Gulf Today

Why I prefer to be living in crisis-hit Britain

Between the cost of living crisis, communal riots in Leicester and politicall­y inspired market turmoil, it must seem from afar as though British society is coming apart at the seams

- Matthew Brooker,

“You chose a good time to come back,” the Waitrose cashier said ironically when I told her this was my first week living in the UK since 1990. And that was before the Queen died and the pound collapsed to a record low.

Between the cost of living crisis, communal riots in Leicester and politicall­y inspired market turmoil, it must seem from afar as though British society is coming apart at the seams. So I risk ridicule when I say that my initial impression­s of life back in Britain are overwhelmi­ngly positive.

It’s all about perspectiv­e. Ater the atmosphere of post-2020 Hong Kong, following its embrace of a miasma of restrictiv­e COVID-19 social control policies, arrival in the UK has felt like one long exhalation. It is a relief to be once again in a place where daily life at least is, for want of a beter word, normal.

What has struck me most since landing is the diversity. The driver who took me and my luggage from Heathrow to our corner of north London was from Afghanista­n. Our landlord is from Romania. The business owner who sold me fited carpets was born in Pakistan. The hairdresse­r I went to recently is Iranian. A man from Hungary showed me how to use the drying machines in the local launderete. When we finally tracked down the big bags of Thai rice that are a staple of supermarke­ts in Hong Kong, it was in a converted newsagent run by a Kenyan Indian. I could go on.

Ater living for decades as a member of a small (albeit privileged) minority in Asia, it is an exhilarati­ng change. The Finchley ward where we have setled is 61% white according to the 2011 census, but it doesn’t feel like that to me. There is no sense of dominance by any group. Many of the food stores that dot the high road have a Middle Eastern flavour; Chinese traditiona­l medicine, Thai massage and Turkish barber shops jostle among the grocery sellers. The children’s playground at nearby Victoria Park on a Sunday aternoon is an ethnic and linguistic cornucopia. Last weekend, I spent some time chating to a Chinese emigre from Tangshan. A week earlier, I overheard a woman from Hong Kong talking about how her family had to leave the city.

The second most striking aspect I have found about moving back is the general good-nature dness of people. The neighbors have been friendly and welcoming to my Anglo-chinese family; shopkeeper­s have gone out of their way to be helpful; only once has a (white) driver made a V-sign at me so far. No one could accuse Hong Kong of being laid-back, even at the best of times. Britain is noticeably more relaxed.

At ground level, people seem preoccupie­d with living their lives in peace and rubbing along with their neighbours as best they can, which isn’t difficult when others have the same objective. Forgive the judgment of a neophyte, but the UK’S cultural diversity strikes me as an immense latent strength. In the absence of ethno-nationalis­m or other forms of tribal loyalty, there has to be some other glue to hold society together. That, to me, inevitably means values. By virtue of its history, the UK may rightly be seen as a colonial bully in some parts of the world, but at home and at the level of ordinary people, there are certain characteri­stics that have long been seen as typical of British society, among them: tolerance, kindness, decency and respect for the individual. I see these much in evidence around me in north London.

Am I too starry-eyed? Perhaps. First impression­s can be superficia­l, without question. I live in a relatively affluent part of the capital, and remain part of a privileged socioecono­mic group.

Moreover London, being one of the most diverse cities on Earth, isn’t representa­tive of the UK as a whole, which is 87% white. I am just starting to get to know my homeland again, and may yet have to encounter more troubling undertones of Britain’s ethnic and social makeup. The Brexit vote stands as a testament to anti-immigrant feeling.

Maybe my euphoria at finally geting here — ater a six-month wait for visas — is generating an aura of goodwill to which others are responding. I’ll admit that on holidays in the UK in the past, I have occasional­ly found people to be grouchy and rude. Give it three months, one colleague advised. Wait until the nights draw in, the temperatur­e drops and the rain becomes more persistent.

There’s no question that Britain has deep and serious problems, and I wouldn’t wish to diminish the hardship of struggling citizens by suggesting everything in this country is fine. Social cohesion may be tested as winter sets in and the full impact of soaring fuel bills is felt. That’s without even considerin­g the fresh economic and market instabilit­y triggered by the tax cuts of the Truss government.

For all that, this newcomer sees reasons for optimism. At times of crisis, it’s common for a government minister to stand before the media and insist that the fundamenta­ls are sound. The fundamenta­ls of the UK really are sound, in my estimation. I don’t mean the economic fundamenta­ls (which quite possibly aren’t) but something even more basic: the way that people relate to each other on a day-to-day level, freely and openly, unencumber­ed by fear or apprehensi­on of authoritie­s, and (more oten than not) with courtesy and considerat­ion.

In a democracy with freedom of speech and rule of law, mistaken policies can be corrected. The UK has shown some worrying illiberal tendencies in recent years, like many countries around the world, but in the end it is still a free society. Those who have spent time in unfree societies will know the difference.

“You can live here,” as the Algerian cratsman who came to assemble some furniture said, concluding a conversati­on about the pain of rising costs and the challenges the UK’S influx of Hong Kong migrants will face. I knew exactly what he meant.

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? Crowds gather on the Queen Victoria Memorial in front of Buckingham Palace following the death of Queen Elizabeth II in Balmoral, London.
Tribune News Service Crowds gather on the Queen Victoria Memorial in front of Buckingham Palace following the death of Queen Elizabeth II in Balmoral, London.

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