The Scotsman

Darren Mcgarvey

Darren Mcgarvey

-

Govanhill needs our support, not moral

posturing

When it comes to Govanhill, I remain uncomforta­bly torn. On one hand, I regard the area with great fondness, not least because of all the time I’ve joyfully frittered away there throughout my life.

Having spent a great deal of my childhood in the area, playing around Govanhill Park with cousins, or visiting my mum, who lived on both Garturk and then Prince Edward Street, Govanhill has always felt like a second home.

In my early 20s, I took up residence in Govanhill myself for a few years. More recently, I worked there, running five- a- sides in the Neighbourh­ood Centre with local boys, leading reading clubs in Govanhill Library and facilitati­ng playgroups with small children on Butterbigg­ins Road.

Unlike many journalist­s and commentato­rs who have written or opined about the area in recent days, amid allegation­s of child sex abuse, my opinion of Govanhill is informed.

This is a community in which almost a third of the population was born outside of the UK, where 42 languages are spoken, where life expectancy is 54 and 55 for men and women, respective­ly, and where crime, anti- social behaviour, violence, alcoholism, domestic abuse and addiction are considerab­ly higher than the national average. To cut a long story short, Govanhill has fallen on hard times and this cannot be seriously disputed.

Where much of the friction in the community is found is in the tension between those who believe immigratio­n is the proximate cause and those who point the finger at the broader economic issues of austerity and social inequality.

Social exclusion, expressed in myriad ways politicall­y and culturally, lies at the heart of this deeply challenged community’s problems. Almost every social group in Govanhill suffers from some variant of exclusion, the effects of which are so severe that it’s begun to erode the basic social integrity of the community. For some, it’s exclusion from education, which often leads to a general disengagem­ent from socie - ty, perhaps giving rise to scepticism or hostility towards public insti- tutions, law enforcemen­t and an apathetic political attitude. These people, by virtue of their exclusion, are not granted an insight into local decision- making and often adopt false beliefs and an adversaria­l posture towards anything that resembles authority.

For them, trendy terms like ‘ regenerati­on’ or ‘ steering group’ are by- words for opportunis­m and exploitati­on.

People who experience this sort of exclusion are less likely to engage with amenities in the area and are more likely to view those who do with scepticism. Every institutio­n, charity or public- sector official is regarded as a proxy for ‘ the man’ – the man who excluded them.

For others, social exclusion is arriving from rural Romania, with little academic education, trying to escape poverty for the benefit of your children, unable to read or speak English in a community which is already besieged by the challenges associated with poverty. For this group, exclusion is far more immediate and severe, compounded by a lack of political repre - sentation and hostility and suspicion from sections of a community already beset by its own challenges.

Govanill is a community where deprivatio­n, and the psychosoci­al stress which underscore­s it, can emotionall­y disfigure already disadvanta­ged people; leaving them physiologi­cally primed to develop chronic illnesses, mental health problems, alcoholism and addictions. It can also become an incubator for self- defeating attitudes, such as pathologic­al distrust, or more pernicious­ly, a spectrum of intoleranc­e, along which racism and xenophobia become normalised as valid intellectu­al ideas. While these pernicious attitudes must be challenged and condemned, we must also pay sufficient attention to the social and economic wound from which they often erupt.

In this community, simple virtues like tolerance, patience and compassion can be emotional states outwith the grasp of people consumed by the consequenc­es of poverty- induced stress on a human mind. Why do you think people here drink and smoke more?

Individual­s and families, in a constant state of psychologi­cal fight or flight, can become unable to discern which aspects of their environmen­ts are supportive and which are threatenin­g.

A crowd of young men on the street, loitering innocently, can seem intimidati­ng and stressful. Not to say, in some cases, there isn’t a legitimate threat. But regardless of the truth, fear leads to gossip, mythmaking and whispers which can give rise to new fears, anxieties and attitudes.

These attitudes interact with the physical environmen­t to pervade a person’s sense of safety and wellbeing; toxifying their mental health, leaving them in a low, agitated mood through which everything else they see and hear is unconsciou­sly filtered. Further compoundin­g the strain and confusion are the very evident problems with which Govanhill has become unfairly associated: abysmal housing, fly- tipping, cockroach and rat infestatio­ns, poor lighting in back courts and stairwells, poor access to bin areas, and public services struggling to keep up. Sadly, when this community should be pulling together, united by the common cause of social inequality, Govanhill has, at times, turned on itself. This vulnerable community needs our support, patience and compassion, not lazy media tropes, ill- informed hot- takes, disingenuo­us, politicall­y motivated outrage or moral posturing conducted from a safe, self- serving distance.

The fact immigratio­n poses significan­t challenges in deprived communitie­s and that migrants are welcome need not be mutually exclusive ideas. But this debate, in Govanhill and elsewhere, around immigratio­n and the broader issue of social inequality requires a deep - er understand­ing of how poverty and exclusion subtly shape social attitudes and behaviour. Skilful political mediation, taking into account such subtleties, is essential, not only for the people of Govanhill, but for Europe as a whole.

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 ?? PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN ?? 0 Poverty- stricken Govanhill has been at the centre of claims about child sexual abuse
PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN 0 Poverty- stricken Govanhill has been at the centre of claims about child sexual abuse
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