The Times

February 06, 2006


Cartoons

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2027298,00.html


Copenhagen rues its lost tolerance


By Roger Boyes





 


THE mood was tense yesterday in Noerrebro, the multi-cultural district of
Copenhagen where the Cartoon War began. As TV pictures showed Danes fleeing
the Middle East, Jan Smolarczyk complained about how his once-gentle adopted
country had been turned upside down. 

"Suddenly everyone is asking themselves: are we bad people?", the
60-year-old Polish-born academic said. 

For years, Danes thought tolerance and free thinking would also make them
popular; now they see their red and white flag being trampled into the dust.
Opinion polls reflected the popular confusion. There has been a surge of
support for the right-wing People's Party, which has been hostile to
immigration. The Left Party, which still has some stake in preserving a
multicultural society, has also seen a boost in the polls. 

Mr Smolarczyk lives only a few blocks away from Kare Bluitgen, the writer
whose book The Koran and the life of the Prophet lit the fuse. Mr Bluitgen
was no Islamophobe, Mr Smolarczyk said. 

He was a typical Danish resident of Noerrebro, which is 80 per cent Muslim.
He helped to train the local football team, full of Moroccans and Turks. 

"That world - socialist, internationalist Danes helping out foreigners - has
been disappearing and it was only last week that we caught up with reality
and realised it had disappeared almost completely," Mr Smolarczyk said.
"When I came here, the Danes were open but cold. Now they are closed and
very edgy indeed." 

There are 200,000 Muslims in Denmark and the State has been subsidising many
of their schools. Islam, in the view of right-wing Danes, secured a
privileged position in Denmark and is trying to use it to engineer further
change. 

Imam Abu Laban was probably the most unpopular man in the Danish capital
yesterday. In the Danish media he criticised the Arabic economic boycott of
Danish goods. But, according to Danish investigations, he has been
expressing joy about the Muslim actions in interviews to Arab media. 

Left-wing Danes see the Cartoon War as a bill being paid for an immigration
policy that has made the country into one of the most hostile societies for
refugees. "The cartoons were simply an extension of jokes or smears that you
could hear in pubs for a while now," Mr Smolarcyzk said.

 



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