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BOOK REVIEW


'Reflections on the Revolution in Europe' by Christopher Caldwell


In Europe, the author argues, the clash between Western civilization and the 
Muslim world has already been lost -- in the latter's favor.


By Tim Rutten

August 19, 2009

When an author with Christopher Caldwell's impeccable conservative credentials 
glosses Edmund Burke in his book's title, it's a safe bet that he's engaged a 
question whose implications he believes are absolutely fundamental.

Burke's great masterpiece of political criticism -- "Reflections on the 
Revolution in France" -- is, after all, both the foundational text of 
contemporary conservatism and a continuing inspiration to classical liberals. 
Caldwell's closely argued thesis in "Reflections on the Revolution in Europe: 
Immigration, Islam, and the West" is that the massive migration of Muslim 
immigrants into Western Europe now represents as much of a consequential break 
with Europe's cultural traditions as the utopian rationalism of revolutionary 
France did for Burke.

Wherever a reader may fall on the political spectrum, those familiar with 
Caldwell's work as a senior editor for the Weekly Standard and, particularly, 
as a columnist for the Financial Times, know him as an opinionated but 
fair-minded writer of impressive range and bracing clarity. "Reflections on the 
Revolution in Europe" does not disappoint, though many may find its essentially 
despairing conclusion debatable, if sobering.

Those familiar with Western Europe's current social tensions won't find much 
new information here, but the author's synthesis and analysis are hard-eyed and 
bracing. A relatively weak, self-doubting Europe, he argues, has allowed mass 
immigration from a fundamentally alien, basically antagonistic culture on such 
a scale that the continent's future is no longer its to decide. Caldwell's 
Cassandra is the brilliant anti-immigrant Tory parliamentarian Enoch Powell, 
who sacrificed a promising career to this issue. In fact, this book can be read 
as an extended apologia for Powell's views, which became more extreme over time.

Unsurprisingly, therefore, Caldwell accepts Samuel P. Huntington's concept of 
the "clash of civilizations" and puts Western Europe on what the Harvard 
scholar characterized as Islam's perpetually "bloody borders." Caldwell's 
assessment of what's at stake can also be adduced from his approving citation 
of philosopher Jürgen Habermas, an atheist, who after a dialogue with 
then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict XVI) declared: "Christianity, 
and nothing else, is the ultimate foundation of liberty, conscience, human 
rights and democracy. . . . To this day, we have no other options. We continue 
to nourish ourselves from this source. Everything else is postmodern chatter."

For his part, Caldwell does a particularly deft job of sorting through the ways 
that fumbling accommodation of Europe's assertive new Muslim minorities has 
accelerated the transmutation of an intellectually fashionable anti-Zionism 
into a virulent new form of anti-Semitism that, according to French philosopher 
Alain Finkielkraut, "will be for the 21st century what communism was for the 
20th century: a source of violence."

Though he's at pains to point out that most Americans oppose continued 
large-scale immigration into this country, Caldwell also argues that the issues 
raised by the mass movement of Muslims into Europe are nothing like those 
connected to mostly Latino migration into the United States. Latinos, he 
writes, simply speak another European language and bring with them a culture 
"that is like the American working-class white culture of 40 years ago. It is 
perfectly intelligible to any American who has ever had a conversation about 
the past with their parents. . . . [I]t requires no fundamental reform of 
American cultural practices or institutions. On balance, it may strengthen 
them."

The U.S. experience

On the other hand, he argues, even America's past experience with immigration 
has been more dislocating: "[T]he arrival of the Irish in Boston destroyed the 
Protestant culture of one of the most important cities in the history of 
Protestantism. The destruction occurred not only because the Irish arrived but 
also because New England Yankees chose not to live in an Irish-run city that 
was increasingly violent and corrupt." Caldwell cites historian Oscar Handlin's 
conclusion that "only half the descendants of the Bostonians of 1820 still 
lived in the city 30 years later." Caldwell is fond of that sort of epic -- and 
iconoclastic -- generalization. The problem is that history -- like God -- is 
in the details, and their accumulation seems to undercut the author's 
intention. One can bemoan the passing of Massachusetts' Protestant culture, but 
for all their turbulence, it wasn't New England's Irish immigrants who executed 
"witches," nor did the Puritan stock surrender without a fight and simply slink 
away. Boston was a center of violent mid-19th century nativism -- the place 
where "no Irish need apply" ubiquitously accompanied announcements of vacant 
situations.

More to the point, despite the fact that Boston's eligible voters of Irish 
descent increased by 197% over the period Caldwell describes, the city didn't 
elect its first Irish Catholic mayor, Hugh O'Brien, until 1885 -- a quarter of 
a century later. O'Brien was a pillar of the city's business establishment, 
enjoyed the support of Catholic and Protestant constituents and would serve 
four terms over a city government renowned for honesty in an era of endemic 
civic corruption.

While these may seem like quibbles beside the larger, urgently contemporary 
points Caldwell makes, the fact is that the past is complicated but knowable -- 
while the future is complex and unforeseeable as often as it's predictable.

Moreover, while authors are entitled to their arguments, it's slightly 
disappointing that a commentator of Caldwell's breadth and fair-mindedness 
neglects one of the inconsistencies in the "clash of civilizations" argument to 
which he subscribes. Caldwell is rightly hard on what he calls "the mediocrity 
of Muslim societies worldwide," the violent malice of contemporary political 
Islam and the dissembling of its covert apologists like the dubious Tariq 
Ramadan. The fact remains, however, that as deadly as the Madrid and London 
bombings in 2004 and 2005 were, Europe's worst post-World War II violence was 
visited on the European Muslims of Bosnia by the Orthodox European Christians 
of Serbia. Similarly, the body counts involved in the London bus and Madrid 
rail outrages pale beside those accumulated by the utterly indigenous, deeply 
traditional European fanatics of the IRA or the Basque ETA. Somehow, that all 
needs to be taken into account by a writer of Caldwell's breadth and 
seriousness.

Unspoken authority

As a good Burkean, Caldwell believes in what the great man called "prejudices," 
which is to say the unspoken authority of tradition, habit, family and shared 
cultural predilections. In that sense, he believes the clash of civilizations 
already has been lost in Europe. He also believes that its native peoples must 
now choose between what Powell called "the tragedy" of American-style cultural 
pluralism or a kind of quasi-Ottoman order in which religious communities 
essentially are self-governing within national borders.

History, though, has a way of confounding both Western historical determinism 
and its not-so-distant intellectual cousin, the resignation of Islamic fatalism.

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