Eastern Eye (UK)

‘We should show divisive racist rhetoric a red card’

FA URGED TO ENGAGE WITH MINORITIES TO DEFEND INCLUSIVE ENGLAND VISION

- By SUNDER KATWALA Director, British Future

THIS is our England. Disappoint­ed in defeat. Proud to have seen our national team contest a major tournament final.

More confident this month about the appeal of an inclusive England – open to everybody who calls this country home – than it has ever before been in my lifetime. And now challenged on the morning after to defend that vision from hatred.

It was a classic game of two halves in the Euro 2020 final last Sunday night (11) – but the case for an inclusive England must not become one too. Losing the final on penalties will not erase the enduring memories of how this summer has felt to our country, but the ugliest elements of the aftermath could damage them badly.

The image on almost every frontpage on Monday (12) was of a disconsola­te, baby-faced Buyako Saka being embraced by his manager Gareth Southgate, who had experience­d similar pain some 25 summers before.

The image tells many stories of generation­al change. Southgate is giving Sako the shoulder to cry on that he did not get in 1996, as the New Statesman political editor Stephen Bush noted on Monday. This image of empathy – this is who we are. We win together. And we lose together. Who is English today is not contingent on whether the ball goes into the net or hits the post. But the moronic racist and hooligan fringe have never gone away, as several disgracefu­l scenes at Wembley last Sunday showed.

Our vision of England is much stronger than theirs. “That is what a national team should be” said Southgate, when shown the clip of students at Darul Aloom in Blackburn celebratin­g Harry Kane’s winning goal against Denmark.

The England manager’s words moved Hasan Patel, who shared the clip which has gone viral online. “The look on Gareth Southgate’s face was one of pride and happiness. Perhaps this showed him the impact that his words, leadership and management have had on society”, Patel told me.

“Football is coming home – and it is a home that we all share” was the #EnglandTog­ether campaign message coined by Imam Qari Asim of the Leeds Makkah Mosque, where prayers were offered for football success.

Jasvir Singh of City Sikhs spoke of how turbans, kippahs, hijabs and baseball caps were all welcome. While the campaign was backed across faiths, political parties and civic parties, its message reflected a spontaneou­s outpouring of support across towns and cities too.

“Enoch Powell predicted rivers of blood in Wolverhamp­ton; what we got in the end is bhangra on the streets. This is England,” wrote journalist Sathnam Sanghera, sharing a joyous fusion march of “football’s coming home” in his hometown.

A similar ethos celebrated an inclusive Welsh pride during Euro 2020 – ‘My Cymru, My Shirt’ murals and photograph­s by Yusuf Ismail and Shawqi Hasson from Butetown grew out of a ‘My City, My Shirt’ project with Cardiff City. It is a story of inclusive pride to emulate in both club and country across the UK nations.

Narratives matter, and they resonate most when they reflect our lived experience­s in a changing society. Projecting them can help broaden the tent again. But narratives of hope will prove fragile if we do not stand together to defend them against those who spread hate.

Football has done more to shape an inclusive England than anything else, from the courage of the 1980s pioneers like Cyrille Regis, who faced down the far right to win the argument about who could be English, to the 1990s shift away from the fan culture scarred by hooliganis­m and xenophobia that flipped to the softer patriotism of Three Lions during Euro ’96.

Yet ethnic minority inclusion in this Britpop era often remained aspiration­al. It has been a longer gradual process for ethnic minority fans to be confidentl­y present in numbers. Shaista Aziz’s viral images of her three hijabis going to Wembley told a story of progress and the need to keep going.

The FA must still address the biggest gap in football’s diversity story by engaging England’s Asian communitie­s as never before. The Euro 2020 spirit shows the appetite is there if there is a plan to capture it.

England’s class 2021 had to have an argument with the public – about taking the knee – to say why their generation does not believe that our progress against racism has completed the journey. The racist abuse on Monday directed at the young black Englishmen who missed penalties makes their case.

We need to see changes on social media platforms like those we made in our stadiums in the 1990s. Yet, shockingly, all of those old National Front slogans – “black goals don’t count” and “no blacks in the England team” – fall within Twitter and Facebook rules that give racism a green light, not a red card.

Let us see Southgate, FA president Prince William and campaign groups set out the agenda for change. And let us have another weekend of social media silence on the opening day of the football season in August if it is ignored.

We must stand up to hate. We cannot let the England that came together this month be stolen in overtime by racists.

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 ?? (inset below) ?? ENDURING EM IES: The Eur 2020 tournament rought fan togeth cheer on the land team this s mer; and nder Katwal
(inset below) ENDURING EM IES: The Eur 2020 tournament rought fan togeth cheer on the land team this s mer; and nder Katwal

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