Barth Derrida on the Neighbor

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    Michael JimenezConference on Faith and History 2008

    Barth and Derrida on the Neighbor

    Recently the town of Santa Paula in California, known mostly for its agriculture, has

    made the news. About four hundred people from the white minority (three-quarters of the

    35,000 residents of the town are Latino) have signed a petition to seek to place a moratorium on

    low-income housing. What is fascinating about this story is that the proponents of the

    moratorium have openly acknowledged that it targets the Latino, immigrant farm workers in

    particular. One resident in favor of the moratorium contends that what the city needs is balance

    stating, Let the free market run.1

    Perhaps the two sides of the immigration debate would read this story in a typical

    fashion. The pro-immigrant side would bewail the intolerance that manifests itself in the

    legislation proposed by the white citizens of Santa Paula while the anti-immigrant side would

    praise their bold move. However, what I would like to point out today is not a mediating third

    side to this debate, but instead look at the lack of hospitality that is being expressed in Santa

    Paula and in similar situations across the world. Hopefully, we will be compelled to ask where

    exactly is the Christian idea of loving your neighbor found here.

    This paper will accomplish this task by looking at the French philosopher Jacques

    Derrida and the Swiss theologian Karl Barth. Why Derrida and Barth? Because both thinkers

    wrote much on how human beings relate to one another and to the outside world at a time the

    world was still struggling to find meaning in the post-Holocaust world and in the midst of the

    Cold War. Moreover, their names are often associated with the postmodern movement. We will

    first look at Derrida and his beliefs about hospitality toward one another especially found in his

    work On Cosmopolitanism which was focused on hospitality toward asylum seekers. Second,

    1 Scott Gold, In Santa Paula, a White Minority Blames the Poor for the Towns Problems,Los Angeles Times, 22August 2008.

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    we will examine Barths ideas about the Near and Distant Neighbor found in his Church

    Dogmatics 3:4 published in German in 1951 and English in 1961. Finally, we will conclude by

    asking how their ideas may help us in our current situation where a lack of hospitality is evident

    by new walls being built to separate people. This paper will use the ideas of Slovenian

    philosopher Slavoj iek to further probe the reasons behind the inhospitable actions of

    communities.

    Derrida and Hospitality Toward All

    One of Derridas most famous ideas that surfaced during his so-called ethical-turn was

    the idea of hospitality. Derrida spent much of his time deconstructing the history of the word. Inone sense he wanted to see what this word really says regardless of how some considered its

    meaning today. He pondered over the conditionality of hospitality that occurs toward asylum

    seekers, immigrant workers or any other group of people that might fit the label of the other.

    This so-called ethical-turn was greatly influenced by the Jewish philosopher Emmanuel Levinas,

    and his ideas about the other.

    Derrida suggests that showing hospitality to friends and family is easy and somewhat

    safe; real hospitality is given without any consideration of gain and with an element of risk

    involved. It is allowing oneself to be open and vulnerable before the other, even the uninvited

    other. Derrida writes:

    The Great Law of Hospitality an unconditional Law, both singular anduniversal, which ordered that the borders be open to each and every one, to everyother, to all who might come, without question or without their even having toidentify who they are or whence they came.2

    2 Jacques Derrida, On Cosmopolitanism and Forgiveness, trans. Mark Dooley and Michael Hughes (New York:Routledge, 2004), p. 18. For a similar definition see Derrida,Of Hospitality: Anne Dufourmantelle invites Jacques

    Derrida to Respond, trans. Rachel Bowlby (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2000), p. 25.

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    Why did Derrida address such an impossible idea of hospitality at the end of his life?

