A Message From the Dispossessed
By Chris Hedges
The terrorist attack in France that took place at the
satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo was not about free speech. It was not about
radical Islam. It did not illustrate the fictitious clash of civilizations. It
was a harbinger of an emerging dystopia where the wretched of the earth,
deprived of resources to survive, devoid of hope, brutally controlled,
belittled and mocked by the privileged who live in the splendor and indolence
of the industrial West, lash out in nihilistic fury.
We have engineered the rage of the dispossessed. The evil of
predatory global capitalism and empire has spawned the evil of terrorism. And
rather than understand the roots of that rage and attempt to ameliorate it, we
have built sophisticated mechanisms of security and surveillance, passed laws
that permit the targeted assassinations and torture of the weak, and amassed
modern armies and the machines of industrial warfare to dominate the world by
force. This is not about justice. It is not about the war on terror. It is not
about liberty or democracy. It is not about the freedom of expression. It is
about the mad scramble by the privileged to survive at the expense of the poor.
And the poor know it.
If you spend time as I have in Gaza, Iraq, Yemen, Algeria,
Egypt and Sudan, as well as the depressing, segregated housing projects known
as banlieues that ring French cities such as Paris and Lyon, warehousing
impoverished North African immigrants, you begin to understand the brothers
Cherif Kouachi and Said Kouachi, who were killed Friday in a gun battle with
French police. There is little employment in these pockets of squalor. Racism
is overt. Despair is rampant, especially for the men, who feel they have no
purpose. Harassment of immigrants, usually done by police during identity
checks, is almost constant. Police once pulled a North African immigrant, for
no apparent reason, off a Paris Metro subway car I was riding in and
mercilessly beat him on the platform. French Muslims make up 60 to 70 percent
of the prison population in France. Drugs and alcohol beckon like sirens to
blunt the pain of poor Muslim communities.
The 5 million North Africans in France are not considered
French by the French. And when they go back to Algiers, Tangier or Tunis, where
perhaps they were born and briefly lived, they are treated as alien outcasts.
Caught between two worlds, they drift, as the two brothers did, into
aimlessness, petty crime and drugs.
Becoming a holy warrior, a jihadist, a champion of an
absolute and pure ideal, is an intoxicating conversion, a kind of rebirth that
brings a sense of power and importance. It is as familiar to an Islamic
jihadist as it was to a member of the Red Brigades or the old fascist and
communist parties. Converts to any absolute ideal that promises to usher in a
utopia adopt a Manichaean view of history rife with bizarre conspiracy
theories. Opposing and even benign forces are endowed with hidden malevolence.
The converts believe they live in a binary universe divided between good and
evil, the pure and the impure. As champions of the good and the pure they
sanctify their own victimhood and demonize all nonbelievers. They believe they
are anointed to change history. And they embrace a hypermasculine violence that
is viewed as a cleansing agent for the world’s contaminants, including those
people who belong to other belief systems, races and cultures. This is why
France’s far right, organized around Marine Le Pen, the leader of the
anti-immigrant Front National, has so much in common with the jihadists whom Le
Pen says she wants to annihilate.
When you sink to despair, when you live trapped in Gaza,
Israel’s vast open-air prison, sleeping 10 to a floor in a concrete hovel,
walking every morning through the muddy streets of your refugee camp to get a
bottle of water because the water that flows from your tap is toxic, lining up
at a U.N. office to get a little food because there is no work and your family
is hungry, suffering the periodic aerial bombardments by Israel that leaves
hundreds of dead, your religion is all you have left. Muslim prayer, held five
times a day, gives you your only sense of structure and meaning, and, most
importantly, self-worth. And when the privileged of the world ridicule the one
thing that provides you with dignity, you react with inchoate fury. This fury
is exasperated when you and nearly everyone around you feel powerless to
respond.
