![]() I was Christmas shopping yesterday, a mighty marathon trip that took me to Peterborough then backtracking to Leicester, before finally home. Leicester had a great vibe. It's a vibrant multi-cultural city, as this Wiki entry attests: Leicester has a large ethnic minority population, mainly from China, Hong Kong and the Indian subcontinent. There are many Hindu mandirs, Sikh gurudwaras and Muslim mosques around the city, mostly converted from existing buildings. The Jain Temple in Leicester is near the city centre (The Jain Centre). The area around Belgrave Road is known as the Golden Mile, and contains many Indian restaurants, jewellery shops, and other shops catering to the large Indian community in the neighbourhood. Many people travel to the area specifically for the restaurants, which serve authentic Indian cuisine. The annual Diwali celebrations are also held here and at the nearby Abbey Park, and are the biggest outside of India. There are also many of Afro-Caribbean descent (mainly from Antigua & Barbuda, Montserrat and Jamaica), the community being centred around Highfields to the south-east of the city centre, and Leicester plays host to the second largest Caribbean Carnival in the UK after Notting Hill. Since 2004, a large number of eastern Europeans and Africans have also moved here. It was lovely, mingling in the market, with all the food smells wafting over. I was most surprised at one point to stumble across a small demonstration taking place. A small number of white people were standing by the clock tower
holding placards which had just one message. One message only. "We Are The English" Some were draped in the flag of St. George. And that was it, more or less. They didn't seem to be canvassing for anything in particular and I didn't much care to ask what they were doing. It seemed provocative to me, given the location. When I got home, I googled around to see what it was all about. I found this: What is the purpose of the 'We Are The English' demo? What will be the content of the protest letter? Where and when is the ‘WE WE ARE THE ENGLISH’ demo? I was disgusted, as an Englishman, that they felt they needed to do this. It wasn't a particularly articulate demonstration. They appeared selfconscious as they stood in the German market, which was selling pancakes and sausages, spicy and plain. They shuffled from foot to foot, obviously keeping it low key as an assertion of their democratic right to demonstrate and to appease the small police presence around the place. I mused for a while on why I felt so much distaste for the event. Is this a true mark of my Englishness? For would I feel so chastened if it was any other ethnic group holding such a demonstration? Are we, the English, really under threat? Do we, the English, really need to reclaim our national identity? Personally speaking, I do not think so, one jot. I felt ashamed as I watched the cornucopia of nationalities pass by, looking quizzically at this display of English ethnicity. How the irony wasn't lost on me when if I turned my head to the left I could see Asian families smiling with admiration, taking pictures of their children enjoying the fairground rides and if I turned my head to the right I saw my countrymen standing for their rights, imposing their Englishness, stood in the entrance to the festive German bier garden, drinking bier, shrouded in the cross of St. George, proclaiming "We are the English". Of that, there was no doubt.
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(photo for illustrative purposes only. Not the actual event)
we are not you indeed...
Strange world, isn't it? As I wandered around Lidl the other day, a European-owned and run convenience store, I marvelled at the polyglot community around me - well, actually mostly Polish, but it may not be easy for Western Europeans to distinguish between Poles, Latvians and Slovaks (for example). I loved it - but then I don't feel threatened by them and I also remembered what it was like to be a Brit in southern Spain when my daughter was running a bar there...
Even though I've just been made redundant, I don't blame foreigners - but maybe if I'd been in a manual job or one where other nationals had been identified as experts (eg Polish plumbers), I might have done. But I still think I would have been wrong to have done so. The causes of my redundancy are specific to my situation, even though precipitated by the global crisis (ie I lost a political battle against a weasely bastard and the people he was even more afraid of). But that's not really the point.
Xenophobia stinks. The more of us stand up to say so and explain why xenophobic reactions to our parochial problems are not appropriate and are, indeed, counter-productive, the better our prospects are.
The longer this goes on and the more I witness Little Englanders protesting against foreign influences, the more I wish for internationalisation of Britain and breakdown of "English Culture" to proceed apace.
Bob