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Editorial:
Minority Report Comment:
Racism in Ulster: Up-front and Ugly From
the Director: Naming Our Sin Faith
in Ulster: Facing Up to Diversity Faith
and Practice Interview
with Rose Ozo: Where the Heart Is Craigavon:
Religious Liberty in the Shadow of Drumcree
Review:
On Eagle's Wing Review:
Conflict, Controversy and Co-operation Review:
The Subversive Manifesto Review:
L is for Lifestyle Review:
It Will Not Be Taken Away From Her Review:
Prophetic Untimeliness: A Challenge to the Idol of Relevance Review:
Two Little Boys Review:
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comment: SOME MONTHS AGO a friend who had just got out of hospital was reading the papers about the upsurge of racist attacks in South Belfast. He felt so angry, Its only a matter of time, Ken, he said, before somebody gets killed. Some of the Filipino nurses who looked after me in the Royal were the ones chased down the Donegall Road by a pack of thugs. It was this kind of incident that led The Guardian to label Belfast The Race-Hate Capital of Europe. Sadly, there are chilling statistics to back that up. While racial attacks in England and Wales were running at 12.6 per 1000 of the ethnic population, in Northern Ireland the figure for the same period was 16.4. Belfast is the epicentre for such incidents, but the virus has spread to Coleraine, Ballymena, Dungannon, Cookstown and Portadown. If it hasnt yet reached where you live, its on its way. Exploring more deeply into our psyche, Dr Monica McWilliams citing University of Ulster research concluded, People here exhibit as much racism as they do sectarianism. Recently, Anna Mawah Lo of the Chinese Welfare Association told me her story. I was walking into Belfast one evening about 5.30pm when suddenly, out of the crowds on the pavement four young men appeared, walking directly towards me. They started taunting me and shouting abuse. I manoevered myself to the other side of the pavement to get past them, but within seconds one of them came up behind me and kicked me ferociously on the back of the legs. I stood there, stunned and shaken. There were lots of people around, but nobody came over to ask me how I was. These men then ran across to the other side of the road and continued to hurl abuse and laugh. Not a soul said anything to them. The general public just walked on by; they didnt even bat an eyelid. Jamal Iweida, a Muslim from Palestine, came to study at Queens in 1995. He writes, When I first came here there were no problems. The majority of people were kind. Muslims have been living in Belfast for 100 years and today we are an integral part of the social, educational and economic life. In recent years we have experienced a nastier side to Northern Irish society. Today the one thing I long for is that my children can walk down the street and not be called names or have people set their dogs on them. It would be wrong to exaggerate the overt racism in our community (read again Jamals positive comments), but there is a silent racism just under the surface. Recently some Indian friends phoned me in distress. They had gone to live in one of our neatlykept villages. They told me that in the previous 18 months nobody had knocked their door to welcome them to the neighbourhood. I had encouraged them to visit the local churches, naively convinced that they would receive a warm welcome. We tried that, Ken. they said. We visited the Presbyterian church, the Church of Ireland, the Catholic church and a few others, but nobody said hello or asked us how we were. Even the ministers were disinterested, except for one. Eventually they asked a man in a local shop why people were distant. I dont like to say this to your face, he replied, but youre black and people round here dont like black people. Their final question still haunts me, Why are church people here so cold towards my wife and me? Theyre our brothers and sisters, arent they? How should we respond to the emerging racism around us? How should we react when a family near us is intimidated and attacked? Here are some suggestions Ive been trying to work through in South Belfast. Refocus on the
life God calls you to live in your community Assess your emotional
involvement with the issue Change your lifestyle Open up the issue
in your church Racism in Ulster presents an ugly face. Do Anna Mawah Los observations of the people around her the day she was kicked apply to us? They didnt even bat an eyelid. RT REV DR KEN NEWELL is minister of Fitzroy Presbyterian Church in South Belfast and is currently the Moderator of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland. |
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