Racism for Children By Jan Needle
When I wrote my novel 'My Mate Shofiq' all
those years ago, the race relations problem seemed not too difficult to
understand. We had invited many people into Britain from our former colonies,
because we needed the labour.
When I was a young reporter, the Minister
of Health came to the Royal Portsmouth hospital to explain why he was
recruiting nurses from the West Indies. The young hopefuls were predominantly
black, and he addressed them thus: "You are all wonderful. You are caring,
hard-working people. Tell all your friends back home in the Caribbean that we
want them here, we need them here. Our welcome will be unequivocal."
Loud applause, from everybody in the room,
black and white. This is not a quiz, so I won't ask you to guess his name. It
was Enoch Powell. The headline on my story read something like "Health
Minister urges West Indians: 'come and save the NHS.'"
In they came, of course – why wouldn't
they? – and duly saved our bacon. Similar experience when I moved to Manchester.
In the past, we – Britain – had learned how to make cotton cloth from the
Indians (whose country we had invaded), developed machinery to spin and weave
the raw material at extraordinary speed and volume, then imported everything
that they could grow, turned it into "textiles," and sold it to every
country in the world, including theirs.
What a tranquil world... |
My dad, by today's standards, was a raving
racist. Strangely enough, among his closest friends were a Hasidic Jew with side
locks, an African called Monty, and the Asian sweetshop owner who moved in next
door to us. The three of them used to keep the rest of Fratton Road awake late
into the night with their shouting matches about racial superiority. At the end
of it, they finished their cups of sweet tea or glasses of “Brickwoods brilliant
ales," shook hands, and went their separate ways. They were friends.
My father seemed to genuinely believe that,
as English people, we were genuinely superior, and destined not to mix. Except
that he disproved that apparent belief every day, in every way.
By the time I moved north, things had
apparently hardened. The word Paki had been born and flourished, the tabloids
and the Daily Mail had found an easy hook for hanging flesh-creep stories on,
and Jim Callaghan had hit on the mind-blowingly simple answer to the Ugandan
Asian problem. He'd cancelled their British passports! In the name of
socialism, presumably.
When I argued with my father about all this,
he had a simple answer. Human beings are animals, yes or no? All animals are
territorial, yes or no? If you take a pregnant tiger from India to Africa, are her
cubs born as lions, yes or no? He had nothing against lions, tigers, or indeed
any other territorial animal. If a human being walks into a crocodile's personal
swamp, has the human being any right to be surprised if he gets eaten?
Being something of a history freak, I hit
on the idea of bringing up the French Revolution. Robespierre's Terror had
exterminated, in the most savage and heartless fashion, thousands upon
thousands upon thousands of French men and women. French men and women. No racism there, right? Get out of that one,
Pa!
Never argue with a self-made scholar. He
pointed out that territorial was the word that he had used, nothing more nor
less. The tiger's stripes were a convenience, a marker. West Indian nurses were
black, Pakistani spinners were brown. Robespierre’s storm troops wore red
bonnets, and possibly no culottes. The hordes they hurried à la lanterne looked different, prayed different, ate different, and even smelled
funny, if only because they washed.
"It was a revolution, idiot," he
told me. "The rich had something that the poor thought they had a better right
to. So they killed them for it. The territory."
"But they were savages," I bleated.
I even quoted Arthur Bryant: ‘Robespierre, possessed one almost superhuman
talent: a single-minded belief in himself and his opinions. He was ready to
sacrifice everything: liberty, justice, decency, his friends and, if need be,
humanity itself. For he believed himself to be the embodiment of the General
Will. As the triumph of his ideals necessitated the triumph of France, to
destroy her enemies and his own, no sacrifice could be too great and no means
too cruel.’”
"Human beings,” said Dad. “Territorial.
Live with it, child, it ain't going to change. Anyway, Paris is a cesspool, so
what did it matter? It's full of bloody Frogs!"
Fast forward not much beyond 200 years.
