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The real issue is we’re all British Print E-mail
Saturday, 14 October 2006

I have a confession to make - I am sick of being integrated.

I feel like a piece of furniture...I can’t help what I am made of or what colour I am but I still feel I don’t fit in with the rest of the house.

In a week when all we could talk about was the veil it was interesting to note that no-one seemed to have said the obvious.

Not even Jack Straw for whom it takes years to bring up a subject.

And when does he do it? In the middle of Ramadan when there are more veiled women on the street than normal.

The veil issue slowly (and predictably) descended into one about ‘They live here so they should become more like us...” or “If they don’t like it why don’t they go go back to their own country.”

Okay, not everyone felt like that. There were plenty of voices saying the whole thing was a waste of time and if the women wanted to wear the veil they should be entitled to do so .

Now, correct me if I am wrong... but who on earth is segregated? Are we not already integrated?

No I didn’t have too much Mango lassi (a thick milkshake type drink) last night but I have decided that the majority of folk I know are already integrated.

And these people are ordinary Joes like you.

Such as the lovely lady at the Tesco checkout counter I met on Wednesday.

I was going to bring this subject up earlier but I thought I would sit on it for a while and share it with everyone when I needed to get myself back on the front page.

Parallel lives? Community segregation? Do the people who make these comments actually live in the North West?

There’s more integration going on than ever before.

I get threatened by young Asian drivers tailgating me and I get annoyed by young white kids who can’t handle their drink.

In fact if I was to reverse that statement I am sure it would still make sense.

We all pay too much tax, eat the wrong foods and our children don’t listen to us.

I hate driving, I detest shopping and the fact that I have no money left in my account at the end of the month.

More integration?. I suggest that all the Muslim blokes with beards start going to pubs.

That would make everyone happy, or would it? Every time I go into a pub some bloke shouts out ‘Taxi!’

On top of all of that we have a new set of fundamentalists in our midst.

NO...not the religous type but the ones who love to debate, and if you don’t debate it means you are wrong.

Just yesterday I got into an argument with one of these new extremists.

I said I thought the veil wasn’t a huge problem and she said I was stuck in the Middle Ages.

Eventually she won the argument because she shouted me down.

Which kind of defeated the whole purpose of the argument in many respects.

The point I make is that the veil, the Hijab or anything else that makes us different are not the real issues at all.

The real issue is that we are British and we are generally going through the same mundane stuff as each other.

Sometimes life is good and sometimes life is difficult.

Just don’t make it more miserable than it already is.

Source: lancashiretelegraph.co.uk 




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Readers have left 6 comments.
Khadeja Khan: Quote

There is a lot of truth and common sense in this article. We don't have to agree with all of it to see this.

After all, freedom of speech does not mean that only two sides of an argument exist, nor that only one is prmitted to make its point.

Many but not all of our worries are similar. It is a pity some of us are not integrated enough to recognise this too!!
(1) 2006-10-14 13:22:44
RE: Khadeja Khan: Quote

Can you please tell us, what more can we do to integrate ourselves, and in what way are we not integrated?

We are being attacked from left, right, and centre without a pause. But it is always us who needs to reform. If you can come up with a comprehensive list and suggestions, we will do our outmost to make further efforts.

Thankyou.
(2) 2006-10-14 14:36:42
Kathy: Quote

There is so much talk about segregation and intergration since Straw opened his mouth about the veil. Well we should all look at ourselves and ask 'What is intergration really all about?' I certainly do not want to intergrate with some of the residents of my home town even though they are of the same race as me (white anglo-saxon) because they do not share my ideas of behaviour, morals or anything else for that matter. I would not be seen dead with most of these drug taking criminals who live on the council estates near to my home. No I am not a snob either. I am a working class 'normal' person but I will not intergrate with people who I do not like and who do not hold my values. On the other hand I have several Asian and Muslim friends.
(3) 2006-10-14 16:47:48
SD: Quote

We've had the 'multiculturalism isn't working' debate, and the 'segregation isn't helping' debate and every other debate you can have about what makes us all different.i love walking down the street, feeling comfortable in my Hijab, whilst others are comfortable in their latest designer brands, or shalwar kameez or jeans or skirts or whatever other item of clothing you can think of. i take the things I like from many cultures and bring them into my own. I love british and italian food, I just add a little spice. I love the dresses on the high street, I just wear them with trousers. This article is right, most of the day-to-day problems we face are the same. We never have enough money and I think most of us feel like society has gone to pot. That does NOT mean that we don't have cultural problems. but these are not as devisive as the media claims them to be.lets use some common sense.
(4) 2006-10-14 21:00:42
Jack Maclean: Quote

A country can be as 'multi-cultural' as it is led to believe it is, and 'celebrate' as much of it's non generic culture as it may like as long as it is not a politicised culture that takes the specious liberty inherent in 'diversity' at its word so as to prevail over -in time,the existing status quo(s).

In the UK the veil is migrating from an habitually worn clothing artefact among the lower socio economic class,to that of a unifying and tactifully deployed means of political activism among the higher educated.

Things are bound to get a bit choppy.
(5) 2006-10-16 16:13:01
RE: Jack Maclean: Quote

Jack I do not know what you are pandering to, can you further clarify as to what you mean by saying, one can celebrate a non generic culture as long as it is not politicised.
Does this mean that those who refused to believe in the lies spun by the government in attacking Afghanistan and Iraq are politicised. Is this not a question of morality, right and wrong, truth and falsehood, international law, human rights violation, so on and so forth. Are you trying to silence those who have a conscience (Muslim or non Muslim) by your new quasi definition. As for your belief that a small community of 1.6 million Muslim will prevail over time, the status quo of 60 million, is simply playing with ones prejudice beliefs.

You further go on to propagating your imbalanced view that the veil is somehow a political statement. First of all this is not something you should be concerned with, it is a matter of personal belief. Nobody will ever force you or anyone else to wear the veil. A tiny portion of females in the Muslim community, wish to wear the veil which is their personal choice and right.
(6) 2006-10-18 06:07:47
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