Kids here in the suburban Copenhagen area are pragmatic about
immigrants. They do not categorize them by faith, nationality or
skin color but by size. There are the "small immigrants" and the
"big immigrants." Many find the "big immigrants" threatening,
especially when they travel in groups of young men in the
evening.
My 18-year-old niece, though, would never dream of letting any of
them intimidate her, having grown up in a town with a sizable
Muslim population most of her life. Even the biggest and toughest
of the "big immigrants" will back down, she believes. "I just tell
them to 'shut up.' I really can't put up with having to be afraid
in my own town," she says. "I just won't accept it." She also
allows though, that immigrants can also be "good guys." The Somali
owners of a pizza shop were wonderfully helpful during her late
grandmother's illness, and one of her best friends is from
Somalia.
Welcome to the complicated terrain of the Danish immigration
debate, where religion and nationalism - Danishness - are
increasingly intense issues. There is some irony in this, for Danes
are notoriously uncomfortable with the articulation of big ideas,
thoughts or emotions.
Denmark is home to 5.4 million people, of which 5 percent are of
Muslim extraction. This number is fairly standard in much of
Western Europe these days, with France having the highest
percentage (9 percent) and Italy the lowest (under 2 percent). The
Danish immigrant population is the result, as is the case in so
much of Europe, of generous guest-worker and family unification
policies that have only in recent years been sharply curtailed. In
Denmark during the 1970s, guest workers arrived from Turkey,
Pakistan, Morocco and the former Yugoslavia. In the 1980s, they
came as refugees from Iran, Iraq, Somalia and Bosnia.
The rest of the world will know Denmark as the country of the
Mohammed cartoons, which caused upheavals throughout the Muslim
world last year, and provoked the Danish flag to be burned by angry
crowds throughout the Middle East. In Denmark, support for the
decision to stand up for the principle of press freedom was widely
popular, but Denmark paid a price in relations with the Arab
countries.
Like elsewhere in Europe, the political engagement of immigrants
has been slow to take hold. There are currently just three elected
Muslim members of parliament. The highly controversial case of Asma
Abdel Hamid - an immigrant of Palestinian extraction and an
aspiring member of parliament - offers interesting insight. Judging
by photos of her benignly smiling face, wrapped in a bright blue
headscarf, Miss Abdel-Hamid does not look like someone who would be
political poison, but in the increasingly fraught atmosphere of
Danish immigrant politics it is.
A member of the far-left Unity List party, her espousal of
fundamentalist Muslim views and doctrines - like the adoption of
Shariah law - have driven voters from the party in great numbers.
At the May general assembly of the party, she was placed seventh on
the electoral roll, something the party now deeply regrets and
wants to reverse.
According to several recent polls, as a consequence of her
candidacy, the small Marxist party has now declined in popular
support to less than 2 percent, below the threshold for
parliamentary participation were elections to be held today. As the
Danish left has traditionally courted the immigrant vote, the big
loser in this context could be the Social Democrats, who in order
to challenge the sitting conservative government would have to rely
on a coalition of minor parties on the left.
The party officialdom and other Muslim immigrants, however, have
started fighting back against the threat of spreading
fundamentalism. The errant candidate has been gagged by her own
party, which does not allow direct contact between her and the
media. And party leaders have called for a declaration of atheism
on the party platform. "Especially we refugees and immigrants in
the Unity List, do not understand her," Iranian refugee Bizhan
Alankesh told the daily Berlingske Tidende. "We fled the Islamists.
We cannot prove that she is a fundamentalist, but we are very far
from her... I cannot deny the fact that there is a great deal of
desperation in the party over Abdel-Hamid's presence."
There is some hope for the future in the kind of debate that is
uneasily emerging in the Danish media, which leads to a
differentiated view of Muslim immigrants and their aspirations.
Were Europe's moderate Muslims to start finding their own voice,
they might turn a corner on the road to real integration.
Helle Dale is director of the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies at the Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in the Washington Times