Thursday 16 July 2015

Reactionary Radicals

Owen Jones and the Rainbow Qur'an


In a 2012 article for the Guardian, Jonathan Freedland had defended his friend Mehdi Hasan by convicting Hasan’s critics of a strange form of racism:
[Subtle examples] can be confusing, because they often dress up in progressive, Guardian-friendly garb – slamming Islam as oppressive of gay and women's rights, for example – but the thick layer of bigotry is visible all the same. Call it progressives' prejudice.
An example of the pitfalls into which this kind of thinking can lead the Left was recently provided by a fractious twitter exchange on the subject of gay rights and Islam involving Freedland’s Guardian colleague Owen Jones [storified here].

The US Supreme Court ruling legalising gay marriage had been handed down a few days earlier and the summer’s Pride festivities had just begun. Profile avatars superimposed with solidarity rainbows swept social media in celebration of both; a touching display of the breadth and depth of support the once-lonely campaign for marriage equality has come to enjoy.

A mischievous variation on this theme was an image of the Qur'an, tweeted by the ex-Muslim writer and activist Saif Rahman, which a twitter user calling himself ‘Colt’ then gave a speculative punt in the direction of Owen Jones:


When Rahman asked why this had not been dignified with a response, Jones answered: "Because I think this is self evidently trying to provoke [rather] than win people over to LGBT rights? Are you LGBT (genuine question)?"

Owen Jones is a notoriously thin-skinned and bad-tempered tweeter, so the petulant tone was hardly a surprise. But I would imagine Jones is also understandably anxious to avoid accusations of bigotry from people like Jonathan Freedland.

The difficulty here is that Islamic homophobia is not a mere calumny or figment of ‘progressive prejudice’. Muslims are not simply the hapless victims of Western prejudice, as Jones and Freedland apparently prefer to believe; they are individuals perfectly capable of holding bigoted views of their own, which it is surely every progressive’s responsibility to oppose.

A 2006 Populus poll conducted for Policy Exchange found that 61% of UK Muslims thought "homosexuality is wrong and should be illegal", a figure consistent across genders and social class. This figure is admittedly nearly 10 years old, but the Populus also reported that younger generations were less tolerant on this issue than their elders, which does nothing to inspire optimism that things have been moving in the right direction.

Nevertheless, their survey did provide a reminder that UK Muslims’ views on homosexuality – whilst profoundly dispiriting – are not uniform. A majority appear to be deplorable and reactionary, but a minority – evidenced by projects like the Inclusive Mosque Initiative – are enlightened and progressive. The aim of gay rights activism, surely, is to stigmatise the former and empower the latter. And on this point, Colt's tweet to Jones was specific.

If Rahman's original image of the Qur'an was intended to mock the incompatibility of modernity and the Qur’an's 7th Century ideas, Colt's additional reference to LGBT Muslims and solidarity invites another interpretation: that LGBT Muslims living in communities and families hostile to the open expression of their sexuality deserve support in their struggle for acceptance under a modernised, gay-friendly Islam.

But, sensing a trap, Jones reflexively counterattacked with a spurious distinction between 'provocation' (bad) and advancing LGBT rights (noble), before accusing Colt and Rahman of the former.

To see a self-professed radical advance an argument of such painful conservatism makes me cringe for Jones. Had his activist forebears afforded reactionary attitudes the respect he demands from contemporary critics of Islam, he would not enjoy the freedoms he takes for granted today.

The overthrow of religious authority in the West – a necessary precondition of sexual liberty – was not achieved simply by the polite suggestion of a rationalist alternative. It also required the unrelenting mockery of its Enlightenment enemies who took great pleasure in making its ideas look ridiculous.

Nor was the later movement for gay liberation and acceptance bashful about provoking its opponents, for whom its mere existence was an affront. Provocation and offence were understood by activists to be engines of change, not its regrettable by-products.

In 1971, for instance, radical Gay Liberation Front activists in drag invaded a meeting of Mary Whitehouse's Christian pressure group, the Nationwide Festival of Light, held at Westminster's Methodist Central Hall, and began kissing one another and unfurling sloganeering banners before shutting off the power. The queer art, literature, music, theatre, and cinema that proliferated with the rise of gay activism likewise revelled in its capacity to generate traditionalist outrage.

Had he been alive, would Owen Jones have pursed his lips in disapproval and defended the sensibilities of offended conservative Christians?

