The struggle to be British
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Date: 1 September, 2004
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'I am British, I think of this as my nation, and I actually
think it is quite a privilege.'
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Yasmin Alibhai-Brown is looking for
new ways to talk about who we are. Andy Jackson found out more.
Yasmin Alibhai-Brown recently received an EMMA
for best print journalism for her columns in The Independent. Her
latest book After
Mulitculturalism, looks at identity in a globalised future.
At Greenbelt, she questioned the stereotypes
of multiculturalism, saying that traditional debates do not fit
Britain today. She wondered whether there should be new ways of
talking about who we are, and what that might mean in an "interdependent
world".
How do you now describe yourself?
I think of myself, now, after many, many years,
as British, as a British person who no longer needs to be good,
or grateful or have to explain. This is my nation, but it needs
to change. But I also think of myself as black, and I'm Asian because
that's where my family background is, and I'm a practising Muslin,
but a wine-drinking one.
You say that you're now British. How much
of a struggle has it been?
I was watching Kelly Holmes [double Olympic gold
medallist] hug the Union Jack and I thought 'how nice', that this
mixed race Briton could do this so naturally. I still couldn't do
that because I would feel uncomfortable. It's been a very long fight,
and it still is. But I am British, I think of this as my nation,
and I actually think it is quite a privilege. I'm a Londoner, I
love London, my husband is English and my daughter is half-English,
there is no choice but to embrace 'Britishness' and I feel good
about that but it's not an easy identity.
Many of my friends went to Canada at the same
time as when I came here and they felt Canadian a long time ago.
It's not been a struggle for them, because not many people will
say to them that they've not got the right to be Canadian.
Why do people say that you have no right
to be British?
I think primarily because of the colour of the
skin, but the idea that this nation belongs to a certain group of
people and we may not lay claim to it and we're here of sufferance,
will continue, I think, maybe for a couple more generations.
Would you think that working class people
would say the same?
I think that working class white Britons have
had a very hard life and have been exploited and excluded and I
would not underestimate their struggles. Perhaps what changed when
black people came after the Second World War, although black people
have lived in the UK since the 1600s, was that working class people
thought that was the way it was, a bit like the caste system in
India.
That life was God-given and class was something
you could do nothing about. What changed their minds was that black
people came and said 'no, we have rights, we demand equality' and
questioned the establishment. So people started to wonder why they
should be stuck into a class they were born into.
But class prejudices have got worse under Mr
Blair, the gap between the rich and the poor has actually widened.
Working class people will say to me as often as middle class people
that this isn't their country, so I tend not to romanticise working
class attitudes too much.
My daughter came home crying the other day -
she's 11 and she looks like me - because someone said to her 'Go
away Paki, what are you doing in this shop.' So, no, it doesn't
go away, but it has got better. But people are still angry with
successful black and Asian people because we're no longer grateful.
Nobody asks Australians who are living here to be grateful, nobody
says to Germaine Greer 'why are you here?' Why should I have to
listen to that?
What was life in Britain like when you came
here to live?
I came here is 1972, and the racism of that period
was unbelievable. When people arrived here from Uganda, for example,
after being thrown out by Idi Amin, there were demonstrations at
Stanstead Airport, people standing with placards saying 'Fuck off,
we don't want you here'. The area where I chose to live had local
newspaper adverts saying 'We don't want any Ugandan Asians - we're
full up.' Taxi drivers wouldn't take my money, I was spat at by
mothers with pushchairs and grannies, not just skinheads.
Enoch Powell had such an evil influence on society
then. But now it's phenomenally better. There have been many changes.
Just look at the television now. The number of mixed race families
is a very fast-growing group so there are a lot of good stories.
And with change there are newer problems - there is not just white
racism, there is so much internal tension which never existed before,
between blacks and between groups of Asians.
Are you worried about the rise of inter-ethic
racism over the last ten to 15 years?
There is a huge jump and we have an obligation
to do something about it. When Damilola Taylor was killed, nobody
wanted to talk about it. When Stephen Lawrence was killed, everyone
wanted to talk about it in the black nation community because it
was easier to deal with Stephen's murder than Damilola's. It's something
we need to address and what I've written this week addresses how
even I've failed.
Someone wrote to me once and said 'you write
so much about Stephen Lawrence, but Ross Parker was a white boy
killed by a gang of Muslims, this is what they did to him - how
come you never write about it?' He was right. What is easier is
that we're in the public spaces, we are more powerful than we've
ever been, and our children are ambitious. 27% of our NHS doctors
are of Asian background. That's phenomenal progress.
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