A bad time to be Asian in Britain 

By MARY ANN SIEGHART Sept 27 2001 The Times

Revulsion at Muslim extremism has expressed itself in violence and hostility against Britain's Asian communities - whatever their faith or views. A couple of years ago, Sukhpreet Grewal’s teenage brother, Sundeep, had to make a big decision. Would he start to wear a turban and grow a beard, as his father had done before him? He knew it would attract attention at his Hillingdon school, but he wanted to be a good Sikh. What he did not know was that, by the age of 16, it would lead people to look at him as if he were Osama bin Laden.

“You can see it in people’s eyes,” explains Sukhpreet, his protective older sister. “Even at the supermarket. He stands out because he wears a turban. But I don’t think terrorists are going to go shopping in Sainsbury’s on a Friday afternoon.”

Her parents have now insisted on changing Sundeep’s routine. His mother drives him to college and back every day instead of letting him take the bus. He has to ring home at break and at lunchtime just to reassure them that he is unharmed. “We’re feeling very threatened,” says Sukhpreet.

So is almost every member of Britain’s Asian community, whether Muslim or not. Sikhs in particular wince every time a picture of bin Laden or an Afghan mullah appears in the media. For to the untrained Western eye, one turban or long beard looks much like another.

Indians find themselves explaining to suspicious whites that they are Hindu, Buddhist, or Sikh — then feeling guilty that they have shuffled blame on to an equally blameless community. Supporters of bin Laden, after all, number only the tiniest fraction of Britain’s two millionMuslims. Most are horrified by the terrorist attacks.

Yet, when they venture out on to the street, many Asians are insulted, spat at and attacked. Women have had their headscarves torn off and have been beaten up. Mosques have been set on fire, ringed with pigs’ heads and daubed with racist graffiti. This is a bad time to be Asian in Britain.

Suresh Grover, a 42-year-old Hindu married to a Sikh, runs the Monitoring Group in Southall, an organisation which supports victims of racial harassment. Soon after the terrorist attacks, his emergency service was handling 35 calls a day, three times the usual number.

“Everyone’s talking about how people are looking at them,” he explains. “I normally look people in the eye, but I’ve seen hatred there, so I’ve been looking away.” He is helping local restaurateurs and taxi-drivers who have been threatened. “There is a massive amount of anxiety that you will get attacked.”

For Asians in Southall, the response has been to stay at home if at all possible; and if they have to go out, not to venture beyond the predominantly Asian town centre. Grover took his elderly mother out of the area to Ealing Hospital last week, and was amazed to see that the other Asian patients had disappeared. “Normally, there are about 100 people; this time there were perhaps 25, almost all white.”

This fear of mingling in white society has spread right to the top of the Muslim community. Siraj Salekin, 35, is the director of the East London Mosque, on Whitechapel Road. Not only is he struggling to keep the place of worship safe — two new security guards and loads of CCTV cameras after a bomb threat last week — but his wife is scared to go to her hospital appointment alone, just 100 yards from their home. He cancelled a trip to Swansea to accompany her.

“We’re like hostages now,” he claims. “The community are all talking about it. It’s crazy because we condemn the terrorists totally.”

Like most British Muslims, he is furious with hardline fundamentalists in London who give succour to bin Laden. Of Sheikh Omar Bakri Muhammad, who issued a fatwa against President Musharraf of Pakistan for cooperating with America, Salekin says, “He’s a nutter, one crazy man. It’s jihad here and jihad there. But there are rotten eggs everywhere.” On the afternoon that I visited Salekin at the mosque, he had been forced to eject a couple of young men shouting “We want jihad!” after Friday prayers.

His wife’s fear is not unjustified, though. A new departure since the American bombings has been the attacks on Asian women as well as men. “We’ve never had whites attacking women before,” says Salekin. “They have been abused and spat at but not attacked. Last week one of our volunteers was beaten up on her way to college by two white thugs.

“These are very passive and peace-loving women. Yet they have been called ‘murderers’. They’ve been told ‘Go back to your country!’ But this is their country.”

Many young Asians I spoke to feel confused about their national identity. Grover says, “This is the first time for ages that I haven’t felt I belonged here.” Sukhpreet agrees. “I don’t think we’re feeling part of mainstream Britain any more. I used to feel Asian British. But because of the experiences I’ve had, if I’ve not been accepted as being British, it’s very difficult for me to feel British.”

As a second-generation immigrant, on my father’s side at least, I have some sympathy. He arrived in this country from Austria, aged 12, with a German-sounding surname and a German-sounding accent, just months before Britain went to war with Germany. The subtleties of his position — that he was a refugee from the Nazis and hated them just as much as the English did — were lost on his schoolmates, who bullied him cruelly.

