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THE FUTURE OF SECULAR EUROPE
a panel discussion with
WILLEM MAAS, Professor of Politics and European Studies,
New York University. Book in progress: Creating European Citizens
and
MARK MAZOWER, Professor of History, Columbia University,
Author of Salonica, City of Ghosts: Christians, Muslims, and
Jews, 1430-1950
and
TALAL ASAD, Professor of Anthropology, CUNY Graduate Center.
Author of Formations of the Secular.
Moderated by
MIRA KAMDAR, Senior Fellow, The World Policy Institute
November 3, 2005
What defines Europe? Globalization and the post-colonial intrusion
into European space of Muslim immigrants have thrown the question
of European identity into crisis. French and Dutch voters recently
rejected the European Union's constitution, suddenly putting the
entire grand project of the European Union into question. Anxiety
about global threats to Europe's high standard of living, the apparently
conceptually difficult project of extending the boundaries of the
European Union to include predominantly Muslim Turkey, and fears
of the irresistibility of a consumer-driven, individualistic American
model which threatens to overwhelm Europe's unique social contract
all contribute to Europe's current malaise. The new pope has taken
the name of Europe's patron saint as a powerful sign of what he
has made one the priorities of his papacy: the recalling of Europe
to its Christian heritage as the only way to save Europe from its
enemies both within and without. Viewed from the passionately religious
United States where policies both domestic and foreign are increasingly
dictated by the imperatives of a conservative Christian ethos, Europe
has seemed a haven of the secular. How will Europe accommodate the
irruption of religion into the secular space of its carefully elaborated
public sphere? What is at stake for us all in the outcome?

Mark Mazower and Talal Asad
Talal Asad and Willem Maas
"The Future of Secular Europe" panelists
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