Was the
Magdeburg market attack the inevitable product of an anti-politics age?
Kenan Malik
Lack of
faith in political leaders is leading the socially disaffected to be seduced by
violence
Sun 29 Dec
2024 09.30 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/dec/29/magdeburg-market-attack-product-anti-politics
Taleb
al-Abdulmohsen, the alleged perpetrator of the horror attack on the Christmas
market in Magdeburg, does not, Germany’s interior minister, Nancy Faeser,
observed, “fit any existing mould”. He had acted in “an unbelievably cruel and
brutal manner, like an Islamist terrorist, though he was clearly ideologically
hostile to Islam”.
Faeser is
not alone in her confusion about how to understand Abdulmohsen.
Born in
Saudi Arabia, Abdulmohsen came to Germany in 2006 for psychiatric training
before applying for asylum. Describing himself as “the most aggressive critic
of Islam in history”, he excoriated German immigration policy for being
insufficiently wary of Muslim asylum seekers, becoming an advocate for the
far-right AfD. The former German chancellor Angela Merkel’s “open borders
policy”, he claimed, was an attempt “to Islamise Europe”.
How could
someone so hostile to Islam carry out a murderous act so redolent of Islamist
terror? For many on the right, especially those in the habit of regurgitating
anti-Muslim bigotry, the answer was simple: whatever the evidence, Abdulmohsen
is an Islamist. Many accused him of practising “taqiyya”, or deception, and the
authorities of being “in denial”. Others saw his views as irrelevant. Being a
foreigner, and from a Muslim-majority country, was sufficient to condemn him as
a deadly threat.
Perhaps the
best way to begin making sense of the seemingly inexplicable horror of the
attack, and the all too predictable responses, is as the intersection of two
developments: the changing character of terrorism and the rise of
“anti-politics” – the sense that all those in power are mendacious, corrupt and
hostile to the needs of ordinary people. And a good place to begin
understanding that intersection is in the work of the French sociologist
Olivier Roy.
A leading
thinker on contemporary radical Islam, Roy has long been critical of
conventional theories of how young Muslims in the west get radicalised.
Abdulmohsen was not a jihadi, whatever the conspiracy-mongers may say;
nevertheless, understanding western jihadism may help throw light on his
actions.
To
understand radical Islam, Roy insists, we need not a “vertical” but a
“transverse” grasp of the issue; to view it not just in terms of Islamic
history or theology but also in comparison to other forms of contemporary
identity movements and political radicalisation.
What gives
shape to contemporary disaffection is the politics of identity
What
initially drives most wannabe jihadis is rarely politics or religion but a
search for something less tangible: identity, meaning, belongingness. There is
nothing new in the youthful search for identity and meaning. What is different
is that we live today in more atomised societies and in an age in which many
feel peculiarly disengaged from mainstream social institutions.
In the past,
social disaffection might have led people to join movements for political
change. Today, most such organisations have disintegrated or seem out of touch.
What gives shape to contemporary disaffection is the politics of identity,
which invites individuals to define themselves in increasingly narrow ethnic or
cultural terms. A generation ago, “radicalised” Muslims might have been more
secular in their outlook, their radicalism expressed through political
campaigning. Now, many vent their disaffection through an intensely, often
murderously, tribal vision of Islam. The key question, Roy suggests, is less
about “the radicalisation of Islam” than about “the Islamisation of
radicalism”.
In this
process, an already degenerate ideology has degenerated even further, jihadism
often transmuting in Europe into “an extension of inner-city gangs” and leading
to the emergence over the past decade of “low-tech” terrorism, in which
everyday objects such as knives and cars become wielded with murderous intent.
The line between ideological violence and sociopathic rage has been all but
erased.
This takes
us to the second significant development: the rise of “anti-politics”.
In his
influential 1989 essay, The End of History, Francis Fukuyama suggested that the
west’s victory in the cold war had brought ideological struggle to a close.
“Idealism”, he wrote, “will be replaced by economic calculation” and the
“endless solving of technical problems”.
Politics in
the post-cold-war world did indeed become less about competing ideologies than
a debate about how best to manage the existing political order. This was the
age of neoliberalism undergirded by a consensus that there was no alternative
to liberal democracy, free-market economics and globalisation.
What
Fukuyama underestimated, though, was the significance of politics and of
collective ideals. “Economic calculation” and “the endless solving of technical
problems” have not, and cannot, replace “ideological struggle”. He also
overestimated the ability of the authorities to solve the technical problems or
improve the lives of their citizens.
The
financial collapse of 2008 spawned a resurgence of political protest and
populist challenges to established authority. From Tunisia to Chile, from
Brazil to Hong Kong, there were, Vincent Bevins suggests in If We Burn, his
history of the 2010s, more people involved in protests worldwide than ever
before. And yet little seemed to change. Anger without change has led to a
growing sense that politics itself is the problem.
We may never
know Abdulmohsen’s motives, or his state of mind as he unleashed his carnage,
but somewhere on his political journey, he seems to have transposed his hatred
of Islam into a hatred of Germany for being insufficiently hostile to Islam.
His sense of being ignored by the political authorities may have drawn him into
an act of nihilistic violence that, like much similar violence, may be
inexplicable in rational terms but is expressive of an anti-politics age, and
rooted in the idea of protest as spectacle, often terrible, murderous
spectacle. “Is there a way to justice in Germany without… indiscriminately
massacring German citizens?” he asked in a striking recent social media post.
He had been “looking for this peaceful path” but “not found it”.
The
insistence that Abdulmohsen must be an Islamist and that “mass immigration is
killing Europe” also emerges from the politics of anti-politics. It is not just
Muslims who are socially disengaged and whose disaffection is shaped by a
narrow sense of identity. Many within white working-class communities are
equally disengaged and angry, and also often view their problems through an
identitarian lens, opening the way for far-right advocates to shape anger in
bigoted ways. This summer’s riots in England showed how quickly disaffection
can become warped and directed against Muslims and migrants.
Wannabe
jihadism, racist populism and individual acts of nihilistic terror can seem
disconnected phenomena but all are in very different ways expressions of
disaffected rage while trapped within the cage of identity in an age of
anti-politics.
Kenan Malik is an Observer columnist
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário