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You have full access to this open access article. This paper argues that too restrictive an understanding has governed both academic and popular analysis of the social, cultural, and political conflicts between the Western European majorities and their Islamic minorities.
While such social facts are undoubtedly important, I argue that the ideology of radical Islamism must be taken seriously in any analysis of the problem. Thus, I do two things in this essay. I outline the elements in twentieth-century radical Islamic writings that relate to the relationship between broadly understood Islamic and Western civilization; I also offer an overview of the now long-lived situation of culture war in Western Europe that supports my argument that Islamic cultural pathology, more than European racism, is the chief causal factor.
Even the Western world realizes that Western civilization is unable to present any healthy values for the guidance of mankind. It knows that it does not possess anything which will satisfy its own conscience and justify its existenceβ¦. The ghetto-ization and non-assimilation of European Muslims, coupled with their comparatively high birth rates and the wave of terrorism and urban crime that afflicted Western European cities in the s and s, has led some commentatorsβand not only ultra-right onesβto sound veritably Spenglerian alarms of cultural suicide and collapse.
Such Spenglerism is certainly too extreme; also fundamentally misguided is the opposing left-liberal viewpoint that only European racism accounts for the cultural pathologies of European Muslims, without which coexistence would be peaceful and easy.
Three synchronous and interacting trends must also be held responsible for this bleak outcome. One was the vast influx of liquidity into the Gulf monarchies starting with the oil price hikes of the s, some of which were recycled into Saudi-financed and Wahabbist-oriented mosques and schools throughout the world, including in Western Europe. Academe in the West, with rare exceptions, has yet to look this process squarely in the face.