France’s teachers can’t do their job for fear of upsetting Muslim students
By: Rachel Marsden
Nudity in a classic painting has triggered accusations of Islamophobia in a suburban Paris school
A teacher in suburban Paris is being accused of Islamophobia for showing her
class, for the purpose of an analytical exercise, the classic painting ‘Diana
and Actaeon’ by Giuseppe Cesari – all because the “five muses of antiquity”
depicted happened to be naked. It’s a painting, not a porno.
Although the artist, who has been dead for nearly four centuries, probably
didn’t have any intention to offend anyone with his portrayal of the nymphs when
he created the piece back in the 17th century, his work apparently now serves as
a convenient springboard for the kind of gratuitous victimhood that has become
so rampant in the current age of cancel culture, where just about the worst
thing you can be accused of is offending anyone.
By the end of the school day, parents of the handful of kids at Jacques-Cartier
Middle School in the Parisian suburb of Issou, who, according to the school
board, had reportedly turned away from the painting when it was presented in
class, were already hanging out in front of the school and demanding
explanations for what the French press says they qualified as Islamophobic. By
the next school day, the school’s teaching staff had exercised their right not
to show up to work out of fear, and the French minister of education had to
personally show up on campus in an effort to put a lid on a fiasco that risked
boiling over.
The school is a mere 34 kilometers from the middle school in
Conflans-Saint-Honorine, in front of which teacher Samuel Paty was beheaded for
showing provocative Charlie Hebdo cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed to a class
for educational and debate purposes in October 2020. The incident gave rise to a
known radical Islamist sending out viral online messages that were picked up and
acted on by a motivated 18-year old Muslim refugee who was subsequently killed
on site by police responding to the teacher’s assassination. Earlier this month,
six juveniles were criminally convicted for collaborating with the killer in
targeting Paty.
Meanwhile, at another middle school in Mantes-la-Jolie, just 9km away from
this latest art incident, teachers also briefly exercised their right of
withdrawal in early December when they found out that their names had appeared
in a parents’ chat group on WhatsApp in the wake of a media literacy lesson by
history and geography teachers on the Israel-Palestine conflict. The parents
were reportedly shocked that the teaching material used in the class had
referred to Hamas as a “terrorist group.”
Look, just because a teacher quotes a reference to Hamas as terrorists doesn’t
mean that the teacher is Islamophobic or some kind of rabid Zionist. One may not
personally agree with that particular characterization – because one man’s
terrorist is another’s freedom fighter – but that’s the actual current policy of
France and the European Union. The teachers, if they want to do their job as
objectively as possible, don’t have much wiggle room behind adhering to
establishment doctrine.
What are they supposed to do – open a debate? Everyone loves that idea until the
teacher fails to come down on the side that one favors. With so many teachers
fearfully withdrawing their services, it’s no wonder there aren’t enough of
them. Last September, about 50% of high schools and middle schools were short at
least one teacher, according to the teachers’ union. This is definitely a step
up from the school bedbug infestations that were making headlines for teacher
withdrawals earlier this year.
Much like free speech, statues, drawings, and paintings are also part of Western
culture and civilization. One of the main selling points of accepting more
immigrants, as promoted by the Western establishment, is that it’s a means of
culturally enriching Western democracies even more. Demanding that classical
cultural works be covered up, torn down, or censored because they’re offensive
to immigrant cultures flies right in the face of that argument.
Come on, folks. We’re talking about France here. One of the national symbols,
Marianne, was perhaps most famously depicted as a topless woman in Eugene
Delacroix’s legendary painting ‘Liberty Leading the People’, which depicts the
moment of popular victory over the elites during the French Revolution. Anyone
who’s offended by the natural female form really made the wrong call when
deciding that France was the country for them – from the topless sunbathing that
doesn’t even warrant a Gallic shrug, to France being the actual birthplace of
the bikini when Louis Réard’s invention made its global debut at Paris’
legendary Molitor pool in 1946.
Granted, we live in an era of heated conflict where everyone seeks to score
against ‘the other team’ by conveniently trying to define inconvenient incidents
as warranting a certain label that serves to slam their opponent’s mouth shut –
whether it’s from the fear of being accused of ‘racism’, ‘sexism’, ‘Islamophobia’,
or ‘anti-Semitism’. This does a huge disservice to the underlying causes that
they’re trying to champion by diluting it with triviality. There’s a real,
legitimate global sympathy for the thousands of civilians of Gaza currently
being killed while the world stands by and bickers over it. Using the conflict
as an excuse to infringe on people’s speech isn’t going to win over many hearts
and minds.
There are cases of real Islamophobia, which has a very clear definition of
prejudice against Muslims. Selective dislike of some aspects of the cultural
repertoire of another country doesn’t fit the bill, just like knee-jerk cries of
anti-Semitism shouldn’t be used as a means of bullying critics of Israeli
foreign policy into submission and silence. These are two sides of the same
rhetorical coin. They serve to effectively quell democratic debate – which may
be desirable when used in one’s favor, but certainly isn’t when one’s on the
receiving end of the same tactics.
It should be possible, even amid a passionate clash of ideas, to still have nice
things like paintings and art – and school teachers who don’t fear for their
lives.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN