Catholics Then, Muslims Now
THE short, crude anti-Muslim video that sparked a wave of violent
protests across the Middle East did not emerge from an obscure pocket of
extremism; it is the latest in a string of anti-Muslim outbursts in the
United States. In August, a mosque was burned down in Missouri and an
acid bomb was thrown at an Islamic school in Illinois. The video’s
backers are part of a movement that has used the insecurity of the
post-9/11 years to sow unfounded fears of a Muslim plot to take over the
West.
Their message has spread from the obscurity of the Internet and the far
right to the best seller lists, the mainstream media and Congress. For
the first time in decades, it has become acceptable in some circles to
declare that a specific religious minority can’t be trusted.
During the Republican primaries, Muslims were accused of harboring plans
for “stealth Shariah.” A group of five Republican House members, led by
Michele Bachmann, groundlessly accused two prominent Muslim federal
officials of loyalty to Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood. Another Republican
representative, Joe Walsh of Illinois, used a campaign rally to suggest
that Muslims in the Chicago suburbs were plotting to commit terrorist
attacks. In New York City, the police spied on thousands of Muslims for
six years without producing any evidence that could lead to an
investigation.
The view that members of a religious minority are not to be trusted —
that they are predisposed to extremism, disloyalty and violence; resist
assimilation; reproduce at alarming rates, and are theologically
compelled to impose their backward religious laws on their adopted home —
is not new. From the 19th century on, distrust, violence and,
eventually, immigration restrictions were aimed at waves of Roman
Catholic immigrants.
As late as 1950, 240,000 Americans bought copies of “American Freedom
and Catholic Power,” a New York Times best seller. Its author, Paul
Blanshard, a former diplomat and editor at The Nation, made the case
that Catholicism was an ideology of conquest, and that its traditions
constituted a form of “medieval authoritarianism that has no rightful
place in the democratic American environment.”
Catholics’ high birthrates and educational self-segregation led Mr.
Blanshard and others — including scholars, legislators and journalists —
to warn of a “Catholic plan for America.”
Many Americans shunned such views, but some liberals did not. Mr.
Blanshard’s book was endorsed by the likes of John Dewey and Bertrand
Russell, and respected scholars like Seymour Martin Lipset, Reinhold
Niebuhr and Sidney Hook debated Catholics’ supposed propensity toward
authoritarianism.
Then, as now, there seemed to be evidence supporting the charge.
Majority-Catholic countries like Spain, Italy, Portugal and Austria, had
fallen into fascism or extremism. Crime and educational failure were
rife among the children of Catholic immigrants. In the years after World
War I, Catholic radicals carried out a deadly wave of terrorist attacks
in the United States.
These days, the same dark accusations are being leveled at American
Muslims, many of whom are recent immigrants. And many otherwise
reasonable Americans have greeted Muslims with fear and suspicion — in
part because they came at a bad time. Their emigration to the United
States, like that of many Catholics before them, has coincided with
turmoil in their native countries and violence from a few extremists in
their midst.
In the years after 9/11, anti-Muslim rhetoric simmered on blogs, YouTube
videos and a stream of inflammatory best sellers. But not until Barack
Obama’s presidency was it allowed to erupt into prominent corners of
mainstream politics. Mitt Romney, to his credit, has shunned notions of
American Muslim disloyalty, but Republican political and media figures
have tolerated or even advanced these hateful myths.
In reality, Muslim immigrants are a success story. They have high levels
of educational attainment. Their birthrate is converging quickly with
that of the general population. They are likely to ultimately make up
less than 2 percent of the population, around the same share as
Episcopalians and Jews.
The violent few among them are no more a product of Muslim values than
1920s anarchists were of Catholic values. Extremism is vanishingly rare
among American Muslims, and loyalty to secular state institutions is
high. The idea of a stealth takeover by Islamic believers is a delusion.
So is the more moderate idea of a permanently alien and unassimilable
“civilization” in America’s midst.
American Muslims are falling victim to the same misunderstandings and
fallacies that threatened earlier waves of non-Protestant immigrants.
The last thing they need, as they work to become part of the mainstream,
is a political movement devoted to portraying them as a menace. In an
election year when both major parties have a Roman Catholic on the
ticket, we should take care to make sure that history does not repeat
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