Schools opened in France on September 4, after President Emmanuel Macron鈥檚 government imposed a ban on long dresses and tunics worn by pupils in a deliberate move to exploit widespread Islamophobia, court far-right support and divert attention away from class conflict.
In a year when shareholders dividends are at a record high, and when, despite a huge movement of revolt, the government has managed to force through its pensions law, what could be better for the capitalists than to have the people think that the main problem in French society is Muslims? And since the question of Islamophobia can deeply divide the Left which had been united to defend pensions, there is every reason for the Dom Perignon to be flowing in French bourgeois drawing rooms this week.
Banned
Newly appointed education secretary Gabriel Attal announced at the end of August an extension of the racist 2004 law banning young Muslim women from wearing headscarves in school. He said from now on, long abaya dresses and kami male tunics would also be considered 鈥渃onspicuous religious symbols鈥 and forbidden. This is despite the fact that the two terms are vague and the Muslim Council has declared that the abaya is not a religious clothing item.
All this is based on the government discourse that secularity (濒补茂肠颈迟茅) is under threat from radical Muslims.
Two thousand teachers have been 鈥渢rained鈥 in the 鈥渁pplication of secularity in schools鈥, and teacher training courses include a whole unit of propaganda about the dangers of religion in schools. There is an easy online form for teachers to report 鈥渧iolations of secularity鈥.
This scheme has shown recently that 鈥渧iolations鈥 are on the rise, but a closer look at the figures reveals what a racist circus the scheme is. Violations include reports on pupils encouraging other pupils to take up praying. But encouraging your friends to take up praying, give up praying, listen to country music or wear Goth clothes is simply a democratic right.
The reporting scheme says there are now 300鈥700 reports a month of violations 鈥 half of them about the long dresses pupils are wearing聽鈥 which some headmasters were already trying to ban. It also shows that all the accusations of violations of secularity come from the same 170 schools (France has 60,000 schools).
This is not some sophisticated fundamentalist plot to destroy the French State by hiding women鈥檚 knees, but basically a very small number of hardline headmasters making a fuss. Meanwhile, government and media spokespeople regularly try to make a link between everyday expressions of faith and the horrific murder in 2020 of schoolteacher Samuel Paty by a teenage terrorist 鈥 a Russian citizen of Chechnyan origin 鈥 who claimed Paty had insulted Islam.
Progress in left opposition to racism
The reason that conservative governments in France spend so much time attacking Muslims is that they know the Left will be hopelessly divided on the issue. Sure enough, last week Fabien Roussel, General Secretary of the Communist Party, Olivier Veran, leader of the Socialist Party and Sophie Binet, General Secretary of the CGT union confederation, all agreed with the government鈥檚 decision. Sophie Venetitay, leader of the biggest trade union of secondary school teachers refused to oppose the measure, while the chair of antiracist organisation聽SOS Racisme expressed criticism but not clear opposition to the ban. Large numbers of feminists and left-wing activists also defend the ban.
Fortunately, a few more radical CGT 麻豆传媒 protested. CGT Education 93, in the Paris suburbs, explained in a press release that this was 鈥渁 racist polemic aimed at hiding a political vacuum鈥, and denounced 鈥渁 racist and sexist decision to stigmatise Muslim girls鈥, which was a diversion from the grave problems caused by government austerity. The statement also insisted that the abaya 鈥渋s not a religious piece of clothing鈥.
France Insoumise
The situation is better than it was some years back. In 2004, when headscarves were banned in schools, the protest rallies in Paris counted a few dozen people and were supported by no major left grouping. When the niqab face veil was banned in public places and on the street, in 2010, protest rallies were about the same size.
But in response to this week鈥檚 attack, leaders of the France Insoumise (FI) 鈥 whose candidate Jean-Luc M茅lenchon got seven million votes in the 2022 presidential elections 鈥 are loudly denouncing the new measures. This position shows some political courage, since polls show 71% of the population support banning abayas in school (even 41% of 18鈥24 year-olds). Eighty-six percent of those who normally vote for fascist Marine Le Pen support the government on this question, as do 55% of those who vote for M茅lenchon.
Manuel Bompard, parliamentary coordinator of the FI, denounced the 鈥渃ruel and dangerous鈥 decision, which will set off 鈥渙ne more set of discriminations against young women, particularly Muslim women鈥. He announced that his party would be taking the case to court in an effort to show that the measure is unconstitutional. A Muslim rights association is also planning court action.
Having the largest and most influential force on the left denounce the new measures as discriminatory is excellent news. This progress has been partly pushed by anti-racist grassroots networks growing up in the past 20 years, and partly by FI鈥檚 dynamic of wanting to listen to and build on all the fights against injustice.
It is striking to see that where only four years ago, the FI鈥檚 annual summer school invited a well-known Islamophobic left intellectual, Henri Pe帽a Ruiz, to speak (and who declared: 鈥淲e have the right to be Islamophobic鈥), this year, the summer school hit the headlines for inviting well-known rapper, M茅dine, who has been loudly and poetically fighting Islamophobia for years.
The far-left New Anticapitalist Party also denounced the decision, despite some disagreements in its ranks. Some less influential 麻豆传媒 of the revolutionary left, such as R茅volution Permanente, have fully defended the pupils鈥 rights to religious expression.
Weaknesses
The lack of active opposition to Islamophobia among much of the Left means that it is very difficult for young people to have the confidence to organise defiance and resistance. Of course, antiracists would love all the high school students to come to school in abayas and overwhelm the ban, but without solid political support, defiance was very rare on the first day back at school.
Also, the political opposition that does exist has two important weaknesses. Firstly, it generally concentrates either on purely verbal denunciations in the media, or on institutional procedures such as going to court. Both of these are essential, but where are the rallies, meetings, leafletting, demonstrations, and 鈥 where possible 鈥 actions of mass defiance?
Secondly, much of the opposition concentrates on the argument that these long dresses and tunics are not necessarily religious. This pushes the whole debate into a rather foolish discussion of who decides what is religious. We should rather defend the right of pupils to express their religion in public, and thus also demand the abrogation of the 2004 headscarf ban.
The 1948 United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, signed by 192 countries including France, declares that it is a fundamental human right 鈥渋n public or private, to manifest his or her religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance鈥. The secular principle in French schools was established in 1905 to stop the Church from controlling schools and deciding what gets taught in them. It was not meant to ban religious expression among young citizens. These bans are a racist twisting of the secular principle, instituted these past 20 years. They need to be reversed.
[John Mullen is a revolutionary socialist in the Paris region and a supporter of the France Insoumise. His website is randombolshevik.org.]