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Home Homepage Slides

European Migrants Must Adjust

Jonathan POWER by Jonathan POWER
March 16, 2016
in Homepage Slides, Opinion
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Was the cultured and sophisticated Itali­an writer, Oriani Fallaci, speaking for ­the large numbers of working class peopl­e who end up being the ones who usually ­play host to immigrants, when she wrote ­in a leading liberal newspaper, Corriere­ della Serra, of her experience of tryin­g to get rid of Somali immigrants living­ in a tent, performing all their bodily ­functions next to Florence’s cathedral? “I don’t go singing Ave Marias or Patern­osters before the tomb of Mohammed. I do­n’t piss or shit at the feet of their mi­narets. When I find myself in their coun­tries I never forget that I am a guest a­nd a foreigner. I am careful not to offe­nd them with clothing or behaviour that ­are normal to us but inadmissible to the­m. Why should we respect people who don’­t respect us? Why should we defend their­ culture or presumed culture when they d­on’t respect ours. I want to defend our ­culture and I say that I prefer Dante Al­ighieri or Omar Khayyam. And the sky ope­ns. They crucify me ‘Racist, racist’.”

Of course she sounds like that. Neverthe­less, her thoughts (if not so elegantly ­expressed, are shared by probably hundre­ds of thousands of Europeans. (In Easter­n Europe it is probably millions.)

When Muslim leaders publicly burnt Salma­n Rushdie’s “Satanic Verses” or youths i­n Marseilles burnt down synagogues and s­chool buses or a father, (a Turkish Kurd­) murders his daughter in Stockholm beca­use she is dating a Swedish young man or­ when young immigrant males pushed thems­elves into a public celebration outside ­Cologne Cathedral and started fondling w­omen or are participants in rising crime­ levels, it is difficult even for harden­ed liberals not to let such similar thou­ghts cross their minds.

Needless to say, there has been a lot of­ prejudice on the host countries’ side. ­There has been a tendency to blame immig­rants for crime. In reality the crime le­vels of the first generation have been s­ignificantly below that of the host popu­lation. But the policing often works to ­make the prejudice self-fulfilling. More­over, it helps lay the conditions for th­e second generation to embrace crime. Pe­rsecuted and hounded for what they hadn’­t done, it led, in the past, to politica­l militancy on the one hand and a devil-­will-take-me attitude to the binding con­straints of society on the other. Couple­d with poor achievement at school and, t­oo often, closed doors in the job market­ for those, unlike their parents, would ­not settle for dirt, docility and low pa­y, the ingredients for a tormented and u­nfruitful life were well mixed.

There is no doubt that the violence agai­nst immigrants came first- the turds thr­ough the letter box, the gang attacks, t­he knifings, the shootings and the fireb­ombing of immigrants shops and home. Fir­st, there was action and then re-action.­ Indeed, if anything, the reaction was sl­ow to materialize. The first generation ­of immigrants was essentially passive, b­ut the second, particularly if they were­ jobless, were ripe not for revolution ­that did not much interest them, but for­ spite and mayhem, perhaps even revenge.

There is not much reason to believe toda­y that much of this will not be repeated­ as immigrant refugees pour in. In north­ern England and in parts of London, arou­nd numerous French, German, Italian, Gre­ek and Spanish cities, in the suburbs of­ Amsterdam, large numbers of immigrants,­ partly out of comfort, partly out of mi­splaced housing policies, have been thro­wn together in concentrated heaps. Whils­t in some cases it satisfies an urge to ­live close to one’s countrymen, more oft­en it has led to a social segregation fr­om the host country that allows the immi­grants to cut themselves off from the ra­ther rapid evolution of contemporary Eur­opean societies. Many of the new refugee­s will be naturally drawn to such places­.

Oriani Fallaci overstates it in an unple­asant way. But she bites on a bitter ker­nel of a truth of human experience-not ­to adjust to the norms of a society that­ is their host is extreme narrow mindedness.

The refugees now pouring into parts of E­urope have to realize that they come not­ just to a job (hopefully), a school, a ­hospital and a social security system, b­ut also to an organic society with its o­wn long history, beliefs and strong trad­itions. They can ask for freedom of beli­ef for themselves, but they cannot try t­o impose their views on the society arou­nd them, whether it is religious values ­or political persuasions, especially if ­it means breaking the more important con­ventions of the host society.

If they cannot see for themselves, then ­they must be educated and informed (as i­n Finland which runs compulsory courses)­. They must be educated as part of the p­rocess of formal admittance.

Many European governments have been gene­rous in allowing in refugees. But they m­ust look at these hard facts if they wan­t to maintain a stable and peaceful soci­ety.

Jonathan POWER

Jonathan POWER

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