salim mansur's
A DELECTABLE LIE
reviewed
by
DAVID SOLWAY
______________________________
David
Solway is a Canadian poet and essayist (Random Walks)
and author of The Big Lie: On Terror, Antisemitism, and
Identity. His editorials appear regularly in FRONTPAGEMAG.COM
and Pajamas
Media. He
speaks about his latest book, Hear,
O Israel! (Mantua Books), at frontpage.com.
I
begin with a disclosure. Salim Mansur is a friend of mine, so
if I were in any way skeptical of his deposition I would not
have consented to write this review. Friendship is too precious
a value to risk giving needless offense, either by being too
brutally honest or by producing a piece of dishonest puffery.
And since even the best of us have written problematic books
(including yours truly), it is best in such cases to say nothing
adverse in print and leave it to others to dissect the writer’s
efforts.
That
I write a review of a friend’s book,
then, means that I suffer no crisis of conscience in praising
it for its many virtues: clarity, painstaking research, intellectual
scrupulousness, a surfeit of historical and juridical information,
and a powerful argument backed by strict evidence and leading
to a set of forceful conclusions.
Mansur
presents his thesis with lucid precision in his Introduction:
“The idea of an ‘official’ multiculturalism
program to be sponsored by the state, supported by tax-payers,
and monitored and enforced by thought-police (human rights commissions)
was at best dubious, and at worst by its very nature poised
against Western liberalism. Moreover . . . it was based on the
false idea—another official lie, really—that all
cultures are equal.”
The
result of this pernicious fantasy was a reversal of cultural
norms and the scuttling of reasonable expectations. If all cultures
are equal, the heritage culture has no priority and no legitimate
claim upon foreign minorities to adapt to the social usages
and conventions already in place. “As immigration changes
the demographic profile of a liberal democracy,” Mansur
writes, “multiculturalism empowers immigrants from non-Western
societies to demand that their host country adapt to the cultural
requirements of immigrants instead of the other way round.”
And this is plainly what has happened. “[I]f the ride
continues unchecked,” he concludes, “the end then
is predictable.”
Delectable
Lie is a detailed exfoliation of this root argument, examining
how multiculturalism—and, of course, its corollary, political
correctness, which discriminates against the expression of dissent—have
inexorably sedimented themselves in the political process, “twisting
our history” as they did so, “tearing apart”
national identities and invidiously replacing them with “even
older identities of a pre-modern past,” thus effectively
eroding the “idea of nation as a people . . . Identified
on the basis of kinship relations or language.”
One
has only to look at the importation of Sharia law into Europe
and the proliferation of no-go zones, in effect Islamic mini-emirates,
in European cities to see how cultural civility and national
coherence can be subverted. In the U.S. Islamic advocacy proceeds
apace, terror attacks are a constant menace, mosques pepper
the landscape, the President appoints Muslim Brotherhood sympathizers
to influential posts, and the Shariate relentlessly advances.
In Canada—Mansur’s chief concern—Islamic organizations
flex their muscles, terror plots are hatched, mosques and religious
schools indoctrinate the young, and our human rights commissions
see to it that criticism of Islam is muted, punished and all
but ruled out.
One
recalls Ottoman thinker Said Nursi who prophesied nearly a century
ago, in his famous Damascus Sermon, that “Europe and America
are pregnant with Islam. One day they will give birth to an
Islamic state.” The way things are going, he may have
been right. And it is via what Mansur calls the “delectable
lie”—the idea of cultural parity, the raising of
the concept of “diversity” (which really means “conformity
of opinion”) to the status of a social paradigm, the practice
of accommodation to the sensitivities of immiscible groups in
the fatuous conviction that the favor will be reciprocated,
the untenable belief that the desire for freedom, prosperity
and electoral democracy reigns in every human heart, in short,
the diktats of multiculturalism—that Nursi’s vision
would be realized.
Mansur
writes with authority both as a professor of political science
imbrued in his discipline and as a Muslim who understands how
the more extreme elements in his community pose a serious threat
to the durability of the society in which they have refused
to integrate. These Islamic elements—along with certain
disruptive and sectarian portions of the South Asian shame-honor
demographic—braid the rope with which we will hang ourselves.
Mansur clearly reveals how multiculturalism has failed to establish
a viable and harmonious pluralism and has instead created an
anarchic and retrograde situation in which old-world identities
take precedence over modern, secular and liberal values. He
shows how the Western political elites have collaborated in
their own eventual dissolution by refusing to control or monitor
the flow of tribally oriented immigrants who bring the hatreds,
conflicts, social patterns, ancestral traditions and cultural
practices of Third World communities into their new home, sowing
inevitable discord as a consequence.
At
the same time, the patrician class does everything it can to
avoid confrontation and, in an access of misplaced solicitude,
even strives to facilitate what is nothing less than a “hostile
takeover” by stifling opposition to such destructive policies
and pandering to the grievance networks set up by these foreign
implants. In so doing, our “progressive” beau monde
empowers radical immigrant organizations in their quest to impose
upon their hosts the standards, customs, rituals and codes of
the “old country.” What we are observing is a kind
of cultural pleaching, the creation of new structures by interlacing
the existing features of the social and political landscape
with alternate modes and configurations. The terrain we have
long taken for granted slowly becomes unrecognizable.
The
casualties of the multicultural delirium are readily discernible
to anyone who cares to pay attention. Freedom of speech, the
bedrock principle of Western liberalism, has been legislatively
curtailed. Freedom of assembly is under threat as well—what
we might designate as the Malmo syndrome. The notion of citizenship,
as Mansur warns, that “brings people together in liberal
democracy and binds them in a relationship of mutual obligation”
has also been crucially weakened. “The problem arises,”
he continues, “when multiculturalism demands that liberal
democracy recognize in law cultural practices that are not merely
different, but contrary . . . to its core values of citizenship
rights and responsibilities.”
In
order to oppose the growing menace of “tribal and collectivist
values” which undermine the social and national consensus,
liberal democracy must be defended, Mansur argues, through education
in the historical achievements of the Enlightenment and the
concept of universal values. The doctrinal lie that “all
cultures are worthy of equal respect and equally embracing of
individual freedom” must be strenuously countered by affirming
a unifying national culture “embedded in the values of
the West and shaped by the Enlightenment.”
It
must be acknowledged, however, that such education as Mansur
recommends does not begin in the schools and universities, or
in religious institutions and the media, which have, by and
large, been corrupted by “the worm inside the doctrine
of multiculturalism.” As he notes in a recent Sun
Media column, our “universities, churches and mainstream
media . . . have assumed the role of spinmeisters for Islamists
and Islamism.” Genuine education begins with voices like
Mansur’s and those of his conservative peers and colleagues—many
of whom are mentioned in his book—who speak out resonantly
and bravely against the plague of self-doubt, debased creeds
and degrading ideologies, unmoored theories and the temptation
to cultural and political appeasement that afflicts the West.
These
heralds of sound judgment understand that, in effect, multiculturalism
is like a horticultural experiment gone wrong, attempting to
graft an unsuitable cutting onto a pre-existing stock and producing
only a vascular deformity in the process. Subsequent pruning
rarely works though it may at least contain the aberration.
What is ultimately required is a strong rootstock, the right
shoot, and the appropriate conditions to ensure that the insertion
“takes”—failing which, we have a disaster
rather than a garden.
Mansur’s
book tells a bitter truth about a delectable lie. It needs to
be read.