The Daily - France, Islam and ‘Laïcité’
Episode Date: February 12, 2021“Laïcité,” or secularism, the principle that separates religion from the state in France, has long provoked heated dispute in the country. It has intensified recently, when a teacher, Samuel Pat...y, was beheaded after showing his class caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad.We look at the roots of secularism and ask whether it works in modern, multicultural France.Guest: Constant Méheut, a reporter for The New York Times in France.For an exclusive look at how the biggest stories on our show come together, subscribe to our newsletter. You can read the latest edition here.Background reading: For generations, public schools assimilated immigrant children into French society by instilling the nation’s ideals. The beheading of a teacher raised doubts about whether that model still worked.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
Transcript
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today.
In the coming days, lawmakers in France are poised to adopt controversial legislation
to combat the threat of Islamist radicals,
which the country's president has called, quote,
the enemy of the republic.
My colleague, Constant Mea, on the debate raging there about the role of government in religion.
It's Friday, February 12th.
Constant, tell me about Samuel Patti.
Samuel Patti was a history and civics teacher in a suburb north of Paris called Conflans-Saint-Honorin.
He was 47 years old. He had been teaching for more than 20 years.
And almost all of Patty's former students I talked to
told me that he was that type of teacher
who was always eager to stimulate their critical thinking,
always eager to organize debates.
Sounds like he was a good teacher.
He was a great teacher. I mean, he was
really beloved by his students. And he was always this teacher who, again, according to students I
talked to, who basically left his mark. So last October, he goes to class to give his lesson on
freedom of expression, which is a lesson he'd given years and years before.
And it's actually part of the French national curriculum. And the way he normally taught this lesson was by challenging students to engage with what could be considered offensive. And he did
that by showing two caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad, including one where prophet Muhammad is naked.
And here you need to understand something about France in general. Over the years,
the Muslim population has grown substantially. And today it's one of the biggest minorities
in Western Europe. And this was also the case for this town, Conflon-Saint-Honorin. And so taking that into consideration,
Paddy told students that if they found the cartoons offensive,
they could leave the classroom or look away.
And he considered this kind of a nice gesture.
But this gesture was actually seen by several parents as discriminatory,
as a way to single out Muslim students.
And so you have some Muslim parents starting to complain to the school director. And after a few
days of internal tensions at the school, and after everybody understood that Samuel Paty had actually
only been a bit clumsy, perhaps, when he asked students to leave their classroom.
Well, he apologized, and everything seemed to be back to normal,
you know, at least in the school.
So this felt like a kind of run-of-the-mill case
of a teacher offering a provocative lesson about freedom of speech,
and there being a small controversy in the school,
but he apologized, and everything seemed to be okay.
Exactly, but...
On the internet, one angry father complained about the teacher in videos.
This week he allowed them to say, the Muslim students raise your hand.
And he told them, here you go.
For example, he said that his daughter was asked to leave the classroom
because she was Muslim, which was not the case.
In fact, she was never in the class.
And Samuel Patti did not ask Muslim students to leave.
He offered it as an option.
And so this father starts to describe what happened in a twisted way,
saying that this teacher was acting in a hateful way.
And he caused people to pressure the school to expel the teacher.
Huh.
So the video goes viral on social media and it reaches a guy named Adulak Anzorov.
Anzorov is 18 years old. He was born in Russia. He's Chechen. He's Muslim.
He came to France when he was six years old and he was raised in the French public school system.
He was very much a product of this system.
And then last year,
he started to become radicalized on the internet.
He was adhering to a vision of Islam
that was very extremist.
And so he sees what happened in Conflon-Saint-Honorin
and he decides to go there.
And he comes to the school where Patty teaches
and he waits for him.
And soon enough, Patty leaves the school to go home
and Anzora follows him down the street.
And after a few hundred meters,
he comes after him and he stabs him and he beheads him with a big knife that's awful that's horrific and after he beheads him he takes a photo
he publishes it online on twitter and he has a message that is addressed to President Emmanuel Macron of France
and the message reads in the name of Allah the most gracious the most merciful from Abdullah
the servant of Allah to Macron the leader of the infidels I executed one of your hell dogs who dared to belittle Muhammad.
Call me his fellows before you are inflicted a harsh punishment.
