By the time this dispatch is read, Pope Benedict XVI will be
in Turkey and, inevitably, adding to the confusion in that part
of the world. Motley groups and associations and ad-hockers have
gathered to protest his visit, and most of them attribute their
grievances to the speech he gave in September at the University
of Regensburg.
That speech was held to be as inflammatory as the Danish
cartoons that silenced half of Europe for fear of being
associated with humorous treatments of the Quran. The pope does
not discuss problems as grist for cartoons. Benedict XVI, we are
frequently reminded, is a mature intellect and as such earns the
rigorous attention paid to what he says, though less than
rigorous attention is paid to what he preaches.
What he did at Regensburg was to quote a learned 14th-century
Byzantine emperor who cautioned Islam against any doctrines that
scorned reason, inasmuch as reason mediates dogma.
It was in one part surprising that the pope provoked such a
storm by saying something so eminently defensible. What was more
surprising was the emergence of a new figure on the throne of St.
Peter. Cardinal Ratzinger was bemoaned, when he was elected pope,
on the grounds that he had been, as cardinal, a full-time keeper
of the eternal flame, and presumably would officiate as pope
without sufficient diplomatic reserves.
Quite the opposite happened. In the three or four days after
making the speech, the pope took every opportunity to stress not
what had been the message of Regensburg, but the pain it had
evidently caused adherents to the Islamic faith. And this theme
he picked up again when he set out for Turkey. He was telling the
world that his devotion to Muslims was such as to cause him
terrible pain at any thought of having offended them by the use
of language that appeared scornful or reproachful.
Now there were underlayers of disruption of a political
character. When the pope was cardinal, he cautioned against
admitting Turkey into the European Union. His reasoning was
straightforward: that Turkey, a Muslim nation, was part of a
different culture from that of Christian Europe. That theme had
been picked up, most directly by the former president of France,
Valery Giscard d'Estaing, and years have gone by without the
admission of Turkey, although the reason generally given for the
delay is ongoing tension between Turkey and Greece over
Cyprus.
This has annoyed some Muslims, and outraged others, and here
was an opportunity to add, on top of the resentments caused by
the Regensburg speech, lingering resentments over the political
rejection.
It isn't as simple as prescribing admission into the European
Union as a poultice and, finally, a cure. That is because many
Muslims, while resenting the articulation of differences between
Western and Eastern culture on matters such as marriage, sex and
alcohol, are proud that such differences exist and defend the
maintenance of them. In Turkey itself there have been several
attempts to overthrow the secular state and restore Islamic
law.
Should Turkey think of itself as facing East? Or West? The
Ottoman Empire was, up until its dissolution, held to be an
adversary of the West in its constitution. Is that still the case
with modern Turkey, never mind that hard secularism was adopted
almost a century ago?
What is happening in that part of the world has to do with the
evolution of Islam, and nobody can persuasively contend that
Islamic passions to conquer and to rule are dead. And in that
part of the world, attachments form under very ancient
dispensations, so that the Shiites and the Sunnis, and then the
Kurds and Hezbollah, crowd about, expressing their resentments
and tossing internecine tribal, nationalist and credal elements
into the stew.
There are those who hope that Pope Benedict will confront the
maelstrom with dignity and with the strength that issues from his
own faith. Or would that make too many people mad? |