Allowing everything but
the veil
The Netherlands,
famously tolerant of prostitution and drug use, wants to outlaw face veils in
public places.
SAME-SEX
MARRIAGE, euthanasia, drug use, prostitution — in the Netherlands
those are perfectly fine. But the one thing the Dutch apparently will not
tolerate is what they perceive to be intolerance. In defense of their cherished
tradition of gedogen — which loosely
translates as "to live and let live" — the Dutch are ready to force
the assimilation of conservative Muslim immigrants, who are deemed intolerant
of fabled Dutch tolerance and must therefore no longer be tolerated. Got that?
Five days before a national election, the Netherlands' center-right
government announced that it would introduce legislation to ban the wearing of burkas, veils and similar garments in public places.
Should it pass, the most famously accepting country in Europe
would have the most restrictive anti-Muslim laws on the Continent.
This is a spectacularly bad case of overreaching, even if you believe — as we
do — that it's unfortunate that some women are forced by their culture to cloak
themselves in anonymity before going out in public. Also, there are some Muslim
women who feel exposed without covering up.
If anything, the proposed law, which is being justified on security grounds,
could backfire by encouraging more immigrants to reach for their veils. And it
risks further victimizing women by forcing them to stay indoors. A tiny minority of the roughly 1 million Muslims in the Netherlands
are conservative enough to be affected by the proposed ban, but the
message to all of them is loud and clear. And menacing.
The ban would undermine the very culture — Dutch culture — it seeks to protect.
In the past, the Dutch may have been too indulgent of immigrant communities'
desires to remain culturally separate. Because of its permissiveness, Holland has allowed a
community that promulgates extremist strains of Islam to flourish.
Part of Dutch identity, since the Netherlands
welcomed Jews fleeing the Spanish Inquisition, not to mention our own Pilgrim
ancestors fleeing England,
has been tolerance. By outlawing a religious and cultural practice they fear,
the Dutch would be sacrificing some of their own identity.
(Extracted from the Editorial, Los
Angeles Times, November 14, 2006)