As reported by DailyMail UK ,
There are almost no white residents to be found in Savile
Town , Yorkshire .
The last census found only 48 of 4,033 people living there were white British.
From the window of her flat overlooking the canal path in a
suburb of Dewsbury in Yorkshire , a blonde
woman watches two female figures walking past as they chatter in a foreign
tongue.
Both the passers-by are covered in black Islamic gowns, only a
glimpse of their eyes show from the 2 in gap in the veils across their faces.
They, like many Muslim women who live here, speak little or no
English. Lots of them will have no contact with any person from another
religion or culture. Almost all have been brought to the UK to wed the
British men of south Asian heritage who have made this area their home.
The wives have restricted lives: bringing up children, cooking
for families, or going to women-only events at the huge local mosque run by the
Deobandis, a powerful sect of Islam whose most outspoken preachers have urged
followers not to mix with Christians, Jews or Hindus.
We are in Savile Town , one of the most racially homogeneous parts of Britain : not because everyone is an indigenous Yorkshire man or woman, but exactly the opposite.
In fact there are almost no white residents to be found in Savile Town .
Astonishingly, a detailed breakdown of the last census of 2011 recorded that
only 48 of the 4,033 people living here were white British.
This would not surprise the blonde Lorraine Matthews, looking
out at the ladies in burkas from her window. She is a 53-year-old dentist's
receptionist, one of the handful of white Britons left in Savile Town 's
grid of terrace streets. Almost all the other residents, according to that
census, have Pakistani or Indian backgrounds.
Their forebears were enticed to Savile Town
as cheap labour for back-breaking jobs in the woollen mills which had made
Dewsbury a renowned textile town.
A detailed breakdown of the last census of 2011 recorded that
only 48 of the 4,033 people living in Savile Town
were white British.
For however unpalatable it may be to British liberals, the fact
is that many Muslims here only want to live with those from their own culture.
These hard-working newcomers bought their own homes, and opened
corner shops that sold burkas, prayer mats and perfumes that contained no
alcohol, in line with the strictures of the Koran.
Soon the new arrivals had built the mosque which is designed to
accommodate 4,000 worshippers. Today, a Sharia court nearby — criticised in a
House of Lords report for discriminating against women in divorce and
matrimonial disputes — does brisk business espousing the strict Islamic justice
code.
Even the lady selling ice creams from a van during the summer wears
a burka, and the mobile butcher going round the streets offers only halal goat,
lamb and ostrich.
Stand in Savile
Town , as I have, and you
will see scores of boys in Islamic robes walking to and from lessons at the
mosque's madrasah school, where for hours at a time they rote-learn the Koran
by heart.
And, distressingly, every girl I saw — even those of six and
seven playing in the park — was wrapped up in a hijab and shoulder-to-toe-gown
lest a man glimpse her flesh.
Eight of the nine pubs in the area have shut because there are
hardly any local customers who drink alcohol. The hair salon, once giving stern
perms to Yorkshire ladies, closed down long
ago, the Western grocery and clothes shops, too.
Needless to say, with nowhere to socialise or shop for what they
like, the local white folk departed, first in a trickle, then a torrent.
(Mohammed Sidique Khan, the leader of the bombers who attacked London on July 7, 2005,
was brought up nearby. He bade farewell to his pregnant wife at their terrace
house before leading his fellow attackers to the capital to claim 52 innocent
lives in explosions on Tube trains and buses.)
Life in Savile Town was investigated earlier this year by Owen Bennett-Jones,
the BBC's former Pakistan
correspondent, who threw light on the influence of the Deobandi movement over
the Muslim population here.
Interviewed for the Radio 4 programme was Mufti Mohammed Pandor,
a civil servant and spokesman for the Deobandis. He arrived from India 's Gujarat
in 1964 as a small child with his family.
