Enlightenment, the US Constitution) can also be unwritten. Clearly what the Netherlands (amongst others) is for enough people to be willing to defend Enlightenment civilisation and to do so without apology. It is not a matter of race or ethnicity, any more than opposing Soviet Communism meant a person had to opposed to Russians, it is a matter of simply saying that Dutch culture, one of the world's truly great cultures, may be tolerant but it cannot and will not tolerate intolerance. Dutch people must be willing to defend (in every sense of the word) the values which make them free and that cannot be negotiable... and that means it cannot be subject to a vote. Arty :"..it is a matter of simply saying that Dutch culture, one of the world's truly great cultures..." That's laughable. There isn't a more degenerate people on the whole degenerate European continent than the Dutch. One mans culture is another mans sewage lagoon I guess. Sharia will be an improvement for the Dutch. Their political masters are even starting to realize that. Myrtus :Excellent article, Pieter! I agree with perry on this one: I think in order to do that, the Dutch constitution needs to be ammended. Let's start with article #1, which both protects and offers excuses and opportunity for abuse by minorities, different religions and cultures - now is the time - the signs are everywhere as Islam is fast becoming the topic of the day, as Islam is grabbing hold of Dutch society down to its deepest foundations, increasingly demanding more, while gaining ground in areas that I personally never would have imagined before. I say this with deepest concern, as I grew up with both, Islam and Dutch culture. Comments have been archived for this page. |
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It's a little hard to come up with a proper European precedence for not allowing a democracy of 2005 to have its way however vile.
No country dropped diplomatic relations with Germany when Hitler took over the Chancellorship democratically (as he had planned) in January of 1933 and began to persecute Jews and political opponents. Shortly thereafter the Soviet Union, at that time the darling of liberals everywhere, agreed to extend the term of a treaty with made with 1920s Germany.
If memory serves me right, several European countries have either voted in legalized abortion or elected politicians who did so. If lethal discrimination based no more than age/dependency is legitimate, then it's hard to rule the sex-based discriminations of Sharia law out of bounds. After all, under Sharia, killings take place for a limited set of behaviors that can, however unhappily, be avoided. It's a bit harder for a baby to avoid being conceived. In the end, both modern, liberal, secular Europe and Sharia deal with out-of-wedlock pregnancies the same unacceptable way--by killing someone.
I make no secret of my loathing for Sharia law, but I'm not foolish enough to find today's hedonistic Western Europe that impressive. Choosing between them is choosing between a militant barbarism and a decadent one. And perhaps that's why Europeans have so much difficulty condemning terrorist ideologies.
Oct 3, 2006 01:27 PM