    Derridas biographer Jason Powell suggests that Derrida took up the cause of the outsiders, the

    immigrants, the minorities because of a heightened awareness of cruelty that developed under the

    anti-Semitism that he faced as a young man.3 He was born in Algeria, so he never felt fully

    French. Derrida noticed a growing anti-immigrant trend in modern politics found in such things

    like the Debret Laws. He believed that the French government had made it a point to target the

    sans papiers (French for those without papers) especially because they are mostly made up of

    low income, Muslim immigrants. He was disturbed at the lack of hospitality being shown by

    France and other European nations toward the immigrant community.Derridas work on hospitality is basically his statement on ethics. Derrida declares,

    Insofar as it has to do with the ethos, that is, the residence, ones home, the familiar place of

    dwelling, inasmuch as it is a manner of being there, the manner in which we relate to ourselves

    and to others, to others as our own or as foreigners, ethics is hospitality.4 What is at stake are

    those institutions that should be welcoming to the other and indeed, on a smaller scale, the

    nature of intersubjective relationships.5 Therefore, there is a restless questioning posed in all

    walks of life and in all human relations; there can never be complete satisfaction in that we have

    finally arrived at perfect harmony. Thus, Calvin College professor James K. A. Smith asserts

    that from the very beginning Derrida has been concerned with the other; in other words, from the

    very beginning deconstruction is a response to the other.6

    Derrida knew that the openness delineated in his ideas on hospitality would be

    conditioned by human laws. However, he hoped his ideas would at the very least help serve as a

    buttress to forms of life that promoted hostile or selfish ideas. For example, Derrida declares3 Jason Powell,Jacques Derrida: A Biography (New York: Continuum, 2006) pp. 16-7.4 Derrida, On Cosmopolitanism and Forgiveness, pp. 16-7.5 James K. A. Smith,Jacques Derrida: Live Theory, (New York: Continuum, 2005), p. 69.6 Smith,Jacques Derrida: Live Theory, p. 13.

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    what is often the reaction of those that have a heightened desire for security and safety: Anyone

    who encroaches on my at home, . . . on my power of hospitality, on my sovereignty as host, I

    start to regard as an undesirable foreigner, and virtually as an enemy. This other becomes a

    hostile subject, and I risk becoming their hostage.7 Moreover, Derrida notes how the issues of

    economics dictate how a nation will practice hospitality to the outsider: When the economy is

    doing well, and workers are needed, one tends not to be overly particular when trying to sort out

    political and economic motivations.8 However, upon the limits of ideas like immigration control

    people are welcomed under the condition that they will not expect the slightest economic

    benefit upon immigration.

    9

    Both these conditions, the feelings of security and economic stability, reveal the position

    of those not wanting to relinquish their power over the other; even when they, the host, show

    hospitality their expectation for something in return spoils it. Therefore, the basic premise to

    Derridas hospitality is the risk involved behind all relations, even those that are unexpected. He

    holds the idea of an unconditional hospitality as a way to reflect on the ways individuals,

    communities and nations fall short in their openness to the other.

    Barth and the Near and Distant Neighbor

    Karl Barth is an important figure to look at because he was in the middle of one of the

    biggest political crisis of all time. In fact, being in the midst of a crisis seemed to be his natural

    place. One would simply have to read some of his published speeches to agree with Barth

    scholar Frank Jehle that Barth was not the type of person who, in a critical situation, was

    especially reserved.10 For example, during his first pastorate in Safenwil he represented the

    7 Derrida, Of Hospitality, pp. 53 and 55.8 Derrida, On Cosmopolitanism and Forgiveness, p. 10.9 Ibid., p. 12.10 Frank Jehle,Ever Against the Stream: The Politics of Karl Barth, 1906-1968, trans. Richard and Martha Burnett(Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans, 2002), p. 29.

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    factory workers in their dispute against the owners, earning the title the Red Pastor. The

    complacency of German intellectuals during World War I provoked him to violently respond to

    liberal theology in his famous Romans commentary. He was openly critical of the Nazis and

    was the principal author of the Barmen Declaration of 1934; he continued to speak out against

    the Nazis even when he was exiled from Germany. Even at the time of his death, Barth was a

    gadfly toward both the West and the East during the Cold War.11

    Barth is in some sense infamous for his overtly Christ-centered theology. According to