But times have changed, and in the process radical opposition to reactionary inter-cultural ideas seems to have mutated into a perverse solidarity. Multiculturalism's emphasis on the need to show deference to cultural and religious difference, and the concomitant empowerment of all kinds of identity politics, has meant that a declaration of offence taken is no longer presumed to be the start of a discussion but its final word.

"Are you LGBT?" Jones had demanded of Rahman in his first tweet. An irrelevance to the matter at hand, but a question of pressing importance to Jones who - as an openly gay man - reserves for himself the right to decide who may and may not advocate for gay acceptance and under what circumstances.

"If you want to be a straight ally, welcome," Jones instructed Rahman. "But I'm done with people only mentioning LGBT rights when Islam is involved." When an Indian ex-Muslim calling himself ‘Desi Liberal’ pointed out that it was Jones who was proving himself to be a feckless ally by downplaying Islamic homophobia so as to comport with politically correct niceties, Jones retorted: "I'm not going to be lectured on LGBT rights by a straight man. Incredible."

It is undercover of this politics of identity and broad-minded respect for other cultures that, as a non-Muslim, Jones excuses himself from criticising even the most regressive elements of another minority group. In his own mind, it is not his business to do so. 

So, instead, he declares his unconditional and indiscriminate solidarity with all Muslims, irrespective of how hostile a given individual's views and values may be to his own. And, consequently, he finds himself objectively defending the Islamic religious right from the pressures of progress at the expense of those they victimise.

The message for LGBT Muslims may be the unintended consequence of a well-meaning impulse, but it is clear, just the same: gay liberation for me, but not for thee.

2 comments:

  1. Post it through Jones' letterbox.

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  2. I don't know if Owen Jones has explicitly said so (I have not read everything he has written) but it is typical of people holding what is described here as his general orientation, to base their defense of illiberal Muslim sensibilities--but not of illiberal Christian sensibilities--on their perception that Muslims in the West, unlike Christians in the West, are a group suffering generally from social and political discrimination, and occasionally, something worse than discrimination. Let us leave for now the current claim emanating from certain Western Christian circles to the effect that believing Christians do indeed suffer from discrimination in the West (at the hands of Leftists, atheists, agnostics, and assorted Enlightenment types) and return to those who support the suffering of Muslims primarily. People holding this latter position cannot avoid noting that there are still those out there in society who suffer discrimination apart from Muslims, even if such people don't take Christian claims of suffering seriously. But people who end up primarily supporting Muslims from among this melange, do not explain why the discrimination suffered by Muslims in the West should be the eternal Trump: the only type of discrimination to override all other types of discrimination, including those visited by Muslims on others, in the event of a "clash of discriminations". Do these people consider the suffering of Muslims to be worse than that of others suffering discrimination? If so, how do they measure this? Indeed, in today's complex and very self-aware world--there are so many prejudices floating around--and so many concomitant grievances--and enough unfortunate effects of discrimination in a number of Identity arenas--that the Compassionate Soul, if they are being completely honest, must find it difficult--at least sometimes--to choose from among this turbulent swirl, who to support in the event of a clash of discriminations. Surely there must be circumstances when such a clash presents the Compassionate Soul with a conundrum.

    Ever since John Rawls published A Theory of Justice in 1971, the explicit focus of the Western Compassionate Soul has been on *Justice-Seeking* for the Unjustly-Treated. The original idea was that there was a potential remedy for all who were Unjustly-Treated. But now--in our very complex globalized era--the great enterprise of Justice-Seeking is no longer about simply promoting justice for those Unjustly-Treated, but in first determining who among those many Unjustly-Treated merit the biggest dollop of Justice, in the event of a clash among them. But how does one determine who suffers more and then be satisfied with their choice--even as the chosen Greater Sufferer causes suffering to yet others? And in determining who is the Greater Sufferer, how does the Compassionate Soul employ a method which is based on a principle(s) which can first be fairly applied to all contending suffering parties in order to make the decision about who should win Justice in the event of a clash--for surely, the Compassionate Soul wants to have a fair, universally applicable method for arriving at this decision.

    And there is the heart of the matter: what are the underlying premises and method for making this choice? Because I have not read what I consider to be a sufficient sampling of Jones' writings, I cannot make an educated guess as to what his underlying premises and methods of determination in this matter may be. Do you know?

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