Eastern Eye (UK)

Protests spark need for quicker equality action

‘DIFFICULT CONVERSATI­ONS ABOUT RACE WILL BE A THEME OF THE 2020s’

- Director British Future thinktank by SUNDER KATWALA

BLACK lives matter. That has been the central theme of protests in America and Britain against racial inequality.

The British demonstrat­ions showed solidarity with those protesting the shocking killing of George Floyd in America, yet their main message was to highlight how much racial inequality is unfinished business in Britain too.

Going ahead while mass gatherings are banned sparked controvers­y. The argument that ‘racism is a pandemic too’ risks mixing metaphor and deadly reality – particular­ly given higher death rates from Covid for ethnic minorities.

On Covid’s inequaliti­es of life and death, a disappoint­ing Public Health England review confirmed what was already known, yet neither explained the causes nor made any recommenda­tions. Three more inquiries were announced this week, from the Government Equalities Unit; the EHRC and the Commons Equality Select Committee. How many reviews will it take to create the action plan we need?

The Black Lives Matter protest marches were overwhelmi­ngly peaceful, but the few intent on clashing with the police made headlines. Protesters in Bristol took the law into their own hands to topple the statue of Edward Colston in Bristol, yet could point to how years of thoughtful civic pressure had not stopped the city from honouring the greatest slave trader of his age. Mindless acts of vandalism against London memorials could offer no such mitigation, defacing Winston Churchill who, whatever his flaws, defeated the Nazis, and even Abraham Lincoln, a hero of emancipati­on.

Debates about the protest fringes could obscure significan­t changes in the way we talk about racism in Britain. These are black-led protests, inviting support from all ethnic groups to focus on the specific experience­s of anti-black racism. The idea of “political blackness” as a unifying banner fades further into history. Most British Asians long ago ceased to call themselves “black”, if they ever had.

Black Lives Matter too challenges how the clunky policy-speak of “BAME” can obscure more than it illuminate­s, when patterns of disadvanta­ge differ across minority groups more than ever before. That this might bring anti-black racism in Asian communitie­s under sharper focus too is overdue. The challenge will remain as to how to build the broadest coalitions to make change happen in our country.

This moment brings the story of generation­al change into sharper focus. Britain has come a long way on reducing overt racism. Minority voices in public life were still a novelty when I left university. So, my own lived experience, in my mid-40s, is of how the pace of change sped up.

This rising generation is impatient that this story of incrementa­l progress does not focus mostly on what still needs to change. British Future’s research on race finds a striking generation­al paradox in perception­s of progress. Young adults, in the sixthforms, universiti­es and recent graduates, aged 1824, are undoubtedl­y part of the most racially inclusive generation this country has ever seen – but are least likely to think that any progress is being made.

It is not just the lack of lived experience of the ‘bad old days’ of the 1970s and 1980s. This Stormzy and Raheem Sterling generation are hardly going to be grateful to not get beaten up by NF [National Front] thugs. The mostly British-born generation will laugh if still told to “go back to where they came from” but have a birthright claim to the equal opportunit­y in Britain, which every prime minister speaks of, now becoming reality.

So attitudes did change for the better, but expectatio­ns have risen faster. These protests will catapult more rightfully impatient voices of twenty-something black Britain into our public conversati­on. In Donald Trump’s America, “Black Lives Matter” and “All Lives Matter” are part of the culture war already. Yet in Britain, Boris Johnson has adopted the slogan of the movement, as have corporatio­ns, charities and other institutio­ns. Using a hashtag on social media is the easy bit. The question is what action will follow.

Rising generation­al expectatio­ns will challenge every corporatio­n and charity that talks about diversity without yet reflecting it at the top table. Expect more cultural conflict within the workplace. Each year’s graduates cohort increases the pressure to walk the walk too.

Navigating difficult conversati­ons about race will be a theme of the 2020s. Can we defuse the dangers of the “them and us” dynamics of social polarisati­on – and find common ground on race inequality and fair chances for all?

The NHS is our greatest symbol of integratio­n and shared pride in modern Britain. To mark its birthday on July 5, the new Together coalition is calling on the whole country to come together for a day where we connect with neighbours and thank all those who are helping us get through the pandemic, as we begin to think about what should change beyond it.

We will need to have more difficult conversati­ons on race. That means putting more energy into what can unite us too.

Sunder Katwala is also a founding member of the Together coalition: www.together.org.uk

 ??  ?? CULTURAL CONFLICT: Anti-racism rallies reflect the younger generation’s impatience with the slow rate of change in society
CULTURAL CONFLICT: Anti-racism rallies reflect the younger generation’s impatience with the slow rate of change in society
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