LONDON - Amid an ongoing controversy over religious attire in public schools, French President Emmanuel Macron delivered a strategic speech at the Grand Mosque of Paris last month to commemorate its centenary. After retracing the mosque’s history, Macron delineated its overarching vision of an Islam “faithful to the values of the Republic”, writes The Middle East Eye.

Referencing these alleged “values” has become a prerequisite among the French political establishment when addressing Islam and Muslims. This vaguely defined reference conceals a deeper political meaning: that Islam, in order for it to be tolerated, must conform to the state’s guidelines.

The “values of the Republic” have become boundaries delimiting the political space within which Islam and French Muslims must operate - a space that only recognises political submission. According to Macron, Islam must be “compatible with the Republic”. Indeed, incompatibility indicates a clear form of “separatism”, a concept the president began using two years ago when he introduced a bill to combat “radical Islamism”.

The notion of separatism points to Muslims’ forbidden territory: political dissent and religious freedom. In other words, French Muslims’ religiosity must earn the state’s stringent stamp of approval. The anti-separatism law, adopted by parliament last year, has dramatically curtailed Muslims’ fundamental rights within civil society. Framed around the need to protect national security, the French republic and secularism, the Islamophobic state has since 2018 launched more than 26,000 investigations targeting everything from Muslim businesses, to schools, to mosques.

It has permanently or temporarily shut down more than 800 facilities, and seized more than €55 million ($55m).

The crackdown has affected numerous well-respected Muslim organisations, such as the Collective Against Islamophobia in France and the charity BarakaCity.


Fear and paralysis


The obvious objective of this radical approach is to terrorise the Muslim population, and the psychological consequences of this state-led persecution are slowly emerging. Fear and paralysis are becoming widespread among a community comprising around six million people, leading a growing number of Muslims towards the path of emigration.

In his recent speech at the Grand Mosque, Macron outlined how the state would work to firmly establish a “French Islam” that is politically subservient to the republic. The Grand Mosque would be incorporated into the newly created “Forum of Islam in France”, which establishes a hierarchy with regard to the state’s norms and Islamic norms, in favour of the former.

 

 

 

 

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