‘Proud and Prejudiced’ was a programme that seemed to be
about two extremist groups: the English Defence League (EDL) and Al Maharijroun
(or whatever name they are currently operating under). From the outset, it is clear that the
programme makers are working within the premise that these are two groups of
extremists both of which are as bad as each other. Nothing could be further
from the truth.
One is a religious extremist group which represents an
extreme minority view amongst the Muslims in Britain. Another is a racist
organisation that has displayed its violent tendencies in public on numerous occasions
and is backed by sections of the media that perpetuate the racist undertones espoused
by the far right.
For all their ills, Al Muhajiroun have only carried out
insensitive political protests at inappropriate times. If white people had carried out the same kind
of protests then the reaction would have been very different. There is still a
sense that Muslims are not British or that Muslims are not part of our society,
part of us. The majority of British
Muslims dislike groups like Al Muhajiroun and their ilk. However, it is
important to note the climate in which they have emerged. Al Muhajiroun use foreign policy and treatment
of Muslims worldwide at the hands of the West as a recruiting tool. They target
the disenfranchised inner-city youth who are looking for an identity and fill
this void with a pseudo-Islamic identity which gives them affiliation to a
faith and the reestablishment of the Caliphate.
Al Muhajiroun is an extreme
minority born out of post-colonial conflict and a reaction to the Western
occupation, destruction, and division of Muslim lands.
The EDL on the other hand, are a product of Britain post New
Labour. From the football terraces, and
racist organisations throughout the country, they use the seemingly acceptable
veneer of fighting Islamic extremism to further a much more sinister agenda –
racism. The EDL have gone on racist
rampages up and down the country. There is numerous evidence of their links to
the BNP and other racist groups as well as videos online of EDL members
performing Nazi salutes and singing, “I hate Pakis more than you”. Their members are violent thugs have been
convicted of racist acts: putting a pigs head on a mosque for example. It is no
coincidence that the Norwegian mass murderer, Andres Breivik, expressed hisdesire to attend an EDL demo and cited the EDL as one of his influences. This
is not fighting Islamic extremism; it is out and out racism.
This documentary is an example of media organisations
commissioning sensationalist film making that masks the reality on the ground
and ignores the political, cultural and social history of the development of
extremism, because lazy journalism is easier than ethical journalism. It may be a convenient story to portray this
as two men that just don’t get along, almost like a playground scrap. Journalism is more than simplifying
complicated issues, it is about portraying struggles and issues in their
appropriate context. It is not balanced
or responsible journalism to merely give the two men half an hour each, it is
responsible journalism to ask why are people following Al Muhajiroun, and why
has the EDL grown so much?
The programme reduces a serious issue of racism and
Islamophobia to a personal vendetta between two men. It furthers the EDL’s
agenda and plays into their hands to represent Muslims as extremist terrorists:
men with massive beards, women you cannot see and children being indoctrinated.
Instead of highlighting the EDL’s violent racism, the only acts
of violence that have been highlighted are Safyul Islam slapping Tommy Robinson
and, later, Tommy Robinson headbutting one of his own rivals. The documentary
has totally missed out all the acts of violence from EDL’s inception to the
present day, including when the EDL smashed up Luton and Stoke. It is dangerous to ignore this violence. By turning
a blind eye to this violence, the programme risks becoming a platform from
which Tommy Robinson can spew their bile.
Although some people may laugh them off and say that they are just
lunatics with mad ideas, there are those who are disaffected and with whom the
EDL’s words and ideas will have resonance.
Although Unite Against Fascism were
mentioned a few times on the programme, they were never given any airtime. It was stated that the EDL have been opposed
by UAF wherever they have gone. Why were
they not interviewed for their views on these groups? To have interviewed UAF for a meaningful argument
against the EDL would have meant completely disregarding the foundations that
the programme was made on. It would have
meant acknowledging the fact that the EDL are not just made up of Tommy
Robinson’s mates out to protect the UK from the mores of extremist Muslims like
Sayful Islam, but that they are a violent, far-right organisation who pose a
real threat to our society. Hearing from
UAF would also have put up non-Muslim faces of those who oppose the EDL and
shown that, contrary to Robinson’s assertions, white people and other ethnic
groups like Jews, Hindus, Sikhs, Black people actively oppose these racists. But to do this the programme makers would
have to abandon their fantasy and flawed paradigm that this is some kind of scrap
between two men with laughable ideas.