Evening Standard

There is no place in this country for theocratic neighbourh­ood mobs and it’s time we said so

- Matthew d’Ancona • Matthew d’Ancona is an Evening Standard columnist

THREE years ago, in one of the most egregious educationa­l scandals of recent times, a religious studies teacher at Batley Grammar School in west Yorkshire was vilified, inundated with death threats and driven into hiding — where he and his family still languish — as a punishment for doing his job.

After teaching a lesson that was an approved part of the school syllabus and included an image of the Prophet Muhammad, the teacher faced complaints not only from Muslim parents, but Islamic activists who did not have children at the school. There were angry protests outside its gates. Instead of defending the teacher, the school suspended him and two of his colleagues and issued a formal apology.

The police and Kirklees council did little to assist him, as he found, in a travesty of a natural justice, that he and his family were effectivel­y living as fugitives. Since the original furore in March 2021, the unnamed teacher has experience­d suicidal thoughts and lives with the debilitati­ng consequenc­es of PTSD.

So it is gratifying that Dame Sara Khan’s review of threats to social cohesion and democratic resilience, published yesterday, offers — at last — official recognitio­n of the outrageous failures and neglect by public bodies that left him isolated, gaslit and profession­ally capsized.

As Dame Sara, the government’s adviser on social cohesion, says: “There [was no] clear condemnati­on of those engaged in such behaviour who were creating an intimidato­ry and threatenin­g climate. There was a disproport­ionate concern for not causing offence to the religious sensibilit­ies of those who, unaware of the facts, chose to engage in intimidati­on and harassment.”

The review covers much ground and the Batley affair is only one of the cases that it investigat­es. At the conceptual heart of Dame Sara’s findings is what she calls “freedom-restrictin­g harassment”; defined as “when people experience or witness threatenin­g, intimidato­ry or abusive harassment online and/or offline which is intended to make people or institutio­ns censor or self-censor out of fear”.

This is an important exercise in social, civic and political analysis. What is often grotesquel­y celebrated as “consequenc­e culture” or “accountabi­lity” amounts, in practice, to censorship, intimidati­on and a culture in which local councillor­s, public sector workers, artists, civil society activists and MPs exercise self-censorship pre-emptively to avoid the wrath of the mob.

In a truly shocking poll released as part of the review, 76 per cent of the public say that they have refrained from expressing their views openly for fear of harassment. For 27 per cent, the consequenc­es of this intimidati­on have been “life-altering” — one in eight of this group having lost or changed their job, or been forced to move.

In a notionally free, democratic and pluralist nation such as ours, these findings are unconscion­able. No society which appeases every self-appointed “community leader”, the loudest group to claim grievance or the most noisily “offended” can function successful­ly. The Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Act, which will come into force on April 1, is the latest instance of a broader trend towards restrictin­g speech that somebody, somewhere, claims to find objectiona­ble.

In any pluralist community, the taking of offence is absolutely inevitable. The challenge is to handle such emotions and to protect those who address areas of disagreeme­nt. In her review, Dame Sara recommends a series of sensible measures, including a “buffer zone” of 150 metres around schools to prevent disorder at their gates, and the establishm­ent of a new Office for Social Cohesion and Democratic Resilience.

Yet the most important element of her inquiry is its overall warning: that the very fabric of our pluralist society is presently imperilled by the reflexive concession­s too often made to those who most menacingly claim the moral high ground.

The unofficial endorsemen­t of neighbourh­ood theocracie­s is not a path to stable coexistenc­e. The harder path is also the only one with a chance of success: which is to stand up unflinchin­gly for the democratic rights and norms that underpin all that is best about this country.

What is often grotesquel­y celebrated as ‘consequenc­e culture’ amounts instead to censorship and intimidati­on

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 ?? ?? “Intimidato­ry”: people gather outside Batley Grammar School, after a teacher was suspended for showing an image of the Prophet Muhammad in an approved class
“Intimidato­ry”: people gather outside Batley Grammar School, after a teacher was suspended for showing an image of the Prophet Muhammad in an approved class

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