the invasion of europe
THE HOUR IS LATER THAN WE THINK
by
DAVID SOLWAY
______________________________
David
Solway is a Canadian poet and essayist (Random Walks)
and author of The Big Lie: On Terror, Antisemitism, and
Identity and Hear,
O Israel! (Mantua Books). His editorials appear
regularly in frontpagemag.com and
PJ Media. His monograph, Global Warning:
The Trials of an Unsettled Science (Freedom Press Canada)
was launched at the National Archives in Ottawa in September,
2012. His debut album, Blood
Guitar, is now available.
Not
to have read the Qur'an is to be half-educated right now.
Richard Rodriguez
The
migratory invasion of Europe, uncannily but presciently foreseen
in Jean Raspail’s much derided 1973 novel The Camp
of the Saints, is now taking place with near-irresistible
force on the shores of that beleaguered continent. As National
Post columnist Matthew Fisher reports, “Europe is in a
deep quandary over how to respond to a huge and growing influx
of desperate migrants crossing the Mediterranean Sea from North
Africa.” Fisher writes as a compassionate liberal whose
sympathies go out to these poor wretches, victims of human traffickers,
trusting their lives to rickety boats that frequently capsize.
It is hard not to feel sympathy for these hapless multitudes.
At
the same time, one must also remember that the overwhelming
majority of asylum seekers form part of a vast transfer of Muslim
populations to Europe, and that Christians in their midst have
been thrown overboard. Equally distressing is the likelihood
that as many as one million “would-be migrants [are] gathering
on the Med’s southern shores” to make the crossing.
At this rate it will not take long before Europe, already burdened
by large, clamorous and disruptive Muslim enclaves, becomes
the island of Lampedusa writ majuscule.
Fisher,
like many of his congeners, frets over Europe’s “niggardly
response” to migrants experiencing “extreme religious
and ethnic persecution and the economic paralysis that are causing
convulsions in Iraq, Syria, Libya, the Horn of Africa and West
Africa.” Many European leaders are now contemplating military
action to stem the flood, including, as Fisher notes, an armada
of warships and attack helicopters “to block the migrants
at source” by destroying transport vessels in their home
ports. Repatriation programs are also underway. Fisher has no
compunction in condemning a “previously open-minded and
open-hearted Europe” for its belated accession to realpolitik.
And
neither do “50 former European leaders [who] described
the calamity unfolding in Italian, Maltese and Greek waters
as a ‘stain on the conscience of our continent.’”
Liberal ideology clearly cares little for the social and physical
integrity of the very nations where it has come irresponsibly
to flourish. One thinks of former Swedish prime minister Fredrik
Reinfeldt who, flying over a country where fully 17% (and climbing)
of the population is foreign-born, asserted there was more than
enough room to house untold numbers of immigrants — chiefly
Muslim immigrants, of course. The naivety of a political airhead
floating serenely above the intractable economic problems and
social dysfunction besetting the country is beyond risible.
But such an attitude is typical of the political and intellectual
classes, advocates of the unsustainable, not only in Sweden
but throughout the increasingly febrile West.
Our
intellectual milieu is so ‘progressive’ that we
are progressing straight toward civilizational extinction. The
spectacle of a Europe undergoing its own species of social,
political and economic ‘convulsions,’ its inability
to assimilate the millions of Muslims who are transforming Europe
into what Oriana Fallaci in The Rage and the Pride
regarded as an abattoir-in-the-making, its impotence before
the spiraling Muslim crime rate and appalling rape statistics,
its evident helplessness in the face of Sharia enforcement and
ongoing terrorist atrocities, and its presiding over the depletion
of its welfare budgets exploited by a parasitical Islamic presence
— all this counts for little to the liberal/left constituency.
Europe’s moral duty, apparently, is to mutate out of all
recognition, to betray the legitimate rights and normative expectations
of its own native citizens, and ultimately to abolish itself.
Europe’s
looming catastrophe was already foreseen by former Algerian
President Houari Boumediene, who gloated in a speech at the
UN in 1974, “One day, millions of men will leave the Southern
Hemisphere to go to the Northern Hemisphere. And they will not
go there as friends. Because they will go there to conquer it.
And they will conquer it with their sons. The wombs of our women
will give us victory.” Daniel Pipes regards as “outrageous”
the claim of a Belgium-based imam to the effect that “soon
we will take power in this country. Those who criticize us now,
will regret it. They will have to serve us. Prepare, for the
hour is near.” In light of current events, the prediction
does not seem altogether farfetched.
None
of this should surprise us. The courageous and prescient statesman
Winston Churchill had the measure of Islam in his 1899 book
The River War (“No stronger retrograde force
exists in the world”). In his Reflections on History,
the great historian Jacob Burckhardt alerted us to the danger
of Koran-inspired jihad. Insightful novelists have read the
writing on the wall, for example, G.K. Chesterton’s The
Flying Inn, Jean Raspail’s aforementioned The
Camp of the Saints, Michel Houellebecq’s Platform
and Submission, and Christian scholar William Kilpatrick’s
recent and provocative Orwellian fable Insecurity.