But at least he was able wholeheartedly to support Britain’s side in the war that followed. Today’s Asian community feels far more ambivalent. Unlike Austrian refugees in 1939, their home countries (unless they are Afghans) have not been invaded by an alien force that needs to be ousted.

Some of the Asians I spoke to are still unconvinced that the terrorist attack was carried out by Muslims. Those who concede that it was remain doubtful that war is the answer. All have a fellow feeling for South Asian civilians likely to be caught up in the fray.

Dalawar Chaudhry, the owner of a Southall restaurant, asks, “If the ploughing fields are turned into killing fields, what then?” He wants to see “proof beyond reasonable doubt” that bin Laden was behind the attacks. And, he claims, “If President Bush and Tony Blair bomb Afghanistan, it makes them no different from any other terrorist.”

Even Najia Ahmad, a 23-year-old graduate student at King’s College London, who leads a cosmopolitan life outside London’s Asian community, is uncertain which side she would be on. “I don’t want it to go to war. If it does become an issue of the Muslim world against the Western world, then I would feel like I’m a Muslim first, even though I hardly practise my religion and even though I was born and brought up here.”

Superficially, those Asians who have thrown themselves into the Western way of life seem to have suffered least. Ahmad claims: “I’m not getting hassled at all. But the area I live in and the college I go to are so international that I’m sheltered from all that.”

The degree of fear and harassment reported to me seemed to correlate almost exactly with the degree of difference in hairstyle, dress and accent. The more traditionally Muslim, Hindu or Sikh an Asian Briton looks and sounds, the more likely it is that he or she will have been abused.

Sukhpreet Grewal is living proof of this. A pretty, bespectacled, Western-looking young woman with a London accent, she confirms that when she steps out in her salwar kameez, the traditional dress, with her uncut hair in a Sikh plait, she is treated differently. “It’s subtle, but I do notice it.”

I venture, diffidently, to suggest that integration into the host community helps to reduce tension, that my father learnt this lesson pretty soon after his arrival. The Muslims at the East London Mosque argue vociferously.

They don’t want to lose their culture or their traditions, they say. They don’t want to become part of a homogenised society: “Saris and trainers! Curry and chips!” jokes Salekin. They can’t help it if the education in Tower Hamlets is segregated; that is because the white parents won’t send their children to predominantly Asian schools.

But most of all, they argue, they can look as Western as they like, but they can’t change their skin colour. It is one thing, they say, for continental European immigrants to assimilate, quite another for sub-continental Asians.

Abdal Ullah, a 25-year-old member of the Metropolitan Police Authority and a worshipper at the East London Mosque, is as modern and Western-looking as you get. He was offered the chance by a BBC documentary team to be made up as a white person for a week to see how different life would be.

“It was a really interesting concept,” he says, and he would have accepted had he been able to take the time off to do it. For he believes that skin colour is the biggest bar to assimilation: “As an Asian person, there’s a difficulty in trying to fit in. If someone’s hell-bent on not accepting you, there is nothing you can do.”

And how much worse this will all become if and when we go to war. Salekin is filled with gloom. “There will be a lot of fear. The white community will be angry. They won’t have Taleban near them; they’ll only have look-alike Taleban to attack. That’s worrying me a lot.”

Grover agrees. “The talk is of a battle against uncivilised nations and the image you see is someone who looks like me! Asians are going to feel more marginalised and alienated in this society if Britain goes to war. It will be a psychological blow. Even if you come out on the radio and say you support the war, you’ll still be treated as different. We always have to demonstrate that we’re on the right side, just because we’re a different colour.”

Salekin’s solution has been to try to bridge the ethnic divide through understanding rather than integration. At the East London Mosque, he has open days for the non-Muslim local community. Some 300 to 400 people attend and, at a recent opening, “One lady said, ‘We didn’t realise you are just like us!’.”

Last weekend, though, he had to cancel the open day for security reasons. And he is hardly likely to be able to restart it in the weeks ahead. The clouds of racial hatred are reforming above Southall and Tower Hamlets, as they are over other parts of Asian Britain. When war comes, the casualties will not just be in Afghanistan, but on our own streets too.

Sukhpreet Grewal, whose brother is still defiantly wearing his turban, is bitterly apprehensive. “We see ourselves as the truly dispossessed. I don’t see India as my home, but I don’t think we’ll ever be accepted in Britain.” It is a grim message for a country that used to pride itself on racial tolerance, and a sobering one for a country about to wage a war in defence of the open society.


 

BACK