He lives near Savile
Town , and would call
himself a British Muslim. Yet he refused to let interviewer Bennett-Jones see
his wife when the reporter visited the couple's home, although she was
permitted to make the tea in the kitchen.
Pandor insists she is completely covered at almost all times,
allowing her only to raise her veil for passport checks at airports. His family
rarely watches British TV and says all music is un-Islamic.
Despite being a religious adviser to two universities — Bradford
and Huddersfield — he told the BBC that Muslim
men should only be permitted to enter higher education institutions to study
and pray, and 'not to look at women'.
'If Mohammed did not do it, we don't do it,' Pandor told the
BBC, saying the Deobandi are a 'back to basics' movement whose followers live
in the style of the Prophet's life, 14 centuries ago.
You might dismiss such desperately backward thinking as being
the preserve of a small outlandish sect, but the Deobandis run nearly half the
1,600 registered UK
mosques, and train 80 per cent of all domestic Islamic clerics who, in turn,
play a huge part in influencing the growing population of British Muslims.
Perhaps it's little surprise that the few indigenous Yorkshire
people remaining in Savile
Town feel somewhat beleaguered.
Lorraine Matthews, in the house near the canal, is outspoken in
her comments about the community in which she now lives: 'I wouldn't go out at
night on my own as it is dangerous if you're not from the Muslim community. It
isn't sensible for a woman to walk there after dark. The Asian lads gather on
the corners, they make you feel intimidated because they don't respect white
women.'
Yorkshire-born Jean Wood, 76, (pictured) a church-goer, is one long-time
resident who feels that she is being edged out
When I myself walked down South Street towards the mosque, figures
in burkas peered out of their lace-curtained windows in surprise at seeing an
uncovered woman's face.
I asked one tall teenager, wearing an Islamic cap and white
robes over his jeans, for directions to the mosque entrance. His response was
to spit at me and shout: 'Go away, you shouldn't be here. Don't come back.'
It is depressing to be confronted with such aggression. And I've
no doubt many Muslims, too, will feel distressed at such behaviour. Not all
British followers of Islam wish to live in areas where people of other faiths
or cultures might fear to tread.
Yet in places such as Savile
Town , the omens are not
good.
For however unpalatable it may be to British liberals, the fact
is that many Muslims here only want to live with those from their own culture.
Indeed, some of the few remaining non-Muslim residents say they
are regularly targeted by members of the local Islamic community who want to
buy their houses.
Not all British followers of Islam wish to live in areas where
people of other faiths or cultures might fear to tread.
Some have even received a knock on the door from complete
strangers in religious robes offering wads of cash in plastic bags to purchase
their homes.
Yorkshire-born Jean Wood, 76, a church-goer, is one long-time
resident who feels that she is being edged out. Her children beg her to move to
an area where she can share her retirement with the kind of people she grew up
with.
At her neat home on the edge of Savile Town ,
she told me the tale of what happened a day after her husband died suddenly
while sitting at the kitchen table.
'He had not gone 24 hours when a Muslim neighbour pushed a note
through the door saying she wanted to buy this house,' she remembers. 'We had
lived here all our married life. I was grieving, although the note did not
mention my loss.
'But I gathered my strength. I phoned the number on the piece of
paper and said my home was not for sale and never would be in my lifetime.'
They were brave words, but — inevitably — the Deobandis'
spokesman Mufti Pandor views it differently.
He described, on Radio 4, how 'white flight' ensued when his
family came to Savile
Town . 'Who was going to
buy the house next door to us?' said Pandor. 'It certainly wasn't going to be a
white guy . . . so my uncle bought it. Then there were two of us. So then guess
what happened? The bloke opposite said: 'Bugger this, I'm going' — so he left.'
It's not hard to see why, with suspicions running deep on both
sides of the cultural divide, Savile
Town is, for good or bad,
changing for ever.
Entire districts of British cities are becoming racially
segregated as white populations move out and the proportion of ethnic minorities
increases, a major report said yesterday.