They knew (and know) what is at stake, not for Europe alone
but for Western civilization in general, soon to be inundated
by an Islamic tidal wave. Our best political thinkers, like
Bat Ye’or, Andrew Bostom, Robert Spencer, David Horowitz,
Caroline Glick, Raymond Ibrahim, Geert Wilders, Bruce Bawer,
Melanie Phillips, Mark Steyn, Douglas Murray, Mark Durie and
others too numerous to mention, have warned us repeatedly that
if we persist in ignoring the theo-political virus of canonical
Islam, we may not recover from the affliction.
But
one does not need to read the literature to stimulate awareness.
Nothing prevents us from using our wits to observe and understand
what is going on beneath our very noses. The savage Muslims
launch terrorist attacks against Western interests and civilians
while the clever Muslims insinuate themselves into the political
and social infrastructures of the countries they have come to
inhabit. One might assume that the latter may even object to
the tactics of the former as actually impeding their subversive
agenda by alienating their formerly complacent hosts. But both
are equally barbarians at large, whether in ski masks and keffiyas
or perfectly tailored Armani suits. In the long run the stealth
jihadists are infinitely more effective. The Islamic politico-cultural
incursion currently in place is working, owing not just to the
wiliness and patience of the Muslim infiltrators but to the
pathological extent of Western compliance.
There
are no doubt many reasons for such complicity: politicians and
academics have been bought off — vendus, as the
French say; far too many of us are constitutively feeble-minded
or proudly ignorant; others adhere to the liberal sedative that
all cultures are equally worthy (except, perhaps, for our own);
still others naturally gravitate to the strong horse; and the
intellectual elite is committed to the belief that we are morally
compelled to expiate a colonial guilt, as if the flagrant and
unremittingly vicious colonial history of Islam never existed.
Moreover, the pervasive sense of spiritual emptiness which vitiates
the communal life of the West demands to be filled. For a people,
no less than nature, abhors a vacuum. If Freud was right in
proposing that every individual seeks his own path to the grave,
the same is surely true of civilizations. Every civilization
seeks its own way to die, and Islam is the form in which we
administer the coup de grâce to ourselves —
what James Burnham called, in his book of that title, the “suicide
of the West.”
Reflecting
on the Cold War engagement with Communism, Burnham believed
that only a policy of anti-totalitarian pushback would lead
to victory. It is no different for the conflict with Islam (not
“militant” Islam, for Islam is militant by definition).
A morally disarmed liberalism, Burnham concludes, is now “the
typical verbal systematization of the process of Western contraction
and withdrawal; that liberalism motivates and justifies that
contraction, and reconciles us to it.” There are other
factors at work, of course, contributing to the decline that
Burnham identified and mourned: non-replacement birth rates,
civil fractures involving race, the therapeutic hedonism of
popular mores, the “culture wars” splitting nations
into contending ideological camps and devastating a once-sound
educational institution. But Islam completes the death of the
Western mind, beheading intelligence from the body politic and
dancing on the severed corpse.
In
the transnational EU, where borders have effectively ceased
to exist, the refugee invasion, aided by hassle-free internal
transit, is virtually unstoppable, despite the newly stringent
measures adopted by the governing apparatchiks. It
looks like midnight there. Although Europe is probably a lost
cause, it may still have a purpose, namely to serve as an object
lesson and advance warning system from which the rest of us
may yet learn and act accordingly — however implausibly,
given political, academic and media collusion with supremacist
Islam. The United States is confronting a European-like dilemma
as millions of illegal immigrants are pouring across an undefended
southern border, among whom, as an added menace, Islamic jihadists
are reportedly embedded. No less disturbing, as Judicial Watch
reveals, ISIS is operating a training camp in Mexico just eight
miles from the Texas border. Commonwealth nations like Canada
and Australia are marginally better off, but open-door immigration
policies are also beginning to wreak social and cultural havoc,
abetted by a soft-minded and blinkered officialdom mired in
political correctness and multiculti myopia. Here, the reckoning
has just been shoved into a relentlessly foreclosing future.
A telling
example of the cultural temper in my own country, Canada, is
provided by our largest-circulation newspaper the Toronto
Star, which has recommended that convicted terrorist and
killer Omar Khadr be awarded the prestigious Order of Canada;
and by Liberal Party leader Justin Trudeau, clearly lobbying
for Muslim votes, who has dismissed former CSIS Director and
National Security Adviser Richard Fadden’s warning about
Muslim radicalization as “fear mongering.” The mind
boggles. As Roger Kimball asks rhetorically, “Who can
reliably distinguish between satire and reality these days?”
The political-and-media world has become its own unintended
parody. Our liberal torch-bearers have morphed into cultural
flame-throwers.
