Amanda Spielman Is Undermining British Values - Could She Be Called An Extremist?
19 February 2018By Usaama al-Azami
The Ofsted chief's calls for the inquisition of children and her
indiscriminate casting of a widespread religious practice as extremist are an
example of cultural illiteracy about the UK's second-largest faith community
For some months now, one of the most senior UK officials concerned with
education and schooling has been preoccupied with the supposed plight of
Muslim girls. In November, Amanda Spielman, the chief inspector of Ofsted,
called for inspectors to question girls in primary school as young as four or
five about their wearing of the hijab.
The reason, she argued, was that the hijab 'could be interpreted as
sexualisation of young girls'. These comments led to an outcry in the Muslim
community. On Thursday, Spielman doubled down on her earlier remarks, calling
for a 'muscular liberalism' to prevent Muslims from using educational
institutions to promote 'extremist ideology'.
British values vs. extremism
In the days after her first statements in November, I was attending my own
higher education institution's annual Prevent training workshop with our
engaging regional coordinator for Prevent, Sam Slack.
During his presentation, he cited the UK government's official definition of
extremism as 'vocal or active opposition to fundamental British values,
including democracy, the rule of law, individual liberty and mutual respect
and tolerance of different faiths and beliefs'.
My hand shot up. Sam had just described this as the best definition of
extremism we have, but according to this, I argued, Amanda Spielman was very
possibly an extremist. She was undermining British values, and more
specifically the value of showing 'mutual respect and tolerance of different
faiths and beliefs'.
The little girl who is questioned for wearing the hijab is not engaged in the
undermining of British values.
Nor are her parents who are exercising their individual liberty under the rule
of law in our British democracy. Rather, it is Spielman's suspicion of their
innocent sartorial choices and her linking them to 'fundamentalist practice'
and 'extremist ideology' that exemplifies a lack of tolerance and mutual
respect towards other faiths and beliefs.
The lecture theatre burst out in laughter, as did Sam, somewhat nervously. But
I wasn't trying to be funny. I was attempting to illustrate that both the
government and Spielman were entirely wrong on the question of what
constituted extremism, and this was leading to the demonisation of members of
the Muslim community.
That demonisation being plastered across the national press in the form of yet
another negative story about Muslims only compounded this sorry state of
affairs.
The inquisition of children
Surely Islamophobia isn't a British value the government wants to promote? The
British prime minister has stated explicitly that she wants to tackle the very
real scourge of Islamophobia.
But how is it that we end up with senior public figures exemplifying an
unacceptable degree of cultural illiteracy about the UK's second-largest faith
community. Doubtless she does not intend to be Islamophobic, but her calls for
the inquisition of children, and her indiscriminate casting of a widespread
religious practice as extremist, are just that.
The above anecdote from a Prevent training session last November also
illustrates the challenges we face in understanding extremism. It is, of
course, necessary to set down legal guidelines as to what constitutes
extremist ideology. But the Muslim community needs to be part of the British
government's conversation concerning its strategy for confronting extremism in
a more meaningful way.
Such conversations must be representative, since within every community there
is a diversity of views on any set of issues. Thus, it's worth recognising
that Spielman took up the issue of school girls' hijab in response to a small
but vocal group of Muslim lobbyists who are opposed to children wearing the
veil.
They present themselves as championing 'hard-won freedoms' in a 'secular
progressive democracy' against the 'regressive practices of gender inequality"
promoted by 'religious extremists'.
Implicit demonisation of Hijab
However, such a view is far from the only perspective in the wider Muslim
community. Indeed, its implicit demonisation of the hijab is something that
would alienate large swathes of Muslim women in Britain.
Polling of the Muslim community in 2016 by the think tank, Policy Exchange,
indicates that: 'as a whole … the issue of school clothing would appear to be
one where the greater social conservatism of British Muslims becomes apparent,
in comparison with their non-Muslim neighbours'.
In a representative survey, they note that 44 percent of British Muslims
agreed that schools should be able to require the wearing of 'a hijab or niqab'
as a part of the uniform; while 32 percent disagreed.
The Muslim anti-hijab lobbyists above may at most be representative of the 32
percent, but the majority of Muslims in this country clearly do not share
their views. By contrast, the report notes that 65 percent of British society
as a whole disagreed with this proposition, with 50 percent 'strongly'
opposed.
The Muslim lobbyists, who include the government's controversial new
anti-terrorism tsar, Sara Khan, could thus be seen as attempting to undermine
the rights of a poorly understood ethnic minority community by stoking the
fears of the majority against them.
This is a classic example of what liberal democracy is supposed to prevent -
trampling the rights of minorities through the tyranny of the majority. So
much for their liberal credentials.
A better way forward
I have argued elsewhere that an important aspect of countering extremism
within Britain is promoting a meaningful sense of belonging among British
Muslims. Muslims who feel they are full members of this society make for
better citizens.
But this is undermined by the constant stream of negative news that highlights
'the Muslim problem', and the tokenistic co-opting of Muslim figures who only
serve to further the demonisation of large sections of the British Muslim
community. Rather we should be broadening our horizons and welcoming 'mutual
respect and tolerance of different faiths and beliefs'.
Amanda Spielman's unfortunate remarks do not need to be just another wedge
between the socially conservative Muslim community and an illiberal secularist
public sphere. They could be an opportunity for broader conversations with a
representative range of Muslim community members and organisations like the
Muslim Council of Britain who can help promote greater social cohesion as well
as combat extremism.
If this were to be the outcome of the uproar over such remarks, the head of
Ofsted could snatch victory from the jaws of defeat.
- Usaama al-Azami is a lecturer in Islamic studies at the Markfield Institute
of Higher Education, and PhD candidate in Near Eastern Studies at Princeton
University. His research critically examines contemporary Islamic reform and
the politics of the ulama. He completed his BA in Arabic and Islamic Studies
at Oxford University, and his MA at Princeton. He may be followed on Twitter
@usaama01.
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