http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009\03\13\story_13-3-2009_pg3_3

COMMENT: The challenge of pluralism -Farish A Noor



 A celebration of pluralism does not necessarily mean the tacit acceptance of 
the injustices that accompany such differences. If anything, one can only claim 
to truly support pluralism if one looks at it through a critical eye

The stereotypes are familiar to most of us by now: Japanese men walking around 
in Western business suits while Japanese women are expected to follow behind 
them in kimonos; Muslim men enjoying themselves in Bermuda shorts and t-shirts 
while their wives and girlfriends are left with the burka to wear.

We have seen it all over the world, time and time again; and yet the message 
doesn't seem to come across loud enough. Cultural pluralism is a double-edged 
sword when women are expected to be the bearers of cultural, ethnic and racial 
identity above all else.

We live in an age of bad multiculturalism that has gone off the rails. One does 
not and should not use this as a stick to beat multiculturalism and 
deconstruction with, but the fact remains that for too long, the appeal of 
pluralism has been mostly cosmetic. The age of the Benetton ad means that we 
value cultural difference when it is laid out on display before us as a tableau 
of difference and diversity. But we forget that cultural differences are not 
merely contingent or accidental, and that underlying these differences are very 
real power differentials as well.

It is for this reason that we should not fall into the trap of cultural 
relativism too fast or too easily. At the recent regional conference on 
Advancing Gender Equality and Women's Rights in Muslim Societies, organised by 
the International Centre for Islam and Pluralism in Jakarta, representatives 
from all over the Muslim world re-stated the vital and sometimes neglected fact 
that, from an Islamic point of view, men and women are equal in terms of their 
ontological origins and eschatologically equal in their final destiny and 
responsibilities. 

Yet how often have we been told that men and women are not really equal in 
Islam due to physical differences? And how many times have we been told that 
such differences - instituted in structures of power - are tradition-bound and 
culturally-specific to Muslims?

Here is where the challenge for the Muslim world today lies. Faced with the 
unprecedented and often traumatic effects of globalisation, Muslim communities 
today - like many other communities in the developing world - have turned to 
tradition and cultural particularism as the last means of safeguarding their 
fragile and contested identities. Fearful of being overwhelmed by the tide of 
mass consumerist culture and drowned by the equalising tide of homogeneous 
consumerism, they cling to cultural difference as the last bastion of their 
identities.

But this steadfast refusal to accept that cultural identities are also 
manufactured, historical and thus contingent has become the suffocating 
double-bind that has stunted the growth and evolution of Muslims. Worse still, 
cultural pluralism has become the convenient excuse for all kinds of casual 
abuse of women and their rights, ranging from dowry killings to the mutilation 
of women with acid. Apparently for the conservatives among us, the denial of 
equal rights to women is and can be seen as a means of 'protecting' their 
identity and, by extension, the identity of Islam.

This paradox opens up a Pandora's box of unanswered questions: why is it that 
whenever pluralism is called for in the defence of identity, it is the women 
who have to take up the role of being the custodians and depositories of 
tradition; why is it that men are allowed to enter the cosmopolitan space of 
public engagement while women have to be relegated to the traditional roles 
that define them; why is it that we fail to recognise that Muslim culture and 
identity have evolved and adapted over the past 1400 years and that being 
Muslim is not something that can be so easily essentialised?

Related to this are the manifold handicaps that affect non-Muslim commentators 
as well. As soon as cultural pluralism and the protection of cultural identity 
became the card that was used to defend misogynistic and patriarchal practices 
among Muslims (and other developing communities), Western liberals by and large 
found themselves paralysed and unable to comment any further, their tongues 
stilled by the cry of political correctness. Thus practices like honour 
killings could no longer be condemned, for they were seen as 'traditional 
cultural practices' among Muslims - who were then relegated to the register of 
the strange and exotic.

How odd that the Western liberal conscience was unable to respond to these 
atrocities in the name of political correctness, for no liberal worth his or 
her salt would have tolerated such abuses done in the name of tradition if the 
victim was a Western woman! (And remember, they used to burn witches in Europe 
too, and they were mostly women.)

So while we all celebrate the wonderfully diverse and colourful plural world we 
live in today, let us not fall too much for the special effects: cultural 
diversity and pluralism are sociological realities but they are also backed up 
by very real power differentials that can spell negative consequences for women 
and minorities in particular.

A celebration of pluralism does not necessarily mean the tacit acceptance of 
the injustices that accompany such differences. If anything, one can only claim 
to truly support pluralism if one looks at it through a critical eye, and 
emphasises the universal equality that binds us all.

Dr Farish A Noor is a Senior Fellow at the S Rajaratnam School of International 
Studies, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore; and one of the founders 
of the www.othermalaysia.org research site


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