Dispassionate
analysis of Islam and its destructive inroads into non-Islamic
countries is in no way an instance of that egregious canard
Islamophobia; quite the contrary, it betokens what American
Thinker blogger Greg Richards calls “Islamorealism,”
a means of dealing with facts, not myths, with concrete details,
not beguiling narratives. Those who claim otherwise, insisting
that Islam is a religion of peace, have consulted neither the
Koran nor the Hadiths. Nor have they familiarized themselves
with the blood-drenched history of Islam from the seventh century
onwards. Nor have they examined the off-the-charts terror statistics
of the last decade, a sign of the sacralized depravity we shrink
from bearding in its cave.
Referring
to the recent attack by Muslim gunmen at the Mohammed Art Exhibit
(“Draw the Prophet” contest) in Garland, Texas,
Richards points out “how much security is now necessary
to hold an event that would be unremarkable if it involved Christianity,
Judaism, Buddhism, Hinduism, or any other organized religion.”
Obviously, those who argue that Muslims offended by satiric
representations — or, for that matter, any representations
— of the Prophet, who go on murder sprees to avenge the
honor of their faith, must somehow be understood and coddled
are living in a state of abject cowardice and cognitive dissonance.
Christians and Jews who may feel similarly offended do not routinely
set off bombs and fire AK-47s. As a letter writer to the National
Post reminds us, Jews who felt offended by the Iranian
newspaper Hamshahri’s sponsoring of the annual
Holocaust cartoon competition “did not board a plane and
shoot up the offices of Hamshahri” — or,
put more reasonably, did not shoot up Iranian embassies and
community organizations.
One
thing is undeniable. Media outlets and establishment figures
that blame the targets of Muslim violence, whether these are
exercising their First Amendment rights or merely going about
their daily business, are soft in the head, if they are not
wholly catatonic. They pose as great a threat to our way of
life, our norms and traditions, and our common domestic assumptions
as do both the extremists and the furtive jihadists. These enablers
refuse to see that Ishmael is now invading the tents of Abraham
with a vengeance; indeed, they are welcoming the marauders not
only with “open minds and open hearts,” but with
open arms.
Are
we then to accept that refusing to publish books or cartoons
in a free society out of fear or coercion is normal, that being
forced to live or travel with an entourage of bodyguards is
perfectly tolerable in a liberal culture, that being threatened
with violence or legal action by the communicants of a particular
faith for speaking our minds is standard practice and that we
should properly hold our tongues? Or should we put our enemies
on notice that such a state of affairs in a free and democratic
society will be resisted with every means at our disposal? That
such questions even need to be posed shows how much we have
already conceded, how far down the road of groveling surrender
we have gone.
The
psychology behind the perfidy and timorousness of our journalists,
opinion makers, talking heads, political leaders and intellectual
clerisy is not mysterious. Frightened people tend to cover for
their failings by affecting an ‘enlightened’ affinity
with their tormenters, whether by joining them or, as in the
current situation, justifying them — the Stockholm Syndrome
comes in various shades. (Aside from those, be it said, who
have been lucratively suborned.) Analogously, stupid people
pretend to a wisdom ineffably beyond the ordinary and an erudition
beyond the informed — like Joe Biden instructing Ayaan
Hirsi Ali on the true nature of Islam.
“The
world is everything that is the case,” said the philosopher
Ludwig Wittgenstein with disarming simplicity in the Tractatus
Logico-Philosophicus. The unwillingness to recognize, let
alone absorb, what is happening in the world will often lead
the morally and intellectually compromised to create a parallel
world ‘which is manifestly not the case’ in order
to spare themselves the hard necessity of admitting the inadmissible,
that is, of acknowledging both an impinging reality and their
quailing deficiency before it. And they will almost invariably
disguise their pusillanimity as human sensitivity and ethical
duty.
Mercy
and commiseration for strangers, which Matthew Fisher and his
counterparts feel in spades, are noble sentiments. But they
should not trump the instinct for survival or the empathy one
extends to one’s neighbors and fellow citizens whose lives
are irremediably changed for the worse by an orgy of extraneous
charity. In such cases, resolute action to avert an indigenous
catastrophe is an expression of moral courage. But there is
little that will curb or retard the present debacle except for
a profound and long overdue re-thinking on the part of our leaders,
a willingness to face up to the reality of approaching cultural
destitution, the re-instatement of rigorous border protocols,
and the unabashed installation of prudent immigration procedures.
As we have seen, European politicians are belatedly contemplating
military intervention before the entirely predictable results
of their accommodationist policies alter the face of Europe
forever. Although I suspect they may soon renege on their commitment.
And why not? All that may be possible at this advanced stage
is a botox injection.
The
fact remains. It is time for the non-European West to act decisively
before it arrives at so disastrous a historical juncture as
have our European compatriots. The Belgian imam is right. The
hour is later than we think.