Tuesday, 13 April 2021

On the preservation of cultural identity

 


How to then handle the stranger?

This is a question posed by Zygmunt Bauman in his book, Liquid Love. I think this question is at the heart of the preservation of cultural identity. Cultural identity as a lived experience has needed a space in which these experiences can be lived out, and shared with others. Traditionally this space has been a physical space and this is the particular space I will dwell on as opposed to the virtual space that modern technology has created. The physical space is important because of the fact it has housed the physical body, which human beings have needed in order to exert influence upon the world. Culture has been the framework in which embodiment can be active and participative. Societal norms, values, and traditions as pillars within the culture have informed those of a particular culture on how to function cohesively with others within the same culture. This itself has made living simpler in that when the people who have been culturally inculcated the same as we have been are expected to conform in action and not act erratically or in unexpected ways. This is when we can sleep easy at night as there is a trust established; when, in the words of Jordan B Peterson 'chaos has been explored and turned into order', physically and metaphysically through culture. And because, as Bauman puts it, ‘chaos has no legitimate family, it is illegitimate. Order is called upon, birthed as it were’ which suggests that when the order of explored territory and established culture is not preserved then entropy will easily take over and all order be reverted back to chaos.

 

And so, again, Bauman’s question ‘How to then handle the stranger?’

When strangers knock at the door of our explored territory, asking to be let in, how have different societies answered this knock? Two ways namely, anthropophagically or anthropoemically. The anthrophagic response means to eat the person; this can be literally through cannibalism or figuratively by devouring their culture and assimilating them into ours; allowing them to keep those aspects of their culture that won’t change or stand in stark competition to the already existing culture. The parts of the culture that cannot be digested by that society are sacrificed as a sort of cultural dowry. The anthropoemic response is the one where the stranger is vomited out; they are rejected in their entirety and not allowed within the city gates; they remain in the forest, the wilderness, chaos itself.

 Refugees are this modern day stranger who have had to leave their physical territory and to seek succour and asylum in other territories. Immigration has been a touchy, contentious subject because when the stranger is allowed in without assimilation, the stranger can pose as a threat to the cultural identity because the stranger would be unpredictable; destabilizing society and potentially placing the citizens in harm’s way. In Gad Saad’s The Parasitic Mind, he goes into detail about why immigration laws are important and how he rejects the idea of open borders. Gad Saad immigrated to Canada himself from Armenia so he is no stranger to displacement, yet he articulates the importance of the preservation of a host country’s cultural identity. Gad Saad quotes Salim Mansur on the immigration of people from Islamic nations.

The flow of immigration into Canada from around the world, and in particular the flow from Muslim countries, means a pouring in the numbers into a liberal society of people from cultures at best non-liberal. But we know through our studies and observations that the illiberal mix of cultures poses one of the greatest dilemmas and an unprecedented challenge to liberal societies such as ours; when there is no demand placed on immigrants any longer to assimilate into the founding liberal values of the country to which they have immigrated instead; a misguided and thoroughly wrong-headed policy of multiculturalism encourages the opposite… We may want to continue with a level of immigration into Canada annually that is about the same as it is at present. We cannot, however, continue with such an inflow of immigrants under the present arrangement of the official policy of multiculturalism based on the premise that all cultures are equal when this is untrue. This policy, is a severe, perhaps even a lethal, test for a liberal democracy as ours… We should not allow bureaucratic inertia to determine not only the policy but the existing level of immigrant numbers and source origin that Canada brings in annually. We have the precedent of how we selectively closed immigration from the Soviet bloc countries during the Cold War Years, and we need to consider doing the same in terms of immigration from Muslim countries for a period of time given how disruptive is the cultural baggage of illiberal values that is brought in as a result. We are, in other words, stoking the fuel of much unrest in our country, as we have witnessed of late in Europe. Lest any members wants to instruct men that my views are in any way politically incorrect or worse, I would like members to note that I come before you as a practicing Muslim who knows out of experience from the inside, how volatile, how disruptive, how violent, how misogynistic is the culture of Islam today and has been during my lifetime, and how it greatly threatens our liberal democracy that I cherish since I know what is its opposite.’

The stranger described above is the courteous one, the one who stands at the door and knocks asking to be let in. There is another stranger, the one who kicks down doors and barges right in. War, colonialism and conflict have been avenues of the annihilation of cultural identities, in order to weaken the society being preyed upon. A warfare tactic that has been utilised to undermine cultural identity is through the raping of women in a society. What this does is to introduce the stranger or the foreign at the genetic level tainting societal identity with hybridization. The Mongolian warrior Genghis Khan is notorious for having employed this particular tactic effectively. There are approximately 16 million men in the world who carry his gene. The Qing dynasty ruler, Giocangga, has 1.5 million men carrying his gene alive today. Jonathan Pageau of The Symbolic World podcast describes how societies have dealt with infiltration; through the strengthening of the society through efficacious leadership such as through a ruler or a king. The king builds up an army that can protect the society from strangers making their way forcefully into their lands. One of the ways the citizens repay the king for his leadership and protection is paying a sexual tax, to the king. The king or chief gets to choose anyone within the society to copulate with. He is allowed a harem or concubinage like King Solomon. ‘jus primae noctis’ is latin for ‘right of the first night’ where a king or noblemen had the right to have sex with a woman on her first night. Naturally, the husband would not be too thrilled by this cuckoldry but that was better than strange men from strange lands having their wives. In this way, the cultural identity of the society is preserved as the king or noblemen are still one of them.

Mobutu Sese Seko (born Joseph –Dériré) was a dictator who ruled Zaire through a coup. It is believed that he had sex with all his subordinates’ wives (mandatorily). This was a way to reinforce his power by ensuring the loyalty of his men, that they should withhold nothing from him and serve him completely. His new, self-given name, is said to mean ‘the cock that is above all the hens’. So sex itself has been used to maintain cultural identity.

 

How to then handle the stranger?

In psychology, there is a term called the parasite stress response which is responsible for producing prejudices within people to create an aversion to new people because of the potential pathogens that they may be carrying. Smallpox, Measles, Influenza and the Bubonic Plague have been responsible for the substantial decrease in population of the San people in Southern Africa, aboriginal groups in Canada, Aztecs of Mexico, Native Americans of North America. These diseases usually showed up coincidentally when Europeans showed up on boats. The disgust effect has developed in human beings to prevent us from ingesting items that will make us sick but also to prevent us from being in contact with people who may be carrying harmful pathogens. Hitler capitalized on the disgust affect of the Germans to carry out Nazism. There was a booklet Der Jude Parasite (The Jew as World Parasite) that was circulated in order to preserve the cultural identity of the Aryan race, by turning the Jewish people into the stranger. In this case, the Jew is vomited out (into concentration camps) and exterminated (systemically eaten). Nazism is a clear illustration of Carl Jung’s Enantiodromia which is a principle that states the superabundance of any force inevitably produces its opposite. When Nazi Germany went to the extreme of eradicating the non-Aryan, they themselves became the scourge of the earth; the uber stranger to the rest of the world.

We have witnessed what happens in the 20th century when cultural identity is preserved at all costs. We have also witnessed with the silences of tribes whose voices are absent on the earth how when the body is killed, the culture is killed as well. When the spirit of a place is gone; the archaeologist is left to piece the remnants together.

 

How to then handle the stranger?                                      

Hannah Arendt in her essay, ‘on humanity in dark times’ answers this succinctly when she says ‘through the lens of our humanity’. The word she uses is philanthropia which is the love of man and she says it manifests itself in a readiness to share the world. Zygmunt Bauman says ‘openness to others is the precondition of humanity in every sense of the word’





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