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Rediscovery of
the World
If tolerance
is the legitimate father of Western democracy, then secularism can
be considered the contested mother of human rights. The concept of
Aufklärung is elaborated through the discourse between acquired and
religious knowledge, between human and divine law. Man achieves the
age of adulthood through a continual act of recreation whereby the
world recovers the transparency of its origins. The relationship
between human power and divine nature did not end with Jesus
Christ. Man has reclaimed his position as supreme legislator of the
natural world. The rupture between Man and his own history was the
catalyst: “(Man was) the sole actor in the modern age who had the
audacity to leave his past, his tradition – one thousand years of
Christianity – in the shadows of the Middle Ages, and to define
himself as the resurrection, the rebirth of an Antiquity forever
lost.”[i]
Reconstruction
Life has never
been an exact mirror of the history of thought. The conflict
between the Church and the modern State has taken place in such a
wide variety of contexts that it is impossible for us to offer a
simple explanation of the relationship between human authority and
that of religious institutions. The desecration of public life in
France has been the result of an open and sometimes deadly conflict,
thus helping to explain the militant and aggressive nature of French
secularism today. This conflict has provided for a French concept
of secularism that is at once legal, moral, and philosophical.
Secularism, according to this perspective, is inseparable from human
rights, liberty, and equality. In her report on human rights and
secularism, Jacqueline Costa-Lascoux describes the situation in the
following terms:
Human rights
are the foundation of secularism. Secularism is not only an
anticlerical reaction; it is also a philosophy, a positive
philosophy that rests on the pedestal of fundamental Rights. Human
rights refer principally to human dignity, to individual autonomy.
They presuppose a rational being with the capacity of choice and
involvement, an individual who exercises free will, a critical mind,
and who weighs the pros and the cons before taking a decision and
who is willing to compare his convictions and ideas to those of
others.[ii]
The concept of
French secularism is often defined in direct contrast to the notion
of religiousness. This is due largely to the fact that secularism
in French society has come to occupy territory that for centuries
had been the sole domain of religion. The writings of Jean Jaurès
illustrate the voluntary spirit that allowed for the transformation
of secularism into a profound philosophical doctrine:
What must be
safeguarded above all else, that which is the inestimable good that
can be achieved by man despite prejudice, adversity, and conflict,
is the notion that there is no sacred truth; that is to say, nothing
is beyond the reach of human investigation. There is nothing
greater in this world than the sovereign freedom of thought. . .that
all truth that does not come from us is a lie; that regardless of
our attachments, our critical sense must remain acute and all our
assertions and thoughts must be impregnated by a rebellious spirit;
it is to say that if God’s ideal were rendered visible, if God
himself stood before the masses in physical form, the first
obligation of man would be to refuse obedience to him who he
considers his equal, not as a master to whom he must submit
himself. Thus are the meaning and the greatness and the beauty of
secular teachings in their essence.[iii]
This global
dimension of secularism, however, has not ensured unanimous
agreement on its meaning. For example, the German approach to
secularism is characterized by a dispassionate pragmatism. In
England, the Anglican Church maintains an official position within
State institutions. For one young nation with a Protestant culture
comprised of multiple denominations, human rights arise from “the
Creator” and are not considered to be in contention with religious
beliefs:
We hold these
Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they
are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that
among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.[iv]
The famous “In
God we trust” stamped on the greenback is understood by Americans as
the link between the “absolute” State and the religious spirit.
Thus in
Western culture, one can see reflected in the rights of Man a
gradual separation between that which was considered sacred and the
elaboration of the first national, and later universal, human
rights.
Universality
Enshrined
Universality
signifies the sharing among human beings, regardless of their
ethical or philosophical values, of a practice or a set of
principles. Torture is universal, as is respect for human
dignity. If we can find defenders of secularism among the great
civilizations, then it could be said that the separation of Church
and State has never constituted a universal phenomenon. There is no
one concept, definition, or representation of secularism that is
common to all secularists. And rarely does secularism go so far as
to constitute a desecration of political life. Reduced to the
separation of Church and State, the link between secularism and
democracy, and secularism and human rights remains to be defined.
During the French Revolution, the conflict between the Church and
the key figures of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of
Citizen of 1789 created an enormous tension between human and divine
rights. But human rights are not exclusively the outcome of the
French example. In American literature, the question of conflict
between religion and absolute rule is rarely cited. The Muslim
world, for the most part, has not opposed the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights (UDHR). The only Muslim state to not vote in favor
of the UDHR was Saudi Arabia which, like the (secular, read:
anti-religious) former Soviet Union, abstained.
Human rights
are not considered a religion, even less an ideology. Human rights
consist of texts and instruments put forward by men and women from
different countries, of different colors and religions, at a given
moment in the history of humanity. Fortunately, this ensemble does
not represent divine law. As a result, it is shaped by evolution
and remains, by definition, a work in progress.
Religion,
however, is another matter entirely. Its declared universality does
not erase the borders established between those who are part of the
religious community and those who remain outside it, even if this
universality is, at its core, in the service of human dignity. In
this context, the universally recognized human rights are situated
beyond religious or philosophical adherence, beyond secularism and
religion. Their elaboration by human beings constitutes the essence
of their secularity, but it is the “evocation of the universal” that
allows them to remain untainted by dogmatism.
