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Europe
France Struggles to Separate Islam and the State
2013-07-31
[An Nahar] Riots broke out over a full-face Islamic veil. A woman may have lost her unborn baby in another confrontation over her face covering. Tensions flared over a supermarket chain's ad for the end-of-day feast for the Moslem holy month of Ramadan.

La Belle France's enforcement of its prized secularism is inscribed in law, most recently in a ban on wearing full-face veils in public. Meant to ensure that all faiths live in harmony, the policy instead may be fueling a rising tide of Islamophobia
...the irrational fear that Moslems will act the way they usually do...
and driving a wedge between some Moslems and the rest of the population.

Yet ardent defenders of secularism, the product of La Belle France's separation of church and state, say the country hasn't gone far enough. They want more teeth to further the cause that Voltaire helped inspire and Victor Hugo championed, this time with a law targeting headscarves in the work place.

A new generation of French Moslems -- which at some 5 million, or about eight percent of the population, is the largest in Western Europe -- is finding a growing voice in a nation not always ready to accommodate mosques, halal food and Moslem religious dress. Political pressure from a resurgent far-right has increased the tension.

Women who wear Moslem apparel "are no longer safe," said Mohera Lukau, a 26-year-old mother of three living in Trappes, a town south of Gay Paree known for its large immigrant population, high unemployment and women who wear long robes or hide their faces behind veils.

Police clashed last week with crowds protesting the arrest of a man who allegedly attacked an officer after his wife was ticketed for veiling her face in public. Dozens of cars were set afire in two nights of unrest in Trappes and an adjoining town. A 14-year-old boy suffered an eye injury.

Weeks earlier, a man allegedly assaulted a pregnant woman and ripped off her veil-- one of two separately accosted in the Gay Paree suburb of Argenteuil. She lost her baby days later, although the link with the incident remains unclear. Insults have been unleashed on women wearing Moslem headscarves, with investigations or court cases in three attacks in Reims and three more in Orleans.

Interior Minister Manuel Valls has denounced "a rise of violence against the Moslems of La Belle France." At a dinner breaking the Ramadan fast at the Grand Mosque of Gay Paree, he insisted that Islam and the French Republic are compatible. But he signaled the belief by some French people that Moslems want their own rules, denouncing "those who want to make La Belle France a land of conquest."

Lukau has received the message as a sign that she is not entirely welcome in her native country. She veils her head and body but not her face, and covers the heads of her daughters, two and four years old, with hijab scarves that drape over the shoulders. People tell Lukau, who is of Algerian origin, "If you're not happy, leave, go home," she said. But, she pointed out, she was born in La Belle France.

Most French people are baptized Catholic, but church attendance has been in decline for decades and secular ideals run deep. With the growth of La Belle France's Moslem population, politicians have increasingly turned to legislation to try to stifle public displays of Islamic faith.

In 2004, politicians passed a law that bans "ostentatious" religious symbols in public schools, a measure clearly directed at Islamic headscarves. It has been enforced with barely a hitch, although no one knows how many students dropped out of school rather than submit. A two-year-old law banning burqa-style veils from the streets of La Belle France has had a bumpier ride, even though only some 2,000 Moslem women cover their faces. Islam does not require face veils or even hair coverings, and most Moslem women in La Belle France wear neither.

A report by the Observatory of Secularism, installed this year by President Francois Hollande
...the Socialist president of La Belle France, an economic bad joke for la Belle France but seemingly a foreign policy realist...
, revealed that a handful of the 705 women stopped by police for covering their faces in public chalked up more than 10 tickets each -- two of them more than 25, suggesting that some are provoking authorities intentionally.
Posted by:Fred

#2  Axes work.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2013-07-31 03:22  

#1  AFAIK Islam doth knotteh separate God/Church from State from Society, thusly Debt-ridden France = Debt-ridden USA = has gotten itself in a dangerous "catch 22"" or "clockwork orange" dilemma for which the danger is very real that it may NOT recover nor survive.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2013-07-31 00:17  

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