Another band of human beings, in symbolic uniforms but not red bonnets, and Kalashnikovs
not lampposts as their leveller of choice, slaughter what we take to be
innocents with the utmost savagery. The crime this time is to refuse to
recognise that their God (like our God, according to the Bible), is an
unforgiving God, a God who will not be mocked.
To most westerners, this seems bizarre,
unutterably vile, a throwback to the Stone Ages, maybe beyond. Why shouldn't we
mock and sexualise their beloved Prophet if we don't believe in him? What right
do they have to be offended, France isn't even their country, for God's sake. If
they don’t like it, let them go home.
But hang on, though. Their country, in this
particular instance, was called Algeria, wasn’t it? And hang on again, didn't
France invade and colonise Algeria? Didn't France slaughter untold thousands of
them and torture men, women and children until the world was sick with shame?
And until, for them, Algeria was uninhabitable? And weren’t they welcomed to
practice any and every religion that they wanted to in France? In liberté, égalité and fraternité?
But that was then and this is now. Which
begs the question: how long ago is then? If my memory serves me right, weren’t
a couple of hundred Algerians murdered in the heart of Paris in a brief period
of the 1960s? And weren’t the murderers finally proved to be the French police?
And on a more bourgeois note, isn't it a fact that certain forms of blasphemy
are still illegal even in our own tolerant and superior country? And that in
parts of America, land of the free, the ‘theory’ of evolution is held to be the
word of Satan?
If I was going to write My Mate Shofiq
today it would have to be a very different book. But I would still take very
great care that neither the racists nor the victims of such attitudes were
necessarily villains. One of the policemen who died for the right of Charlie
Hebdo to mock and slander Mohammed was himself a Muslim. One of the killers’
early captives was spared ‘because we don’t kill civilians.’ It takes a man as
crass as Rupert Murdoch to tweet (and presumably believe) that all Muslims
should be held responsible for the Paris slaughter.
The French Revolution, via Robespierre’s
obscene terror weapon, brought about something wonderful in the end, and while
last Sunday Prime Minister Manuel Valls said the protest march in Paris was a
reassertion of the values of 1789, he didn’t say which ones, and he didn’t
mention Robespierre. All that said, however, it seems unlikely that these gangs
of brainwashed and deluded young murderers will achieve anything of much value
at all.
But who knows, as I guess my old man would
have said – don’t the crocodiles in the swamp have feelings too? Maybe
hysteria, and its dissemination through the new media, is what we need to get a
grip of most of all. Public figures who commit crimes (or indeed,
misdemeanours) are pilloried, harried, and threatened with punishments up to
and including death, while the massive crimes of governments and countries are
mysteriously excused.
Racism is here to stay. Religion is here to
stay. And most of all the atavistic need
to protect one's own territory by any means, however desperate and appalling. I've
been trying to get over the fact that human beings are territorial animals all
my life. And if I have to be more circumspect, if I write about such things for
young people ever again, then is that so bad a thing?
Long live satire! But beware of instant
outrage, too.
PS. I’m stuck in the broadband desert of
rural Leicestershire, so I wrote this before I got to see John Logan’s post and the furore
it caused. It does seem pretty odd to me, though, to tell writers what they
ought to write about. Isn’t that what the Taliban and IS do?
My Mate Shofiq:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0078W05XU
http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0078W05XU
Comments
I'm not quite sure criticising that no one had thought even to mention Charlie Hebdo here - obviously wrong in your case, Jan -- is the same as telling other writers what to write. Perhaps. Again, I'll let others take over.
I happen to agree with your Dad - about the animal-like behaviour and territorialism, anyway. (I don't think the British animal is any way superior to the human animal from anywhere else.)
But human beings have always committed brutal, senseless, stupid violence against each other - and whatever justification they give - Crusade, Jehade, 'he was asking for it' - it's territorialism at the bottom.
Whatever we do, or say, or don't do or don't say, there'll be another brutal, stupid, senseless act of violence along shortly, committed by one gang or another, with one of the usual, transparent excuses. It's what chimps do - especially when they pride themselves on being superior to chimps.