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Denmark and Jyllands-Posten: The background to a provocation
By Peter Schwarz
10 February 2006
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The basic lie in the controversy over the caricatures of the
Prophet Muhammad published by Danish and European newspapers is
the claim that the conflict is between free speech and religious
censorship, or between Western enlightenment and Islamic bigotry.
The taz newspaper, which has close links to the German
Greens, declared the conflict was about reducing the influence
of all religions, including Christianity, to a tolerable
measure. In Spiegel.online, Henryk M. Broder condemned
the halfhearted apology made by the publishers of the Danish daily
Jyllands-Posten, which unleashed the caricature controversy,
as an example of how democratic public opinion capitulates
to a totalitarian standpoint.
An examination of the prevailing political conditions in Denmark
reveals how bogus such arguments are. One would be hard pressed
to find another European country where political changes over
the past few years have found such a clearand repellentexpression.
In a country renowned for its tolerance and openness, the social
crisis and the betrayals carried out by the old working class
organizations have opened the way for the emergence of political
forces which systematically encourage xenophobia and racism. The
newspaper Jyllands-Posten has played a prominent role in
this process.
Last autumn Jyllands-Posten assigned 40 prominent Danish
caricaturists to draw the Prophet Muhammad. Twelve responded and
the results were published on September 30. The project was deliberately
designed to provoke.
According to the cultural editor of the newspaper, Flemming
Rose, it was aimed at testing the limits of self-censorship
in Danish public opinion when it comes to Islam and Muslims.
He added: In a secular society, Muslims have to live with
the fact of being ridiculed, scoffed at and made to look ridiculous.
When the anticipated reaction by the Muslim community failed
to arise, the newspaper continued its campaign, determined to
create a full-scale scandal. After a week had gone by without
protest, journalists turned on Danish Islamic religious leaders
who were well known for their fundamentalist views and demanded:
Why dont you protest? Eventually, the latter
reacted and alerted their co-thinkers in the Middle East.
At this point the head of the Danish government, Andres Fogh
Rasmussen, and the xenophobic Danish Peoples Party, which
is part of the ruling coalition, swung into action. Fogh Rasmussen
demonstratively turned down appeals by concerned Arab ambassadors
for talks to clarify the issue. Even after 22 former Danish ambassadors
appealed to the prime minister to hold discussions with the representatives
of Islamic states, Rasmussen maintained his stance, arguing that
freedom of the press could not be a topic for diplomatic
discussion.
The chairperson of the Danish Peoples Party, Pia Kjaersgaard,
insulted Danish Muslims who complained about the caricatures,
publicly denouncing them as national traitors because they supposedly
placed their religious beliefs above free speech.
From the start, the campaign had nothing to do with free
speech and everything to do with the political agenda of
the Fogh Rasmussen government, comprising of a coalition of right-wing
neo-liberals and conservatives, together with the Danish Peoples
Party.
The latter rose to prominence in the 1990s when all of the
countrys bourgeois partiesincluding the then-governing
Social Democratsresponded to a mounting social crisis with
xenophobic campaigns. The Peoples Party declared at the
time that Islam was a cancerous ulcer and terrorist
movement. Kjaersgaard, notorious for her racist outbursts,
declared that the Islamic world could not be regarded as civilized.
There is only one civilization, and that is ours,
she said.
Fogh Rasmussen, at that time the chairman of the right-wing
Venstre party, adopted much of the racist demagogy of the Peoples
Party. In the election campaign of 2001he demanded, among other
things, that criminal foreigners be thrown out of
the country within 48 hours.
His campaign utilized an election poster featuring pictures
of Muslim criminals to suggest that all Muslims were violent.
Venstre won the election and, together with the traditional conservative
party, formed a minority government, which was supported by the
extremist Peoples Party.
Danish politics lurched far to the right. The countrys
immigration laws were drastically tightened, while spending for
development aid was cut back. In the Iraq war, which was opposed
by the majority of the Danish population, Fogh Rasmussen lined
up behind the Bush administration and sent a contingent of Danish
troops to help occupy the country.
The campaign unleashed by Jyllands-Posten is a continuation
and intensification of this reactionary trajectory, aimed at bolstering
the xenophobic policies of the government and strengthening its
support for US imperialism.
The caricatures themselves are patently racist. They suggest
that every Muslim is a potential terrorist. Reports and pictures
of outraged Muslims protesting the defamation of their prophet
are used to reinforce this slander.
Official politics and the media throughout Europe are increasingly
preoccupied with such agitation. Muslims are collectively held
responsible for acts carried out by terrorist groups, although
they bear no responsibility for them. In the German state of Baden-Württemberg,
Muslims seeking to stay in the country must answer a catalog of
questions probing their religious beliefs.
Television news presenters regularly malign Muslims for being
prepared to protest against the defamation of Muhammad, but not
against acts carried out by terrorist groups in the name of Islam,
suggesting that they secretly support such acts.
A campaign is emerging to depict Islam as an inferior culture
that is incompatible with Western values. There are
clear parallels here to the anti-Semitic caricatures that were
spread in the 1930s by fascist newspapers such as the Nazi Stürmer.
The depiction of Jews as sub-humans served as the ideological
preparation for the Holocaust.
Today the systematic defamation of Muslims is being used to
prepare public opinion for new wars against countries such as
Iran and Syriawars which will be even more brutal than the
Iraq war, and could well involve the use of nuclear weapons.
It is no coincidence that it was the Jyllands-Posten that
took up this initiative. The newspaper is notorious for its declarations
of support for the Nazis in the 1930s, and has played a key role
in Denmarks recent shift to the right.
With editorial offices in the rural area of Arhus, Jyllands-Posten
remained a relatively insignificant provincial newspaper until
the beginning of the 1980s. At that time it began an aggressive
policy of expansion. It bought up smaller regional and local newspapers
and launched a price war with the two established newspapers in
the Danish capitalBerlingske Tidende and Politikenand
rapidly built up its circulation to 170,000, becoming the biggest
circulation newspaper in the country.
In the 1990s the decidedly conservative paper increasingly
developed into a mouthpiece for openly xenophobic, right-wing
forces. Nearly a quarter of the editorial board was dismissed,
and the quality of the paper sank as its aggressiveness rose.
Shortly before the publication of the Muhammad cartoons, Jyllands-Posten
ran a headline reading, Islam is the Most Belligerent.
The newspaper ran an exposé about an alleged Muslim death-list
of Jewish namesuntil it emerged that the whole thing was
a fabrication.
One year ago the editor-in-chief resigned because the newspaper
carried a report, in the midst of an election campaign, alleging
the systematic abuse of welfare rights by asylum-seekers. The
sensational charges were published against his will.
The notorious right-wing sympathies of Jyllands-Posten
are no secret. The Süddeutsche Zeitung describes it
as a newspaper with an almost missionary zeal, boasting
that it has been successful in breaking the ideological and political
grip of left-wing liberals over Danish society. According
to the Süddeutsche Zeitung, it would be an inadmissible
simplification to equate Jyllands-Posten with the
Peoples Party, but they are certainly fellow combatants
in the broader sense.
The FrankfurtRundshau writes: Connoisseurs of
Danish media will note with no little irony that it is precisely
Jyllands-Posten which is now considered to be a beacon
for free speech, i.e., the most right-wing of the Danish newspapers,
which normally thrashes anyone who dares to advance a different
point of view.
See Also:
Death toll mounts in worldwide protests
against anti-Muslim cartoons
[8 February 2006]
European media publish anti-Muslim cartoons:
An ugly and calculated provocation
[4 February 2006]
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