So this is clearly an act of terrorism in every way.
It is in every way. And after a few minutes, he is spotted in the street by the police officers.
And they kill him.
What is the reaction in France to what happened to Samuel Patti?
People are outraged. People are mourning because it feels that this attack could
have struck at their own friends, at their own teachers. And you have to remember that, you know, this attack comes on the heels of a string of very deadly attacks that started in 2015.
Now, returning to our breaking news story, we are getting reports of a shooting at the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris. First was the January 2015 attack against the Charlie Hebdo journalists that left
about a dozen people dead. Bloodbath in Gulf Paris tonight as terror attacks exploded across
the French capital. At least six sites were hit. Tonight, one at the Stade de France. From a
concert hall. Two more attacks. To a shopping mall. Gunmen with Kalashnikovs reported.
To a restaurant.
And then you had the attack in November 2015 around the Bataclan and in and around Paris,
striking at cafes, restaurants, and that left more than 100 people dead.
An evening of national celebration turned into a scene of horror
when a truck plowed into
a crowd in southern France. And then over the next couple of years, you had an attack in Nice
with someone driving a truck over a very busy street, leaving more than 50 or so people dead.
With breaking news from France, where a few hours ago,
a gunman opened fire on a Christmas market in Strasbourg, killing at least two people.
And then a string of very specific attacks
that felt like France was constantly under this threat of terror attacks.
But meanwhile, France is grieving, and not just for the dead.
The French are also in grief because they know their country will struggle to recover from these wounds,
and they fear what will come next.
But in 2019, and in the beginning of 2020, those attacks started to stop, you know.
And so this fear started to decrease until the killing of Samuel Paty.
And so the killing not only revives old wounds of terrorism in France,
but it also points to a threat that is changing, that is becoming increasingly homegrown.
And that actually changes the issue because you're dealing with people who are self-radicalized,
who are unknown to the intelligence services, who have no clear links to terrorist groups.
And so it indirectly calls into question the way we respond to those attacks.
For years, French authorities had been pushing ahead on various anti-terrorism measures.
But now they're looking at other solutions, other options.
They want to go deeper.
They want to get to the root of the issue. It lands at a bedrock of French society, at a concept that is really deep inside our national psyche, which is called laïcité.
And what is laïcité? Am I saying it correctly? Laïcité.
Laïcité, yeah. Let's find this way.
Okay.
So, laïcité is a principle.
And if we wanted to simplify things, I would say that it's about the separation between
the state and the church. So this is something that is familiar for Americans, something that
we could actually translate by secularism. But in France, it has some sort of a bigger meaning. In France, this idea behind laïcité is that it's about
freedom from religion, you know, whereas in the U.S., it's really about freedom of religion.
Right, and freedom from the government impinging on religion.
Exactly, yeah. You know, in France, there's this idea that it's all about preventing religion from impinging into state affairs.
Okay, so that's fascinating in theory.
How does this principle of laïcité actually get applied in France?
I know that, Constant, you grew up in France, so I'm guessing you have seen it firsthand.
Yeah.
You have seen it firsthand.
Yeah.
Probably the best place to explain this concept is the school, which are considered a public space.
There is this idea in laïcité that students are not allowed to wear ostentatious religious signs in school because it is a public space.
It is a neutral space.
So when I was in middle school,
I think that was grade eight,
and there was a fellow classmate,
you know, at some point in a class,
and he was wearing this cross around his neck.
And our math teacher, if I remember well,
you know, just asked him just to hide that cross just under his t-shirt, right? Which is kind of surprising. But I mean, my classmate agreed,
and that was completely fine, actually quite natural, because again, there was this atmosphere
that laicite has to be implemented in the public space, and what else than a better public space than school?
Okay, so what is the history behind this concept? Where exactly does it come from?
You have to go back to the French Revolution, 1789. For centuries, the Catholic Church was
incredibly powerful, financially, politically, up until the late 1700s.
And that's when the French Revolution happened,
and it largely put an end to the reign of the Catholic Church in France.
And for the next century, for the 19th century,
it's pretty much a constant battle between the church and the state,
with this idea that
the Catholic church should not get too much power.