    Barth, the Churchs only commitment is to be a faithful witness for Jesus Christ and the gospel;

    the gospel in and of itself has enough political force to evoke real, substantial change. Jehlesuggests what this type of preaching may look like: For Barth it was important that one not

    orient oneself one-sidedly in preaching in the name of Jesus Christ to the politically (and

    economically) powerful. Often, but not always, it was about swimming against the stream.12

    Thus, in 1946, Barth insists that the Church must concentrate first on the lower and lowest

    levels of human society. . . . The Church must stand for social justice in the political sphere.13

    An excellent area to examine Barths concern for social-political concerns in the light of

    the gospel of Christ is to see how he applies his understanding to the relationships between

    people of different cultures. Barth calls those that are of the same nationality and race near

    neighbors and those that are considered foreigners distant neighbors.14 Barth notes that God

    calls each person to be obedient in a specific time and place; he calls each person as they are in

    relation to both the near and distant neighbor.

    11 Joseph L. Mangina,Karl Barth: Theologian of Christian Witness (Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster John KnoxPress, 2004), pp. 1-6. Mangina opens Chapter 1 with an excellent yet brief biography of Barths life.12 Jehle,Ever Against the Stream, pp. 98-9.13 Karl Barth, Community, State, and Church (New York: Anchor Books, 1960), p. 173.14 Barth, Church Dogmatics, III/4, trans. G. W. Bromiley and Thomas F. Torrance (Edinburgh, UK: T & T Clark,1961), p. 286.

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    Barth deals with the relationship between the near and distant neighbor as a topic for

    Christian ethics. God has created human beings to communicate, to fellowship and to praise him

    together. Therefore, language is a central aspect for Barth. However, who gets the burden of

    learning the language to be able to communicate? According to Barth, it is the duty of the host

    people, who value the fellowship commanded by God, to learn to understand the foreigners

    language:

    We shall then try to understand and speak this foreign language to the best of ourability, and as we do so in this respect at least a section of the barrier which seemsat first invincibly to separate one nation from another will be removed, and eventhose who seem to be very distant will become relatively near. Where it is a

    matter of the command of God, this is necessary. Our own language must not beallowed to become a prison for ourselves and a stronghold against others .15

    Barth explains that one should be proud of his or her own language and heritage; the

    history and culture of ones people is where God has placed that particular person. However,

    this pride should never develop into sanctifying ones culture or race over another; only God is

    holy.16Moreover, Barth notes that there are aspects of all cultures of the world that could benefit

    from the influence of foreign cultures.17

    The command of God calls each person out of their familiar cultural world to relate to the

    larger world. The covenant the God made with all of humanity is through the Brother and Friend

    of all humanity, Jesus Christ. In other words, God is concerned with all of humanity. This

    means that each community and nation should be a welcoming people. Barth notes that this is

    not a simple task. Furthermore, tensions will arise when people of different cultures and

    languages come into real contact with one another. Nonetheless, the challenges and difficulties

    that arise from the movements of peoples is not an excuse for a nation or community to be

    15 Ibid., p. 291.16 Ibid., pp. 292 and 295.17 Ibid., p. 294.

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    inhospitable toward the distant neighbor. Thus, Barth poignantly describes what a nations

    borders should be like:

    Ones own people in its location cannot and must not be a wall but a door.

    Whether it be widely opened or not, and even perhaps shut again, it must never bebarred, let alone blocked up. The one who is really in his own people, amongthose near to him, is always on the way to those more distant, to other peoples.18

    In other words, Barth contends that there may be situations that force a particular nation to try to

    secure itself at the expense of hospitality. However, Barth declares that even the so-called iron

    curtain was only for a season.19

    iek, Violence and Why the Problem is not at the Border for Santa Paula

    After looking at both Derrida and Barth, we can now ask how to deal with the growing

    tension in Santa Paula and in other places across the globe. The story about this town serves as a

    good example on the micro level of societys problem with its lack of hospitality. Its openness

    about the Latino people group being the source for the towns economic woes highlights what is

    oftentimes behind much of the discourses about the immigration debate.

