Trevor Phillips, the former Head of the Race and Equality
Commission, said in an
article in the Daily Mail that “we
were wrong to try and ban racism out of existence ..... campaigners like me seriously believed that if we
could prevent people expressing prejudiced ideas then eventually they would
stop thinking them....... only a willingness to talk more openly about race,
despite risk of causing offence, will help those in need.”
I welcome these comments. You cannot control people’s
thoughts – I hope that you can change their minds and modify their behaviour
but when does comment become racism? Is
it comment when someone is suspected of fraud that he is a “Jewish businessman”
when other suspects are not identified as a Catholic/Methodist/Presbyterian
etc. If child abuse in a particular area
is perpetrated mainly by one religious/ethnic group – is that relevant/significant?
We are comfortable with “people like us” and there is
nothing wrong with that in our immediate circles but we absolutely need to get
on with people who are not like us – whether it is because of race, religion,
nationality or even education and this has to be taught, experienced and
practised. The more diverse our groups are
the more creative we will be.
A friend wrote on Facebook about a racist cabbie he
encountered who said he isn't
racist because he 'only has a problem with Polish and Bangladeshi cab drivers’. This reminded me when I came to London in the
late 1960s, as white South Africans we were vilified, verbally abused and even
spat at – by white people. No one asked why we had left or why we were here.
On the
other hand there were people who, when they found out we were white South
Africans, made really vile racist comments and were surprised that we were
offended.
As it was
International Women’s Day I should point out that prejudice isn’t only confined
to race and religion. There is a large population group – too large to be
called a minority – that is discriminated against and not sufficiently
represented. They are called women. I
quote from the House of Commons note published on International Women’s Day.
“In the UK,
on average, women working full-time earn 9.5% less than men. Although women
make up 51% of the population in the UK, only 23% of MPs, 25% of judges and 21%
FTSE 100 company directors are female.”
We await
the results of the election in May – not holding my breath.
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