The Mail on Sunday

Walliams in racism row over ‘grasping’ Asian shopkeeper

After PC brigade gets rid of Apu in The Simpsons…

- By Graeme Donohoe

HIS books have sold millions since he embarked on his second career and became one of Britain’s bestloved children’s authors.

But TV comic David Walliams has been engulfed by a racism storm over his depiction of Asian shopkeeper Raj in his stories.

Last night critics rejected the accusation as another example of pointless political correctnes­s.

Author and education expert Toby Young said: ‘There seems to be a whole army of politicall­y correct do-gooders in contempora­ry Britain who are always on the lookout for things to get worked up about. But no Indian shopkeeper will be offended by Raj.’

The row echoes the recent furore over The Simpsons’ Indian immigrant shopkeeper Apu, which led to the character being dropped.

Raj is known for his canny way wit h money – t r yi ng to sell items past their sell- by date – and comically mangles the English language.

In Walliams’s book Bad Dad, Raj says: ‘I am not a bad man. I just use best-before dates as a very rough guide, rounding them up to the nearest decade!’

And in Grandpa’s Great Escape, Raj cannot say the main character’s surname Bunting – pronouncin­g it ‘Bumting’ instead.

He was played by Harish Patel in the BBC1 adaptation of Walliams’s The Midnight Gang, which was shown on Boxing Day. Walliams also appeared, playing the headmaster.

The Raj character was condemned by Mohammed Shafiq, chief executive of Muslim rights group the Ramadhan Foundation.

He said: ‘It’s a stereotypi­cal character. To target a community and suggest that community’s shopkeeper­s are involved in selling out-of-date food is deeply unacceptab­le. It’s distastefu­l. In most cases these shopkeeper­s have been the fabric of their community for decades and I am uncomforta­ble with that joke.

‘I’d love to have a conversati­on with David Walliams about it just to understand what his rationale is.’

Veteran anti-fascist campaigner Gerry Gable, editor of Searchligh­t magazine, said: ‘Walliams is planting in kids’ minds that Asian shop- keepers are villains or not to be trusted. The whole stereotypi­ng is disgracefu­l. It’s the same kind of stereotypi­ng you would have seen in anti-Semitic literature before the war about Jews cheating in business. I find it really alarming.’

But Toby Young said: ‘The people shouting “racist” are nearly always white, privately educated Lefties who’ve appointed t hemselves moral guardians. Raj ignores sellby dates and tries to rip off his customers, but those aren’t things people associate with Indian shopkeeper­s. Those are just characteri­stics David Walliams has given him for comic purposes.’

It’s not the first time Walliams has been caught up in a racism storm.

He starred with Matt Lucas in the sketch show Little Britain, which came under fire for characters such as Thai mail- order bride Ting Tong. A 2008 report condemned the series for jokes that ‘pander to prejudice’.

And l ast year Walliams was accused of ‘ yellow- facing’ after dressing up as North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un for a Halloween party.

Walliams and his publishers HarperColl­ins declined to comment.

 ??  ?? ‘DISTASTEFU­L’: Raj, above, in the TV version of The Midnight Gang. Far left: Walliams in the show. Left: Raj as depicted in the book Bad Dad
‘DISTASTEFU­L’: Raj, above, in the TV version of The Midnight Gang. Far left: Walliams in the show. Left: Raj as depicted in the book Bad Dad
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