    Slovenian philosopher Slavoj iek, in his new bookViolence, suggests that now the

    politics of anti-immigration have gone mainstream; he writes that the main [political] parties

    now found it acceptable to stress that immigrants are guests who must accommodate themselves

    to the cultural values that define the host society It is our country, love it or leave it.20 In one

    sense, just as actual written legislation is oftentimes ignored by the public toward immigrants

    about their actual legality, this can be accomplished under the banner of altruistic motives, while,

    at the same time, practicing inhospitable informal laws, unwritten laws acted out by society,

    toward them.

    18 Ibid., p. 294.19 Ibid., p. 301.20 Slavoj iek, Violence: Six Sideway Reflections, (New York: Picador, 2008), p. 41.

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    The topic of immigrants rights is one that is beginning to divide American evangelicals

    especially over the issues of justice and upholding existing laws. Some Christian believers often

    point to biblical passages like the welcoming of the stranger in Matthew 25: 35 as a context for

    hospitality toward immigrants, legal or illegal. One of their favorite passages is Leviticus 19:33-

    34: When an alien resides with you in your land, you shall not oppress the alien. The alien who

    resides with you shall be to you as the citizen among you; you shall love the alien as yourself, for

    you were aliens in the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God. However, in a Washington Post

    article in 2006, a Hispanic pastor, the Rev. Samuel Rodriguez, president of the National Hispanic

    Leadership Conference, declares his disappointment of the lack of white evangelical voices forcompassionate immigration reform.21 It is noted in the article that two-thirds of white

    evangelicals consider new immigrants a burden on society, compared with about half of all

    Americans who hold that view.22 Rodriguez insists that if white evangelical leaders do not

    become more vocal for the humane treatment of immigrants then he suggests that the growing

    Hispanic evangelical community may not take part in social-political concerns with the white

    evangelical community.

    How can the ideas of Barth and Derrida help with the problem of inhospitality? The

    main problem in both Derridas and Barths ideas are that they are not concrete enough. What

    does real, concrete hospitality look like? How does one begin to implement it? However, the

    ideals explored in both thinkers are reference points to use to critique certain forms of life that

    breed inhospitality. For example, Derrida frames his discussion along the lines of the cities of

    refuge passages in Numbers to illustrate the religious dimension behind the obligation of

    21 Alan Cooperman, Letter on Immigration Deepens Split Among Evangelicals,Washington Post, 5 April 2006,sec. A04. The reforms mentioned in the article are such things as procedures for reuniting families, and ways forundocumented workers to become legal. Of course, it also mentions that the path to citizenship includes fines, backtaxes, criminal background checks and the successful attempt at learning English.22 Ibid.

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    nations to be open to the foreigner especially if he or she is seeking refuge.23 Furthermore,

    Derrida perspicaciously dissected the very hypocritical talk of politicians who often speak of

    such things like an ideal world without borders, or a nation founded by and made up of a

    citizenry of immigrants. Do they really mean it? Do they really envision a world without

    borders? Are we really prepared for a world without borders?

    Many thinkers and politicians speak of tolerance and acceptance in our day and age; an

    acknowledgment of the other is at the center of many speeches. Nevertheless, has talk about the

    other really solved the issue? Do not the white minority of Santa Paula identify the other in the

    Latin immigrant community? Is not this the actual problem?iek notes the irony of the differences between the Berlin wall, which was set up to

    keep people in, with the many proposed walls like the one between the Mexican-American

    border, which is set up to keep people out. The further irony is these new walls are being set up

    by those nations that preach the ideology of tolerance. iek declares,

    This is a clear sign of the limit of the multiculturalist tolerant approach, whichpreaches open borders and acceptance of others. If one were to open the borders,the first to rebel would be the local working classes. It is thus becoming clear thatthe solution is not tear down the walls and let them all in, the easy attemptdemand of soft-hearted liberal radicals. The only true solution is to tear downthe true wall, not the Immigration Department one, but the socio-economic one:to change society so that people will no longer desperately try to escape their ownworld.24

    ieks point is that the real problem is not language or certain cultural aspects and the level of

    tolerance we have for one another. The problems that come with language and cultures are

    constant, as Barth noted. The real issue is the socio-economic divisions in Santa Paula, France

    and in the immigrants countries of origin.

