Pulling back from the brink: Religious and ethnic intolerance threatens to spin out of control
By James M Dorsey
The family of nations is balancing on
the edge of an abyss as mushrooming religious and ethnic intolerance becomes
the norm.
Western as well as non-Western
societies have helped paved the road towards the abyss: the West by abandoning
the post-World War Two principle of ‘Never Again’ and the non-Western world by never
embracing it and failing to adopt the principle of ‘forgive but don’t forget.’
Exasperating matters is the fact that
the United States and Europe look at individual crises rather than a
threatening pattern of developments. In doing so, they fail to recognise the structural
problems that challenge Western values of democracy, tolerance, and pluralism.
Citing a litany of crises and tensions
in Central and Eastern Europe, Balkan scholar Damir Marusic
warns that “the whole edifice feels rickety. It feels like the order we have all
taken for granted since the end of the Cold War is badly decaying, and has
gotten so fragile that it might well shatter soon… We notice individual
problems, but we don’t see how it adds up, nor how we got here… We are still,
in some strange way, operating as if things are more or less fine—yes,
adjustments must be made, but our world is durable and sound.”
Mr. Marusic argues that the rot in the system has been exasperated
by the troubled US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan in the wake of the 9/11
Al-Qaeda attacks on New York and Washington. “As the final collapse of the
Afghanistan project earlier this year proved, the whole optimistic premise of
nation- and order-building upon which the EU project is ultimately premised was
also undermined by America’s failures,” Mr. Marusic said.
Geopolitical battles are being fought
on the backs of innocent and desperate people. They fuel tensions and threaten
stability in Central and Eastern Europe and spark humanitarian catastrophe in
Yemen and Afghanistan. An ethnic and religious divide characterises the tens of
thousands of Middle Eastern migrants ferried by Belarus with Russian support to
the Polish border. Ten British soldiers have been
dispatched to the border to help Poland
with fencing.
The exploitation of deep-seated
religious and ethnic hostility drove Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik to threaten to withdraw Serb troops
from the army of Bosnia Herzegovina and create a separate Serb force. Bosnia Herzegovina was created
as a federation at the end of the Bosnian war in the 1990s with Muslim, Serb
and Croatian entities that enjoyed autonomy. The federation retained control of
the military, top echelons of the judiciary, and tax collection. Mr. Dodik has
said that the Bosnian Serb parliament would also, in what would amount to de
facto secession, establish a separate Serb judiciary, and tax administration.
The writing is on the wall across the
globe from the United States and Europe to Afghanistan and China.
Islamophobia and anti-Semitism have
become mainstream. Hindu-Muslims tensions spill across South Asian borders. Sunni
Muslims persecute their Shiite brethren in Afghanistan, risking clashes between
the Taliban and Iran. The Christian minority in the cradle
of Abrahamic faiths has been decimated.
Men like former Israeli Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu and Republican Jews in the United States have joined thinly veiled anti-Semitic attacks on liberal
philanthropist and Holocaust survivor George Soros rather than insulate their political
and ideological differences with the billionaire from assaults laced with
undertones of religious prejudice and racism.
Similarly, French presidential contender Eric Zemmour questions the innocence of Alfred
Dreyfus, the Jewish army officer whose false conviction for treason sparked
bitter controversy in the walk-up to World War One. Mr. Zemmour also rejects
the notion that French collaborationist wartime leader Philippe Petain assisted
in the deportation of Jews to Nazi death camps, asserting instead that Mr.
Petain had saved Jews.
Finally, China has launched a frontal
assault on Turkic ethnic and religious identity in the north-western province
of Xinjiang that has gone largely unchallenged in the Muslim world.
At the core of the problem lie not
social media that function as megaphones, aggregators and creators of echo
chambers and silos rather than instigators but political, religious, ethnic,
and cultural leaders who play on base instincts in pursuit of popularity and
power.
Lebanon, Iraq and potentially
Afghanistan are fallouts of the institutionalisation and instrumentalisation of
religious and ethnic prejudice and intolerance at the expense of notions of mutual
respect, adherence to human dignity and coexistence.
Sectarian warlords loot the Lebanese
and Iraqi states and weaken their institutions. Recent violence in Beirut suggests that protagonists, including
former Christian warlords and Shiite allies of Iran, are willing to risk a
second round of civil war to secure their vested interests, sending a middle-income country
spiralling into widespread poverty.
Long-term, the solution is education
systems that stress the importance of humanitarian and moral values as well as
religious and ethnic tolerance as the guardrails of governance and politics and
ensure that ethnic and religious prejudice and racism are socially taboo
attitudes.
The short-term tackling of the problem
will have to involve dialogue and negotiation. A recent study showed that John
F. Kennedy’s decision to seek an arms control treaty rather
than escalate a debilitating and risky arms race after the Soviet Union detonated the
world’s most powerful nuclear weapon in 1962 succeeded where accelerated
conflict may not have.
Applied to religious and ethnic
intolerance, lessons learnt from Mr. Kennedy’s approach require that governments
and religious and ethnic groups that pay lip service to interfaith and other
forms of dialogue or assert that they promote democratic and humanitarian
values are held to account rather than be allowed to rest on their laurels with
hollow promises and declarations.
This year’s chairmanship by Indonesia
of the Group of 20 (G20) that brings together the world’s largest economies has
an opportunity to stress humanitarian and democratic values and promote a
framework for dialogue. The chairmanship puts Nahdlatul Ulama, the world’s
largest Muslim civil society organisation that emphasises those values, on
global public display given that it is poised to play a role in the G20’s
inter-faith tack.
Jon Grinspan, a curator of political
history at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History, argued in a
New York Times op-ed entitled ‘The Last Time America Broke,’ that the United
States, despite deep-seated polarisation that has brought religious and ethnic intolerance
to the forefront, had not passed the point of no return. He noted that civil
society had repeatedly brought America back from the brink.
“We're not just helplessly hurtling
toward inevitable civil war; we
can be actors in this story. The first step is acknowledging the dangers
inherent in democracy. To move forward, we should look backwards and see that
we're struggling not with a collapse but with a relapse,” Mr. Grinspan wrote.
It’s a message that is as true for the
rest of the world as it is for the United States.
A podcast version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr,
Podbean, Audecibel, Patreon
and Castbox.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an award-winning
journalist and scholar and a Senior Fellow at the National University of
Singapore’s Middle East Institute.
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