This battle is, you know, sometimes quite violent and it leads to this 1905 law, which
was really the first one that rooted into legal terms this principle principle of laïcité, making sure that religions should not interfere in state affairs,
meaning that you are allowed to practice your religion privately,
but it should not be, you know, this kind of constant presence in the public life.
And at the same time, it is expected that the state does not interfere
in religious affairs. The state is not there to support any religion, nor to repress any religion.
So the element of this concept and this 1905 law that feels most distinct, especially to
my American ears, is this freedom from religion. And you're saying that comes from this long
history of France trying to be free from the power of the Catholic Church, and therefore this concept and this law, it attempts to address
this deep suspicion of a religion's influence on the state.
Right, exactly.
And so how does this principle of la cité evolve over time?
La cité was largely untouched for most of the 20th century, and that could be because
France at the time was largely homogeneous.
century. And that could be because France at the time was largely homogeneous. But that starts to change with an influx of immigrants from Muslim countries. And that leads to the law being first
really tested in the 80s and the 90s. In 1989, you had three girls, three young girls in a
middle school who refused to take off their headscarves.
And because of that, they were expelled by their director.
Wow.
And, you know, at the time, it was kind of a small controversy, at least when it started.
But then it really sparks off a whole debate on the wearing of the veil in schools.
And there is this decision, this judgment by Francis Supreme Court a few
months later that say that wearing headscarves in schools is actually not incompatible with
the principle of laicite. Not incompatible, so it's allowed. Not incompatible, right. But the debate had taken root in the country.
And so in the following years, you have new incidents in schools that are reported, especially in the French press, of young guys who are pressuring young girls to wear a headscarf in school.
And that started to kind of worry people. And so the government responds
to that new challenge by passing a law in 2004 that bans the wearing of religious signs,
of ostentatious religious signs in schools. And I'm going to guess, based on my understanding
of your age, that when you were in school and your classmate was asked to hide his cross, that that law would have been in practice.
Exactly, right. Okay, so at this point in the history of laïcité, it feels like France is
having to make a choice, right? Do we as a country adjust the way we view this concept of the separation of church
and state to accommodate the religious practices of new arrivals, especially Muslims, or do we
force people to change their practices? Exactly. And the choice that France makes at the time is to force people to accommodate with the French model of integration.
And I just mentioned the 2004 law.
There is actually a second law that was passed in 2010.
And this time it banned the full face veil in streets, in public spaces, in basically public buildings.
With this idea that the full-face veil actually breaks with this principle of equality between women and men.
Because it is some sort of a subjugation of women, you know, to men.
So laïcité is once again codified into French law.
And if we're being candid, in a way that targets Muslim religious practices.
Yeah. I mean, again, the 2004 law, the 2010 law, it's all about banning religious signs.
But two, we need to be honest.
The real aim, you know, is targeting Muslim practices.
I have to imagine that as this is happening and these laws are accumulating,
for some Muslim people in France, this is starting to feel kind of oppressive and maybe even a bit
discriminatory. And asking them to give up a pretty big part of their identity.
It is. And this is a debate that we have had for the past two decades, basically,
trying to make sense of laïcité, whether it is something that actually helps people
to integrate into society, or whether it is something that actually helps people to integrate into society or whether
it is a tool that oppresses more and more people and especially Muslim people. It's actually a
debate about the model of integration in France, really. Do you assimilate, meaning that you need
to change your own practices so that you resemble people,
or do you integrate in a way that allows you to keep your traditions, your behaviors,
and that doesn't prompt the backlash from the rest of the society?
We'll be right back.
So, Constant, how does the murder, the horrific killing of Samuel Pate, influence this decades-long debate about laïcité.
So, President Emmanuel Macron had been working on a package of laws to deal with the growing threat of Muslim radicalism for several months.
We need to remember that it's been five years that France has been regularly the target of terrible terrorism attacks. So this attack on Samuel Paty really comes on the heels of years of terror attacks in France.
And so this attack really creates an incentive for the government to dabble down on laicite
and to use laicite as a tool to respond to this growing threat of Muslim radicalism in the country.
And so part of this package is about banning homeschooling for kids over three years old
because there's this fear that children who would be educated at home
in an atmosphere that is a sort of Islamist environment,
it would be a threat for the republic.