    23 Derrida, On Cosmopolitanism and Forgiveness, p. 17.24 iek, Violence, pp. 103-4.

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    Think about the phrase from the white citizen of Santa Paula: Let the free market run.

    Here we find two ideas that are keys to understanding the problem. First, there is a way to lay

    responsibility at a non-partial entity: the market. Second, that the problem is that something is

    holding back the freedom of the market. In other words, the white minority is not culpable for

    the proposed expulsion of the Latin immigrants; it is simply the workings of the market that will

    move them out. iek asserts that this violence is no longer attributable to concrete individuals

    and their evil intentions, but is purely objective, systemic, anonymous.25We might ask what

    if it is the workings of the market that is at fault? What if the problem is that the market is

    running unabated too long? Thus, noting ieks argument, it is indifference or ignorance tosystemic violence, in the workings of socio-economic injustice, as the real culprit. When a group

    of people have left their homeland that they love for better opportunities for themselves and their

    families, one must ask, why did they leave in the first place?

    What exactly is systemic violence? iek points out that there is both a subjective and

    objective form of violence. The subjective form is what we typically understand as violence; it

    is when one person does physical, bodily harm to another person. Objective, systemic violence

    is what underlies subjective violence. It is at all levels of society and oftentimes goes

    unnoticed.26

    Systemic violence aims precisely at the other through the machinations that support the

    socio-economic system. Again, this happens subtly and without much fanfare. For example, it

    is the type of systemic violence detailed in Ron Siders bookRich Christians in the Age of

    Hunger.27 The premise behind Siders book is to raise awareness, especially for Christian

    25 Ibid., p. 13.26 Ibid., p. 11. iek also mentions a third mode of violence: the symbolic. Symbolic violence is the way languageserves as a violent tool to control people. Again, this happens subtly and often unnoticed. For the sake of brevity itis not discussed in this paper.27 Ronald J. Sider,Rich Christians in an Age of Hunger(Nashville, Tennessee: Nelson, 2005).

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    believers from affluent nations, on how they and the rest of society help contribute to much of

    the poverty in the Third World. He suggests a few tempered ways to stop some of the habits that

    contribute to this systemic violence.

    The problem is that people are often quick to respond to examples of subjective violence,

    yet oftentimes need convincing that there is even such a thing as systemic violence. This mood

    is evident in that fact that two-thirds of white evangelicals simply see the immigration problem

    as a burden to their own society. Perhaps, if the argument was phrased around the issues of

    systemic violence, that is happening here and over there, and under the topic of ethics, as both

    Barth and Derrida suggest, then more white evangelicals would be open to comprehensiveimmigration reform.

    Conclusion

    How should evangelicals respond to the issues of inhospitality addressed in this paper?

    Barths teaching is helpful here. According to Barth, it is the role of the Christian to be

    concerned and active on behalf of the distant neighbor even when he or she may be at ones

    doorstep or in a far away land. This is an ethical command from God. Barths plea is for

    Christians to be less concerned about their own nationalistic interests, whom he assumes is

    natural for them, and to move out of their homeland and look for ways to embrace their fellow

    humanity, who have a common brother in Christ. Moreover, Barth suggests that fidelity to

    Christ, as seen in Barths own stance against Hitler, comes before anything else.

    As we have seen, the distant neighbor often arrives because of issues of systemic

    violence, which we might, to some extent, even be culpable. Awareness of this fact should

    produce self-examination of both our private and public lives and a better response of hospitality

    than what is often expressed. However, we must not simply worry about how hospitable we

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    come across, but actually try to accomplish concrete reform for both the near and distant

    neighbor. Perhaps, evangelicals could deal with the concrete situation in Santa Paula and serve

    as channels of reconciliation there. Instead of arguing about putting a wall up or down, we can

    get involved in particular situations involving near and distant neighbors that need reconciling

    and a little hospitality.