Global Rebellion / 19 Apr 2008
Secular nationalism might not take a stand on supernatural beliefs, but it restricts the public role of religion. Citizens are expected to have an allegiance to a modern state and its political process, while their specifically religious commitments get relegated to private life. Legitimate coercion, including violence, and the task of imposing public order are monopolized by a secular state. Religions that emphasize cosmic order reflected on Earth, and that legitimize coercion in the context of a divine social order, get marginalized. There is a lot in the book that will interest secularists in particular. For example, Juergensmeyer makes the observation that secularism is the prime enemy for religious nationalists, even more so than religious minorities with whom they may also clash. Finding some accommodation with another religious community is not impossible. But, Could the accommodation approach work with secular minorities? Even in traditional religious cultures there are people who were raised in religious households but who, through travel, education, or association with modern urban culture, have lost interest in religion. Should there not be a safe cultural haven for such people in a religious society, just as the cultures of Copts and other minorities are maintained as islands in seas of religiosity? From most religious nationalists to whom I posed the question, the answer was a resounding no. They could accept the idea that other religious traditions provide valid alternatives to their own religious law but not secular culture: it has, in their eyes, no links with a higher truth. From their point of view, it is simply antireligion. Some religious nationalists found it difficult to accept secularism even in Europe and the United States, where, they felt, Christianity failed to keep its backsliders in line. Still, it seems to me that the logic of the two-level-shari'a admists at least the possibility of islands of different cultures within a religious state. [Page 237.] I can add my own observations in support of this. Among Turkish Islamists, the idea of treating secularists as a separate "religious" community with its own laws and communal rights has been discussed. It doesn't seem to me to have got far. Secularism is too alien, too much the enemy. | New here? Create an account. Search civilbrights.netQuotesOur civil rights have no dependence upon our religious opinions, any more than our opinions in physics or geometry. —Thomas Jefferson No longer are we satisfied with the fiction of things. We want them in their full reality. —Mikhail Bakunin I slept with faith and found a corpse in my arms on awakening; I drank and danced all night with doubt and found her a virgin in the morning. —Aleister Crowley The Christian resolution to find the world ugly and bad has made the world ugly and bad. —Friedrich Nietzsche |