When tolerance becomes a term of abuse in a place such as The Netherlands, you know something has gone seriously wrong. The Dutch always took pride in being the most tolerant people on earth. In less feverish times no one could possibly have taken exception to Queen Beatrix”s speech last Christmas when she pleaded for tolerance and respect for minorities.
But Geert Wilders, leader of the right-wing, anti-Muslim Freedom Party, was so disgusted by the Dutch queen”s “multicultural rubbish” that he wanted her to be stripped of her constitutional role in the government.
Wilders, a popular rabble-rouser whose party occupies nine seats in the Dutch parliament, compares the Koran with Hitler”s Mein Kampf, wants to stop Muslims from moving to The Netherlands and thunders that those who are already in the country should tear up half the Koran if they wish to stay.
Tolerance towards Islam is cowardly appeasement in his eyes. He thinks Europe is in peril of being “Islamised”. “There will soon be more mosques than churches,” he says, if true Europeans don”t have the guts to stand up and save Western civilisation.
Notwithstanding his call to ban the Koran, Wilders and his admirers claim to believe in unfettered free speech as a Western birthright. Beatrix stated that the right to free speech does not automatically mean the right to offend. Wilders disagrees. No criticism of Islam, however offensive, should be hampered by political correctness.
Wilders uses every opportunity to test Muslims” (often limited) tolerance. His latest provocation is a short film denouncing Islam that has yet to be shown but has already caused panic.
Remarkably for a Dutch politician – and a minor one, at that – news of Wilders”s antics has reached the world press.
Some commentators suggest Wilders, born and reared as a Catholic in a provincial Dutch town, is, like his Muslim enemies, a true believer, driven by the goal of keeping Europe Judeo-Christian. Perhaps, but this is probably a red herring.
His war on Islam is also, and perhaps even mainly, a war on the cultural and political elites, the Dutch intellectual establishment, the Eurocrats of Brussels and the liberal-minded queen. Indeed, his speeches are studded with references to arrogant elites who are out of touch with the feelings of the common man. Tolerance is seen as weak and elitist, typical of people who live far removed from the harsh realities of the street, where violent and unruly foreigners menace upstanding Dutch folk.
This notion of the elitist appeaser is not confined to The Netherlands.
In Israel, the educated Jewish activists who criticise Israeli abuses against Palestinians, the peaceniks who believe that negotiation is better than violence and that even Arabs have rights, are called, with a knowing sneer, “beautiful souls”. The common man, rooted in the real world, supposedly knows better: uncompromising toughness, the hard line, is the only way to get results.
In the US, the word liberal, in the mouths of populist radio hosts and right-wing politicians, has become almost synonymous with “effete east coast snob” or, worse, “New York intellectual”.
Liberals, in this view, are not only soft but somehow distinctly un-American.
The association of elites with foreignness, tolerance and metropolitan cities is nothing new. Elites often can speak foreign languages, and big cities are traditionally more tolerant and open to mixed populations. Modern populism – American politicians running, or pretending to run, “against Washington” or French populists speaking for “deep France” – is invariably hostile to capital cities. Brussels, the capital of the European Union, stands for everything populists, left or right, hate. And Muslim immigrants live in Amsterdam, London or Marseilles, not in the kind of small towns where right-wing populists find most of their support.
Still, the politics of resentment works best when it can tap into fears.
There are reasons for people to feel anxious about economic globalisation, pan-European bureaucracy, the huge and not always effectively controlled influx of immigrants and the aggression of radical political Islam.
These anxieties have too often been ignored. There is a sense among many Europeans, not just in The Netherlands, that they have been abandoned in a fast-changing world, that multinational corporations are more powerful than nations, that the urban rich and highly educated do fine and ordinary folk in the provinces languish, while democratically elected politicians are not only powerless but have abjectly surrendered to these larger forces that threaten the common man. Tolerance is seen as weak and a betrayal.
The Muslim threat, of course, is not a fantasy. A small number of ideological extremists has inflicted violence in the name of Islam and will continue to do so.
But the popular resentment of Islam goes deeper and wider. Wilders, and others similar to him, are not just attacking Islamic extremists. His success is based on that sense of tolerance as betrayal.
And, as so often happens, the loathing of elites has found an outlet in the loathing of outsiders, who look different and whose ways are strange. We must fight Islamic extremism, but not by tapping into the darkest gut feelings of the unthinking mob. Nothing good came from that.
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Ian Buruma is professor of human rights at Bard College in New York state. His most recent book is Murder in Amsterdam: The Killing of Theo van Gogh and the Limits of Tolerance. The Australian