Open Society and Soros Foundation
about usinitiativesgrants and scholarshipsresource centernewsroom
Contact
Search

Soros Foundations

MENA works closely with the Open Society Institute Assistance Foundation–Turkey, a liaison office that identifies actors and activities that will help Turkey's evolution toward an open society, facilitates collaboration between Turkish civil society and the Soros foundations network, and makes funding recommendations.

Open Society Institute Assistance Foundation–Turkey

Past Events
OSI Forum: Muslim Minorities in Europe—Questions of Culture, Ethnicity, and Religion
Location: OSI - New York
Event Date(s): March 29, 2006
Speaker(s): Olivier Roy
Multimedia:   AUDIO

OSI's Middle East and North Africa Initiative hosted a briefing, "Muslim Minorities in Europe: Questions of Culture, Ethnicity, and Religion," with Olivier Roy, Research Director, French National Center for Scientific Research. Anthony Richter, director of Middle East Initiatives and associate director of OSI, introduced the event.

Most Muslims in contemporary Europe arrived as part of a wave of labor immigration, Roy noted. Since they didn't intend to stay, they "had no vision of themselves as Western or European Muslims." But the second and third generations "are here to stay." To integrate them France has used an "integrationist" or "assimilationist" model, meaning French citizens are assumed to have no religious, linguistic, or cultural specificity.

This model has failed, Roy said, because it conflates religion and culture. The problem, however, is a disconnect between the two; religious "revivalism" in Europe is the attempt to reconstruct religion outside of cultural bonds. Fundamentalism is not a backlash of traditional culture against Westernization and globalization; it is an anti-cultural product of those forces.

The riots in France in November 2005 have been described as the "intifada of the suburbs," Roy said, yet the unrest "had absolutely nothing to do with Islam." Instead factors such as high unemployment, especially among the youth, are to blame. Islamic militants were "sidelined"; the riots had no meaning for them, nor were they able to provide a viable alternative.

The media focuses on Islamic radicals, but this hides what else is going on. There is no "Muslim community," Roy said, only a diverse "Muslim population." For instance the notion that the "Muslim community" was upset by the recent Danish cartoon controversy is false, he said. The actual number of protesters was a small fraction of the Muslim population.

back to the top of the page
share  print  print
Related Information

OSI Forum: Globalized Islam
OSI - New York
November 16, 2004
Olivier Roy discussed his latest book, Globalized Islam, in which he argues that Islamic revival has resulted from the Muslim diaspora´s efforts to assert its identity in a non-Muslim context.  more

About Us  |  Initiatives  |  Grants, Scholarships & Fellowships  |  Resource Center  |  Newsroom  |  Site Map  |  About this Site  |  Contact


Creative Commons License
Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative License.
©2008 Open Society Institute. Some rights reserved.

400 West 59th Street  |  New York, NY 10019, U.S.A.  |  Tel 1-212-548-0600

OSI-New York, OSI-Budapest, OSF-London, OSI-Paris and OSI-Brussels are separate organizations that operate independently
yet cooperate informally with each other. This website, a joint presentation, is intended to promote each organization’s interests.