The study, by Professor Ted Cantle, said cities were suffering
from deepening polarisation between white and minority groups that had gone
largely unnoticed by academics and politicians.
Professor Cantle named Slough, Birmingham ,
Leicester, Luton, Bradford and a series of London boroughs as ‘areas with an
increasingly dwindling white British population and growing minorities’.
Mohammed Tabrez Noorji, who runs his own butcher shop in
Blackburn, Lancashire , admits he has never
served a white Briton.
He said that census returns for small areas of cities showed
that some were even ‘tending more towards ghettoisation’.
Professor Cantle, the investigator called in by Tony Blair in
2001 to head an inquiry into race riots across northern cities, described the
effect as the ‘growing isolation of the white majority from minorities in urban
zones’.
Professor Cantle’s report – which attracted backing from
prominent Labour figures – did not use the American phrase ‘white flight’ to
describe the departure of white residents from cities and suburbs.
In an attempt to end racial segregation and improve the
prospects of black pupils, US schools were forced to adopt the hugely
controversial policy that became known as busing.
A series of court judgments in the 1960s allowed cities to
insist that pupils attend schools far from their own districts and suburbs.
‘Forced busing’ became a means of shipping pupils to schools
where it was considered they would improved the ethnic mix and the quality of
education.
The policy proved hugely unpopular. White parents demonstrated
in many cities, notably in Boston .
There were complaints from white parents that children were being moved to
dangerous areas, and that long periods spent on the buses harmed their
education.
Black parents were no more impressed: discipline in schools
where students were bused in was often said to have deteriorated rather than
improved, and parents were not convinced that their children’s education would
be better simply because they were sitting next to a white pupil.
By the 1980s is was largely accepted that the policy had failed
and gradually it was phased out.
However, it said it was clear that there had been a ‘decline of
the white British population in those towns and cities in absolute numbers and
relative to the increase in minorities in the same areas.
‘This results in a growing isolation of the white majority from
minorities in urban zones.’
The Cantle analysis used the word ‘ghetto’ to describe the way
some parts of British cities have developed. It said that while there was no
accepted definition of a ghetto, many agreed it meant areas where minority
groups made up 90 per cent of the population, or 80 per cent where a single
group was dominant.
The report’s demand for state-directed desegregation echoes the
controversial attempts to reverse racial division made by American cities in
the late 20th century, known as ‘busing’.
Professor Cantle, who after the 2001 riots warned that
populations in northern cities were living ‘parallel lives’, produced the
report, Is Segregation Increasing In The UK?, with Professor Eric Kaufmann of
Birkbeck College.
It was time for the Government to move in to stop the spread of
ethnic division, said Professor Cantle, who runs the iCoCo community cohesion
foundation. ‘This has gone under the radar, but it is time this became a
national priority because cohesion is at stake,’ he said.
‘The focus of policy needs to shift, this is not just about
minorities – politicians and policy-makers need to encourage white British
residents to remain in diverse areas; to choose, rather than avoid, diverse
areas when they do re-locate, encouraging similar choices with respect to
placing pupils in diverse schools; in other words to create a positive choice
for mixed areas and a shared society.’
The call for state intervention was backed by senior Labour
figure Chuka Umunna. The MP for Streatham said: ‘Integration is a two-way
street and all parts of society have a role to play in preventing the UK becoming
more fragmented.’ The report gives no indication of what policies might be
adopted to persuade whites to remain or move into minority areas, to help
minority families move into predominantly white areas, or to persuade parents
to send their children to ‘diverse’ schools.
Professor Cantle’s analysis said that in a number of towns there
has been ‘outward movement of white British population and an increase in the
minority population because of natural factors or inward migration’.
The report adds: ‘Given that the polarisation of wards has been
evident since at least 1991 and has been increasing, it is likely that this
will continue as the minority population continues to grow and the majority
continues to relocate.’
Source: DailyMail UK
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