The cartoons of the Prophet in the Paris-based satirical
weekly Charlie Hebdo are offensive and juvenile. None of them are funny. And
they expose a grotesque double standard when it comes to Muslims. In France a
Holocaust denier, or someone who denies the Armenian genocide, can be
imprisoned for a year and forced to pay a $60,000 fine. It is a criminal act in
France to mock the Holocaust the way Charlie Hebdo mocked Islam. French high
school students must be taught about the Nazi persecution of the Jews, but
these same students read almost nothing in their textbooks about the widespread
French atrocities, including a death toll among Algerians that some sources set
at more than 1 million, in the Algerian war for independence against colonial
France. French law bans the public wearing of the burqa, a body covering for
women that includes a mesh over the face, as well as the niqab, a full veil
that has a small slit for the eyes. Women who wear these in public can be
arrested, fined the equivalent of about $200 and forced to carry out community
service. France banned rallies in support of the Palestinians last summer when
Israel was carrying out daily airstrikes in Gaza that resulted in hundreds of civilian
deaths. The message to Muslims is clear: Your traditions, history and suffering
do not matter. Your story will not be heard. Joe Sacco had the courage to make
this point in panels he drew for the Guardian newspaper. And as Sacco pointed
out, if we cannot hear these stories we will endlessly trade state terror for
terror.
“It is a sad state of affairs when Liberty means the freedom
to insult, demean and mock people’s most sacred concepts,” the Islamic scholar
Hamza Yusuf, an American who lives in California, told me in an email. “In some
Latin countries people are acquitted for murders where the defendant’s mother
was slandered by the one he murdered. I saw this in Spain many years ago. It’s
no excuse for murder, but it explains things in terms of honor, which no longer
means anything in the West. Ireland is a western country that still retains
some of that, and it was the Irish dueling laws that were used in Kentucky, the
last State in the Union to make dueling outlawed. Dueling was once very
prominent in the West when honor meant something deep in the soul of men. Now
we are not allowed to feel insulted by anything other than a racial slur, which
means less to a deeply religious person than an attack on his or her religion.
Muslim countries are still governed, as you well know, by shame and honor
codes. Religion is the big one. I was saddened by the ‘I’m Charlie’ tweets and
posters, because while I’m definitely not in sympathy with those misguided
fools [the gunmen who invaded the newspaper], I have no feeling of solidarity
with mockers.”
Charlie Hebdo, despite its insistence that it targets all
equally, fired an artist and writer in 2008 for an article it deemed to be
anti-Semitic.
Shortly after the attacks of 9/11, while living in Paris and
working as a reporter for The New York Times, I went to La Cité des 4,000, a
gray housing project where North African immigrants lived in apartments with
bricked-up windows. Trash littered the stairwells. Spray-painted slogans
denounced the French government as fascist. Members of the three major gangs
sold cocaine and hashish in the parking lots amid the burned-out hulks of
several cars. A few young men threw stones at me. They chanted “Fuck the United
States! Fuck the United States! Fuck the United States!” and “Osama bin Laden!
Osama bin Laden! Osama bin Laden!” By the door of an elderly Jewish woman’s
apartment someone had spray-painted “Death to the Jews,” which she had
whitewashed out.
In the banlieues Osama bin Laden was a hero. When news of
the 9/11 attacks reached La Cité des 4,000—so named because it had 4,000 public
housing apartments at the time of its construction—young men poured out of
their apartments to cheer and chant in Arabic, “God is great!” France a couple
of weeks earlier had held the first soccer match between a French and an
Algerian team since Algeria’s war of independence ended in 1962. The North
Africans in the stadium hooted and whistled during the French national anthem.
They chanted, “Bin Laden! Bin Laden! Bin Laden!” Two French ministers, both
women, were pelted with bottles. As the French team neared victory, the
Algerian fans, to stop the game, flooded onto the field.
“You want us to weep
for the Americans when they bomb and kill Palestinians and Iraqis every day?”
Mohaam Abak, a Moroccan immigrant sitting with two friends on a bench told me
during my 2001 visit to La Cité des 4,000. “We want more Americans to die so
they can begin to see what it feels like.”
“America declared war
on Muslims a long time ago,” said Laala Teula, an Algerian immigrant who worked
for many years as a railroad mechanic. “This is just the response.”
It is dangerous to ignore this rage. But it is even more
dangerous to refuse to examine and understand its origins. It did not arise
from the Quran or Islam. It arose from mass despair, from palpable conditions
of poverty, along with the West’s imperial violence, capitalist exploitation
and hubris. As the resources of the world diminish, especially with the
onslaught of climate change, the message we send to the unfortunate of the
earth is stark and unequivocal: We have everything and if you try to take
anything away from us we will kill you. The message the dispossessed send back
is also stark and unequivocal. It was delivered in Paris.
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