Real Clear Politics   /  Real Clear Religion
 
April 4,  2011  
The Muslim World's  Coming European Revolution
By _Philip Jenkins_ (/authors/?author=Philip+Jenkins&id=17157) 

A revolution is sweeping North Africa  and the Middle East. No, not the one 
you've been hearing about in the media --  all the protests against 
dictatorship and oppression, in _Egypt_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/egypt/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
 

and Tunisia, and most violently, in _Libya_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/libya/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwauto
link) . The revolution I'm referring to certainly  affects all those 
countries, profoundly, but its effects promise to outlast any  change of 
regime, 
or even any new constitutions. Barely noticed by the West,  many Muslim 
societies are experiencing a demographic transformation that is  going to make 
them look far more European: more stable, more open to women's  rights and 
above all, more secular. That change underlies all the current  political 
upsurges. 
The magic number in this story is 2.1,  which is the fertility rate a 
society needs if its population is to remain  constant. If the typical woman 
has 
significantly more than 2.1 children during  her life, then that society's 
population will expand, and it will be a youthful  community. If the rate 
falls below 2.1, then populations will stagnate and  decline, and the average 
age will rise. 
 
According to a familiar stereotype,  Europeans have lost the long term 
vision that would make them want to have large  families, and religion no 
longer 
provides such an incentive: the closer a woman  lives to Rome, the fewer 
children she has. When commentators look at modern  Europe, they worry about 
the long term prospects for low fertility nations like _Italy_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/italy/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm
_campaign=rcwautolink) 
(1.39), Germany (1.41) and _Spain_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/spain/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
  
(1.47). Pundits are all the more concerned  when they compare these European 
rates with the notoriously high-fertility Third  World demographic profiles 
that long prevailed across the Middle East. It's not  difficult to imagine a 
scenario in which those mainly Muslim Middle Easterners  outbreed and 
overwhelm the staid Europeans, creating an Islamicized  Eurabia. 
 
But here's the problem. In just the  last thirty years or so, those very 
Middle Eastern countries that used to teem  with children and adolescents have 
gone through a startling demographic  transformation. Since the mid-1970s, 
_Algeria_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/algeria/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
 
's fertility rate has collapsed from over 7 to  1.75, Tunisia's from 6 to 
2.03, Morocco's from 6.5 to 2.21, Libya's from 7.5 to  2.96. Today, Algeria's 
rate is roughly equivalent to that of Denmark or Norway;  Tunisia's is 
comparable to _France_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/france/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
 . 
Counter-intuitively, that remark about "the  closer to Rome" also holds good on 
the 
southern, Muslim, side of the  Mediterranean. 
Just what is happening here?  Everything depends on the changing attitudes 
and expectation of the women in  these once highly-traditional societies. 
Across the region, women have become  increasingly involved in higher 
education, and have moreover moved into  full-time employment. That sea-change 
simply makes it unthinkable for women to  manage a rampaging tribe of seven or 
eight children. Often, too, images of  women's proper role in life have been 
upended by extended contacts with Europe.  Migrants to France or Italy return 
home with changed attitudes, while families  who stay at home find it hard 
to avoid the media portrayals of Western lives  they see via cable and 
satellite dish. Maybe Europe and the Middle East are  merging into one common 
Eurabia - but it's far from clear which side is doing a  better job of imposing 
its opinions on the other. Presently, it looks as if the  Maghreb is 
becoming European. 
Such a wrenching change cannot fail to  have political implications. In a 
country with a Third World fertility rate, it  is very unlikely that women 
will seek or be granted education: their designated  career path as mothers is 
starkly clear. Meanwhile, adolescents and young men  proliferate, and 
provide ample cannon fodder for armies or militias, to whom  life is cheap. 
(_Yemen_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/yemen/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
 's fertility rate is still over 
5.0, _Somalia_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/somalia/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
 's is 6.4). But then 
imagine a newer, more  European society, in which men and women are intensely 
concerned about their  nuclear families, and have invested their love and 
attention into just one or  two offspring. As citizens become more educated, 
they are not prepared to accept  the demagoguery and systematic corruption 
that has long passed for government in  those regions. They see themselves as 
responsible members of a civil society,  with aspirations that demand to be 
met: they feel they deserve full democratic  participation. Of course the 
recent turmoil began in Tunisia, with its very low  fertility rate and its 
intimate ties to France. 
Sudden demographic change also seems  to be closely linked to 
secularization, a point of potentially great  significance in the Middle East. 
Smaller 
family sizes can result from a decline  in religious ideologies, but falling 
fertility can itself drive such a decline,  as has happened in modern 
Christian Europe. When children abounded, as they did  in the 1950s, strong 
pressures kept families close to religious institutions, as  they sought common 
religious training and religious rituals. parents attended  churches to ensure 
their children received the familiar cultural heritage.  Church prestige 
rode high when priests were shepherding hundreds of local  children through 
annual confirmation classes. But as the children became scarce  from the 1970s 
onwards, so the churches emptied. At the same time, couples  highly 
concerned with their own personal and emotional fulfillment became  
increasingly 
impatient about clerical attempts to enforce morality laws. Women,  especially, 
became highly disaffected from the mainstream churches. 
If the European precedent is anything  to go by, that could well provide a 
model for religious developments in the  Maghreb over the next decade or 
two. A society so dependent on women in the  school and the workplace simply 
cannot support the kind of intransigent  orthodoxies offered by the familiar 
Islamists. Extremists may not vanish  overnight, but they will have to adapt 
substantially to present their message in  a civil society with a powerful 
taste for democratic values and gender  equality. 
Demography is not, of course, the  whole story. But it has to play a full 
part in any attempt to understand the  current political revolutions in the 
Middle East. 

 
Philip Jenkins teaches at  Penn State University.

-- 
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