This sense of
caution was built into article 1 of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights:
All human
beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are
endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one
another in a spirit of brotherhood.
This
philosophical “neutrality” endows human rights with universality.
Mention is made neither of Creator nor nature; the accent is placed,
rather, on liberty and equality. Neither secularists nor the
religious wield a monopoly on human rights. History teaches us that
the fundamental basis of the rights of the individual as well as the
obstacles to the exercise of those rights is not systematically the
work of one camp against another. The mystical unity of humanity in
Jesus Christ renders possible the conception of a history that fully
encompasses all of humanity. And it is written in the Koran that
Allah honored Bani Adam (human beings), Muslims and non-Muslims
alike.
Secular Power
and Human Rights
Reducing
secularism to a simple separation of Church and State removes the
moral and humanistic protection inherent in the concept. Such a
separation does not signify, in and of itself, the respect for human
rights or democratic values. Ataturk constructed an authoritarian
secular state and Hitler showed us that racism and a secular state
could coexist in Nazism. Stalin eliminated all those who refused to
obey the totalitarian system installed under the single-party rule
of the USSR. Ben Ali, Assad, and Saddam Hussein induced a sense of
rejection and disgust toward the principles that were lost in this
reductionist and institutionalized conception.
To accept a
negative image of secularism is just as dangerous an approach as to
reduce Catholicism to the Inquisition. Secularism is an historical
process rooted in Western civilization. Peoples of many non-Western
countries and cultures find secularism to be a useful tool in making
sense of the structures in which they live. It may also be the only
means of coping with the diversity thrust upon us by the
post-colonial reconstruction of the nation-state. India provides an
interesting example, far removed from Europe, of the cohabitation of
a Muslim president, a Sikh prime minister, and a predominantly Hindu
populace. But it remains important, in our opinion, to take a
closer look at the example of France, the avant-garde of secularism
in Europe.
The law of
1905 that governs the separation of Church and State is the result
of 116 years of conflict between the State and the Catholic Church.
This law establishes the basic structure of French secularism:
. . .freedom
of conscience and religion; free organization of Churches;
non-recognition and legal equality of aforementioned; free and
public expression of religious beliefs. To this is added secularism
of institutions, notably that of schools and of educational
instruction.
Nevertheless,
the religious neutrality of the public domain remains formal in
nature. If there no longer exists official religion, traces of the
public role historically played by religion in France remain. This
is particularly evident in the calendar to which the Third Republic
even added Easter Monday and the Monday of the Pentecost to the four
“mandatory” Catholic holidays: Christmas, Ascension Day, Assumption
Day, and All Saints’ Day, all declared holidays in 1802. Thus
France has not cut itself off from its religious roots, but from
other religions – Judaism, Islam, and Buddhism. These believers do
not see their holy days taken into consideration except in rare
cases, such as that of public employees and students who can request
special authorization to observe “un-official” religious holidays.
We are currently facing an unspoken agreement that is being
articulated in different terms depending on whether it is addressed
to a minority religion (such as Judaism in its early days) or to a
religious community in the process of construction (see Islam and
the Muslim community of today). Some may be surprised, for example,
to see so many Saints in the Paris metro – this in the same country
that does not allow a grown woman in working in the public service
to choose her own outfit. Secularism is also a political affair.
To that end, the secular spirit must remain everywhere relative if
it is to minimize the tendency of exclusion and maintain a focus on
the respect for human rights.
It can be said
that we have entered a period of crisis concerning human rights.
Despite progress in the areas of jurisprudence, theory and
reflection, and denunciation, major work remains to be done to
address the problem of impunity: to bring human rights violators to
justice and to prevent certain States from opting out of
international human rights norms. In order to truly speak of human
rights for all, we must move away from a Western conceptualization
of those rights and toward one with greater global reach and
relevancy. For its part, secularism is experiencing a crisis of
identity. Now more than ever there is a need emphasize the
inseparable link between secularism and human rights and to openly
oppose authoritarian secularism. The European Secularist movement
recalls this inseparable complementarity:
Secularism is
at once an ethic and an ensemble of legal rules relating to the
functioning of the State and public utilities, including National
Education. The values of ethical secularism include freedom of
thought, independence of spirit, respect for difference, and
tolerance to the extent that it is reciprocal and unrestrained.[v]
This text was
originally presented at a symposium entitled Culture and Secularism
in the Arab World held at the Arab Cultural Center in Brussels on 16
October 2004.
[i] Kostas
Papaioannou, The Consecration of History (La consécration de
l’histoire) ed. Champ Libre (1983), 161.
[iii] Jean
Jaurès, “Speech before the Chamber of Deputies” (Discours à
la chambre des Députés), 18 February 1895.
[iv] The
Declaration of Independence, Action of Second Continental
Congress, July 4, 1776.
[v] See
www.europe-et-laicite.org.
Translated from French by Morgan Wolfe
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