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ISTANBUL: Why France is so illiberal?

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  • ISTANBUL: Why France is so illiberal?

    Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
    Dec 24 2011


    Why France is so illiberal?

    by Mustafa Akyol


    `I do not think I have ever met a Frenchman who was a liberal,' the
    late French literary critic Émile Faguet once ironically remarked. If
    he lived today, he could have preserved his pessimism, especially in
    the light of the latest work of the French National Assembly: A new
    law which penalizes `the denial of the Armenian Genocide' with a year
    in prison and a heavy fine.

    Before getting into the trouble with France, though, let me tell you
    what I think about what really happened to the Ottoman Armenians in
    1915. I do not go as far as using the G word, but I think that this
    tragic episode well deserves being called an `ethnic cleansing' - and
    a very gruesome one which killed at least half a million innocent
    souls. I also think that we Turks have made a big mistake for decades
    by refusing to see the great suffering of the Armenians, who used to
    be our good neighbors for centuries before the venom of ethnic
    nationalism befell all of us. I therefore not only believe in, but
    also push for, a more honest and compassionate attitude in Turkey to
    what is called here `the Armenian issue.'

    That is why I would not be offended by any declaration by the French
    National Assembly, or any other parliament in the world, that
    expresses grief for the Great Catastrophe of 1915. I in fact hold that
    parliaments should not legislate history, but if they wish to express
    an opinion, that would be their call, and I would not object.

    Now let's come to France. Here, the first thing I would say is that it
    is only hypocritical for this county give lessons to others about the
    sanctity of human life: the more than 1.7 million innocent souls that
    the French colonizers brutally killed in Algeria is enough of a reason
    for France to remain shamefully silent when it comes to history and
    humanity. But countries do have double standards, and nations tend to
    see other's crimes rather than their own. So, let me be lenient on
    that.

    What I am not lenient on, though, is the shocking illiberalism that
    lies behind the new French law. It not only proclaims that 1915 was
    genocide, but it also penalizes all other opinions, launching a clear
    attack against freedom of speech.

    Needless to say, such laws about `genocide denial' (including the most
    unacceptable of all, Holocaust denial) exist in France and some other
    continental European states, but not in the United Kingdom or the
    United States. For the latter Anglo-Saxon countries are the beacons of
    classical liberalism, while France certainly is not. (For the same
    reason, France has recently imposed a ridiculous ban on the burqa,
    which would be unthinkable in Britain and America.)

    The roots of this illiberalism lie, I believe, in the two main pillars
    of French political thought, as it evolved since the bloodbath called
    the French Revolution: rationalism and laicite. These two principles
    can well curb individual freedom. For rationalism gives the state the
    power to figure out and impose `the truth,' whereas laicite gives it
    the power to oppress religion. Hence comes thought-policing and
    burqa-policing.

    British thinker Tony Judt once expressed this problem well, noting,
    `To speak of natural rights, or rights against society, or about
    rights against state interference, was never a favorite topic in
    France.' He also observed that the French `displayed a strong
    propensity toward a strong executive power that in turn engendered a
    particular type of liberalism through the state, not against the state
    as in the Anglo-American liberal tradition.'

    Unfortunately, we Turks can't do much to help heal these problems in
    French political thought. We just need to de-Frenchize ourselves, by
    further expanding freedom of speech and freedom of religion, which
    were both tragically shrunk during our past French-wannabe century.
    And, of course, we need to reach out to the Armenians to establish a
    historic reconciliation in which no arrogant third party can
    interfere.

    * For all of Mustafa Akyol's works, including his recent book, `Islam
    without Extremes: A Muslim Case for Liberty,' visit his blog,
    TheWhitePath.com. On Twitter, follow him at @AkyolinEnglish.
    December/24/2011

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