There is also a legislation that would curb online
hate speech, the kind of hate speech that led to the killing of Samuel Petit. And there's also a
provision that would rein in community associations, but also religious associations by
obliging them to sign declaration of allegiance to so-called values of the republic. And it would
also impose stricter controls on their fundings. So making religious groups sign a document that
says we pledge essentially our loyalty to the state. Yes, exactly. And so how are French Muslims
responding to this overall package of laws? Yeah, so you have two reactions, I would say.
On the one hand, you have several imams or leading figures of Islam in France
who support that bill, saying that they have grown aware of their responsibility
to make sure that a peaceful version of Islam is promoted in mosques.
And they're thinking that this bill will help them better control
and restrict the way Islam is taught in France.
On the other end, you also have Muslims who feel that this law unfairly targets them
and kind of conflates Islam with radical Islams.
And I think this is the thing they're really worried about, about this new atmosphere, about this new climate,
that in a way implies that religions can be, and especially Islam, the starting point for separatism and extremism.
So it sounds like in their minds, this law maligns Islam. It sees the religion itself as
nurturing radicalism, and they don't agree with that.
Right. And so for Muslim people, it kind of creates this situation where you actually have an opposition between your French citizenship that does not allow you to express, you know, your religious beliefs, or at least that asks you not to express them too much.
And your religious identity that is seen as opposed,
you know, to your French identity. Rather than combining those two identities,
this low risk's dividing them even more. Is anyone in France asking themselves whether,
instead of trying to strengthen la cité, the country should be rethinking it
and rethinking it in the opposite direction, which is to say making religious immigrants
feel welcomed and embraced for their religiousness. And is it possible that that
might better serve the goal of assimilation and integration and ultimately making France safer?
Well, it is a question that is very difficult to ask in France because ultimately that actually calls into question our very model of integration.
You know, France was based on this idea that to integrate people, you assimilate them.
Meaning that you try to have people looking quite similar, having the same culture, having the same historical references.
And I mean, all in all, kind of behaving in a homogeneous way. And Laïcité was part of that
idea. But as the society in France grows diverse, as multiculturalism is increasing in France,
well, this new reality kind of contradicts those ideas of assimilation.
And so if you try to think about a new model of laicite,
you actually have to think about a new model of laicite, you actually have to think about a new model of integration.
And the question of whether laicite could fit into this new model of integration that
accepts more diversity, I'm not sure that it would work, you know, because it basically contradicts this very idea that we want everyone to be neutral about their religious beliefs and roots.
Right. So you're saying France isn't quite ready to let go of this concept of assimilation. But I wonder if, over time, France is really going has acknowledged it himself, society is becoming more and more multicultural.
And so you cannot remain in a model that worked well in the 1960s, but that does not fit with the reality in 2021.
But so far, and this law is a perfect example of that, it is true that France is kind of clinging on this,
perhaps ideal of assimilation.
But when are people going to question, you know,
the very way they were
raised and educated and the way they integrated immigrants? It's difficult to know when this
is going to happen. Well, Constance, thank you very much.
We appreciate your time.
Thanks, Michael.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today. We humbly, humbly ask you to convict President Trump for the crime for which he is overwhelmingly guilty of.
On Thursday, the House Democrats prosecuting former President Trump concluded their case,
branding him a danger to American democracy who risks inciting new violence unless he
is convicted and barred from holding office. Because if you don't, if we pretend this didn't happen,
or worse, if we let it go unanswered,
who's to say it won't happen again?
The impeachment managers, led by Congressman Jamie Raskin,
appealed to senators from both parties to rise above partisanship
and hold Trump accountable for his role in the insurrection at the Capitol.
Senators, America, we need to exercise our common sense about what happened.
Let's not get caught up in a lot of outlandish lawyer's theories here.
Exercise your common sense
about what just took place in our country.
Trump's defense lawyers will begin making their case
for his acquittal later this morning.
And...
If you look at the projection,
I would imagine by the time we get to April,
that will be what I would call for, you know, for better wording, open season, namely virtually everybody and anybody in any category could start to get vaccinated. for COVID-19, said that most Americans could become eligible for the coronavirus vaccine
as soon as April, but that administering it could take several months.
Today's episode was produced by Aastha Chaturvedi, Rochelle Banja, and Rachel Quester.
It was edited by Lisa Chow and engineered by Chris Wood.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you on Tuesday after the holiday.