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Weekly Worker 598 Thursday October 27 2005
Alienation and identity
Any way it comes
Yet another cash crisis is looming, as, once again, we look set
to fall well short of our £500 target this month. With only four
days to go for our October fund, we have only £310. That’s right
- just £30 received over the last seven days.
But all is not lost. If just a dozen or so comrades could let us
have £10 or £20 straightaway, we would easily make the full amount
by our deadline of noon on Monday October 31. Mail your donation
first class as soon as you read this or - even better - go onto
our website and make your contribution using your credit or debit
card. That way, we will be sure to get it without having to rely
on the vagaries of the post.
Talking about our website, I’m sorry to have to repeat that perennial
complaint of mine - not a single online donation made this week.
True, there were not so many readers as last week - 14,876, compared
to 15,720 - but surely a few of you are due to show your appreciation?
Thanks go to comrades ES (£20) and HD (£10) for coming up with
the goods - even if they did write us an old-fashioned cheque. But,
to be honest, I’ll take it any way it comes - just as long as you
get it to me by Monday next. Please don’t let me down, comrades.
Robbie Rix
Click
here to download a standing order form - regular income is particular
important in order to plan ahead. Even £5/month can help!
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Emily Bransom reviews Navid Akhtar's Young, angry and muslim
(Channel Four, October 24)
Director Navid Akhtar revisited his British-Pakistani roots to make this
contribution to the debate on the reasons why some young muslims have
turned to ‘radical islam’.
Appropriately, the unforgettable scenes of the 7/7 London bombings opened
the programme, with the videoed personal statement of one of bombers immediately
following. Akhtar described the shock this had provoked among muslims
and explained how the aftermath of the attacks had left many questioning
the values of their own communities. How could young people from this
British-born generation turn on society with such hatred?
The programme suggests the answer is an internal crisis of identity,
felt most keenly by youth. Torn between the restrictive traditions of
their parents and the ‘individualism’ of British society, young muslims
feel dislocated and without a genuine ‘home’, according to Akhtar. Consequent
feelings of alienation and a lack of direction “make young muslims vulnerable
to the radicals”. This point was repeated throughout the hour-long programme
- young and angry muslims are drawn to radicalism to fulfil a sense of
belonging and identity. The voice-over of the director warned ominously
that “ignoring these voices will only ensure that we hear them again”.
In order to help us better understand the “very real, not abstract” identity
crisis felt by so many muslims, we were invited by Akhtar into his community
to see for ourselves the problems faced every day. The majority of muslims
in Britain are of Pakistani origin and, having been born there himself,
Akhtar focused on this group. Images of British troops herding up Pakistani
refugees in the 1960s and 1970s accompanied an interview with an elderly
man explaining how he, like thousands of others, had come to Britain to
make money to send back home. Their plan was to work here for five years
before returning to Pakistan wealthy and capable of looking after their
families.
In reality though, for most this did not happen. Instead, the old man
continued, “We are now citizens of the UK and Pakistan.” It is
this double identity that was the focus of the programme and in a sense,
the title was very misleading. Rather than concentrating on young and
angry muslims, it was more an insight into Akhtar’s personal turmoil and
that of his friends and family.
His father had recently died and we followed him in his attempt to decide
what to do with the land he had been left in Pakistan. Clearly, Akhtar
did feel torn between two cultures and it would be wrong to deny the significance
of this on his personal life. However, to use this personal crisis to
make sweeping generalisations about the motivations of political islam
and its attractions for some youth is to miss the point.
The programme presented no evidence of young muslims being fundamentally
different in objective terms to youth from any other social or ethnic
group in Britain. So the question that needs to be addressed is why some
at the fringes of this group have become so desperate as to make human
bombs out of themselves and what this tells us about not simply this section,
but also wider British society.
A representative from the Muslim Youth Helpline spoke of the 5,000 calls
received by the organisation last year. It was explained that this was
significant because it showed a growing disillusionment among muslim youth.
However, most of the calls turned out to be about issues such as personal
relationships, school, friends and family - all difficult enough for any
young person. Although trying to make us see how young muslims have to
fight the contradictions between their ‘two worlds’, Akhtar himself sometimes
appeared not to appreciate that teenagers born and brought up in Britain
would not necessarily find Pakistani elders qualified to deal with their
problems.
To dismiss the added cultural pressures faced by muslim teenagers in
Britain would be foolish. Yet to use it as proof that they are unlike
other youth groups is also unhelpful. Young British muslims have the same
objective problems as any other adolescents, although refracted though
the particular culture of their communities, of course.
In some scenes with his family Akhtar seemed to project his own obvious
identity crisis onto relatives who actually seemed perfectly at ease with
themselves. Given that his programme featured no interviews with ‘ young
and angry’ muslims tortured by their split personalities, it seems he
did exactly the same thing with a whole group of people he did not even
know. In reality support for reactionary islamism is a symptom of a far
deeper and more disturbing malaise not simply confined to one ethnic/religious
population - the alienation produced by capitalism itself.
And the effects of capitalism’s ills are particularly felt amongst some
minority groups. There is massive unemployment within the muslim population
and the programme claimed that 60% of muslims are on low incomes. In addition
to this, there are proportionately more Pakistani-Kashmiri muslim men
in prison than any other Asian group.
The programme was useful in offering an insight into the “rural tribal
mentality” that prevails within much of the Pakistani-Kashmiri community.
The clan system, known as the biraderi, is designed to keep power
with the elders. In return for positions of influence in local politics,
clan elders deliver votes for mainstream parties. This was demonstrated
by the massive and systematic fraud conducted by Labour in the 2004 council
elections in Birmingham. These elders, detached and remote from youth
culture in Britain, are promoted by Blair to help solve the problems of
alienation and identity.
The programme alluded to the idea that anger felt by so many young people
in Britain today often stems from the hypocrisy of the Blair government’s
foreign policy. This is accentuated for muslims when the government claims
it is passing anti-terror legislation to protect the innocent in this
country whist itself terrorising the (mainly muslim) innocent in Iraq.
However, disaffection with particular foreign policy strategies is hardly
adequate to explain the tragedy of July 7.
The lack of identity suggested by Akhtar cannot be dismissed. However,
it is misguided to place it as the issue that most urgently needs addressing.
It is one factor within a layer of social and economic factors affecting
the whole working class. The building of a viable working class alternative
that all disaffected sections can relate to is the essential antidote
to the alienation experienced most sharply by sections such as young muslims.
The answer is to be found not in Respect-type platitudes, but in the
programme of working class socialism.
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