7.7.06

Troubled times in Europe

My first week of vacation was spent among my In Laws who live in Belgium. My husband left Belgium to finish his medical studies in France where he became an expatriate acquiring the citizenship and moving later to Canada.
Although a visit to his parents does not leave us time to tour the country, he always likes to check what has changed in his native country since he left. Therefore, the picture of the cooked snails sold on the street in Bruxelles. This was just next to the most famous tourist attraction in Bruxelles: Mannekenpis.
During our stay and outside family conversations, two subjects of concern emerged: climate change and immigration, most specifically Muslim immigration but also Polish seasonal immigration to Belgium. One British blogger had a recent post on the subject. Reading his blog from Canada, these subjects seemed far to me. However they are palpable among ordinary people.
I have never known Belgium before under a constant sun in the summer during seven consecutive days with no rain and 30 degrees Celsius.
My husband's family used to shy away from immigration talk in my presence and I knew that this was an implicit understanding between us. I had arrived this time to Belgium with the magazine 'The Economist' bought at the airport with its cover on EuroIslam and when I left Bruxelles, their first national french newspaper was publishing on a remote page Tariq Ramadan's manifesto for a new Islam in Europe. Opinions diverged in my husband's family about Islam. His cousin and his wife expressed their fear while his brother who lives in the European quartier in Bruxelles told me that the problem with the talk about Islam in Europe was that ordinary people were hearing from the media more loudly about extremists than about moderates.

There was also a discussion between me and my mother in law on the subject of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. I explained to her my point of view (which every regular reader f this blog knows well by now) and she explained to me hers which is representative of the seventies (my mother in law is 73) point of view of European leftists on Israel and Palestine: 'We are responsible to what happened to jews during the second world war and therefore Israel has the right to exist', typical zionist propaganda. After a 30 minutes conversation we agreed mtually to stop the discussion.

My husband's family is a typical socialist family, half Flemish on his father's side and half Francophone on his mother's side with a grand'mother, now deceased, who was among the rare people who had their Belgian communist party membership during the second WW and after. She was taken prisoner to Ravensbrück by Nazis for 4 years.
I liked the grand'mother. She was quite a character and probably the person in the family to whom I was most close. She died in 1995, after having seen the fall of the Soviet Union and the total demise of the ideals she and others fought, suffered and died for.

There was another problem I noticed in Belgium, the rise of the Facist racist Flemmish party, Vlaams Block, the second largest party in Flandres. In a trip to Bruges, we were greated on the road by a large picture of a smiling blonde on her bicycle. My husband explained to me that she was a Vlaams representative. The Vlaams party people are not only racists but also nationalists and separatists. There is talk in Belgium that if the Vlaams becomes the first party, they may vote separation from the rest of the country, like the people of Montenegro.
And so Nationalism is another problem on the rise in Europe.

This picture is taken from the Bruges beffroi and shows the Cathedral of Saint Sauveur. Another Bruges church hosts what is believed to be the blood of the Christ taken by Beligan crusaders from Jerusalem. I reminded my husband that this was a time when European christianity was even more belligerant than Islam. I remember, when we met, the first thing my husband told me jokingly was that one of his ancestors, Godefroy de Bouillon, had occupied my piece of country, northern Lebanon, and built a fortress that we can still visit to this day in Tripoli. Of course, this is a far away past, but a past that Europe still rely on and a past that is hindering, in my opinion, the understanding of Islam in Europe.
I know that these problems, climate change, immigration, racism, nationalism and Islam are not only specific to Belgium but exist also in other European countries. My feeling is that these are troubled times for Europe. I am writing this while listening to BBC world and the commemoration of the London bombing. My sympathies to the victims and to all random victims of terror. These are not only troubled times for states but also for citizens and ordinary people taken in the spirale of fanatisms and cynical politics.

P.S: I apologize if I will not be able to answer the comments soon but my access to an internet connection is limited.

3 comments:

Gert said...

Sophia:

As I'm sure you know, I'm a Belgian citizen who's lived in Britain for longer than I care to remember. For someone with Belgian in-laws you show an impressive lack of understanding of the Flemish "separatist movement". To understand it better, as always, you need to understand Belgian history. As I haven't got time or energy to give you a well-deserved history lesson, I suggest you check out Wiki's "executive summary" on the subject: it's more than adequate for a beginner.

In the part below, you pick and mix and end up with a pot-pourri of nonsense, neither helped nor hindered with any knowledge of the subject:

."There was another problem I noticed in Belgium, the rise of the Facist [sic] racist Flemmish [sic] party, Vlaams Block [sic], the second largest party in Flandres [sic]. In a trip to Bruges, we were greated [sic]on the road by a large picture of a smiling blonde on her bicycle. My husband explained to me that she was a Vlaams representative. The Vlaams people are not only racists but also nationalists and separatists. There is talk in Belgium that if the Vlaams becomes the first party, they may vote separation from the rest of the country, like the people of Montenegro.
And so Nationalism is another problem on the rise in Europe."


Firstly when you say "Vlaams people are not only racists but also nationalists and separatists", did you mean "Vlaams Blok people"? If so, it deserves rectification as you make it sound like the "Flemish People are nationalists and separatists".

A majority of Flemish people, including my family and myself, have fought for decades with the separatists. In the end we made one big mistake: we gave in to their demands of "Belgian Federalism", hoping they would be happy with greater regional autonomy for Flanders and Wallony. That was our mistake: the separatist "ideal" indeed went on the backburner for some time but it never quite went away. Now their separatist rallying cry is for an independent state of Flanders, presumably the "Republiek van Vlaanderen". Once they've achieved that (in their wet dreams and over my dead body first) they'll want to tarmac over Wallony and "ethnically cleanse" it from French (as in "French speaking") influence, all for historical "grievances" that are complete non-issues in today's Belgium.

There is however something really much more important to understand here: Vlaams Blok's success has little to do with its separatist ideals. They rose to electoral success on the immigration issue, this other practically "non-issue" which holds so much of Europe in its grasp. The average Vlaams Blok voter has no intention of cutting our postcard-sized country up any further than the unnecessary and expensive exercise of "Federalisation" has already done. Vlaams Blok voters aren't all racists either, they are broadly speaking ignorant, often well-meaning idiots who see the "Muslim danger" (which has of course been sold to them by the carpet baggers of the VB) and other immigration issues as a threat to the "Flemish way of life" (whatever that is).

The Belgian separatist issue is one many Flemish Belgian Unionists, like myself, will go to war over, if needed.

Nationalism is on the rise in Europe? Yes, regrettably it is, like everywhere else in the world, including the Middle East. As often, you show lack of dept and perspective.

Anyway, I hope you enjoyed your stay in our far from perfect country.

A Belgian Socialist Republican Unionist.

Sophia said...

Gert,
I, of course, never meant that flemish people are all racists. I meant that the people at the party, notably his chief, are. I apologize for the misunderstanding.

Wolfie said...

Hi Sophia,

I spent a year living and working in Brussels (1999/2000).

Gert is absolutely right, although I think he could have been kinder in his admonition! Europe has its separatist fools almost everywhere, each with their own level of militancy, Spain and the UK are examples of some of the worst. Each of them nursing resentments of of old and a fantasy version of history. I just hope that European governments keep their nerves and maintain their reason.

Personally I am of the view that cries of racism in Europe are often over stated and one should remain slow to accuse.

Yours
Wolfie

 
Since March 29th 2006