LIFEGUARDS in Australia wear
them. A mainstream British retailer sells a fashion version of them on the high
street. But the “burkini”, a body-covering swimsuit (named with the portmanteau
of “burqa” and “bikini”), has been banned this summer by the mayor of Cannes
from his stretch of Mediterranean beach, as well as by a dozen other mayors of
French seaside towns.
In countries with a tradition of liberal
multiculturalism, such a ban is greeted by incomprehension, if not ridicule.
Within France, however, it enjoys widespread political backing, not just from
the far-right National Front but also from the mainstream right and left.
Manuel Valls, the Socialist prime minister, has argued that the burkini is “not
a fashion item”, but represents the “enslavement of women”. Why are the French
so offended by Islamic body covering?
The government’s defence of the
burkini ban rests on worries about religious tension and public order after
recent terrorist attacks, coupled with two underlying principles. The first islaïcité, a strict form of secularism enshrined by law
in 1905 after a struggle against authoritarian Catholicism. This principle is
supposed to keep religion out of public life, and has been the basis of
previous French bans: on the headscarf (and other “conspicuous” religious
symbols, including the Jewish kippah and oversized crucifixes) in state schools
(in 2004), and the face-covering niqab in all
public places (in 2010).
The other principle is women’s equality. It may appear
bizarre, or frivolous, to argue that women should bare more flesh. But many on
the French left in particular regard the need to protect women from a
male-imposed doctrine as being at stake—and are willing to put it even before
liberty, another founding value of republican France. The logic of the burkini,
says Laurence Rossignol, the Socialist women’s minister, is to “hide women’s
bodies in order better to control them”.
Over the years, such efforts
have long been met with dismay, if not derision, outside France. When the
French began to debate a ban on the burqa in 2009, for instance, Barack Obama
declared in Cairo that Western countries should avoid “dictating what clothes a
Muslim woman should wear” under “the pretence of liberalism”. Some
civil-liberties groups within France have tried—but so far failed—to get the
burkini ban overturned in the courts. Yet French governments bristle at the
notion that their various attempts to defend laïcitéamount to
intolerance or an infringement of the freedom of expression.
They may note that
in 2014 the European Court of Human Rights upheld France’s burqa ban. What
outsiders fail to understand, the French argue, is that such body wear is not
just a casual choice but part of an attempt by political Islamism to win
recruits and test the resilience of the French republic. Mr Valls dismisses as
naive those who see it as being no different than a wetsuit. The burkini, he
says, is part of a “political project”, and complacency plays into the hands of
Islamists.
The difficulty is that, after
a series of deadly terrorist attacks over the past 18 months, France is in a
state of heightened tension. Perceived provocations on both sides are
amplified. It is not just civil-liberty activists who consider the mayors’ ban
excessive, or stigmatising. Some French scholars of Islam, such as Olivier Roy,
consider it “absurd” to conflate the burkini with hard-line Islamism, not least
because the latter would not permit women to bathe publicly in the first place.
Politicians, though, are unlikely to cede ground. The nature of French identity
is likely to feature prominently in next year’s presidential election. Some
contenders, such as Nicolas Sarkozy, a centre-right former president, argue
that the Muslim veil should be banned on the campuses of state universities.
France looks set to defend, if not tighten, its strict approach to
head-covering.
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