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Civic bodies must confront racism

Posted: 10 June 2004 | Subscribe Online


Once I heard of a little-known culinary tip to encourage an obstinate jelly out of its mould. It involves using a hairdryer to apply heat so that the edges melt away and it can slip out. In a similar way, compassionate yet subversive challenges need to be made against campaigns that aim to exclude or marginalise people such as asylum seekers or refugees. My belief is that non-inflammatory, but directly applied, speaking out can make everyone question their attitudes.

Racism is based on the belief that one's own ethnicity is superior. Racism is then given credence by the tacit support or failure of civic institutions to speak out against it, as illustrated in Channel 4's documentary Keep Them Out in May. Councils and the media appeared to support the fear-driven xenophobic campaign of the pressure group opposed to an asylum assessment centre at Lee on the Solent.
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Members of the pressure group Daedalus Action Group sought to protect their own lifestyles and were fearful of anything that might seem to threaten their own comfortable and relatively privileged lives. The group exhibited deep-seated and irrational fears of asylum seekers. And no civic institutions publicly challenged these attitudes.

There was a petition in my doctor's surgery against the centre. When I challenged the practice manager about it I was told there were "not enough resources for our own". In addition, the chair of the county council supported the group and the district council did not remove offensive banners and posters. Local newspapers were supportive of the pressure group and no local authority spoke out against the views displayed. Civic institutions reflected the same attitudes as the pressure group and there was more than a whiff of cultural racism in the air.
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Where there are fear-led campaigns opposing asylum seekers and refugees, xenophobic attitudes are likely to be dominant. Ideals such as inclusion, diversity and compassion must be defended and promoted. Civic institutions must be prepared to publicly oppose racist views and argue for diversity and compassion. Heat needs to be applied by all of us if we are to rid racism from our society.

Les Gibbons is an approved social worker, but writes from a personal perspective.


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