Steadfast
Contents
- issue 17 Summer 2006
Steadfast Demo 
England: the mother of modern sport - Robert Henderson
Letters 
Progress for the English Community - Tony Linsell 
Birds of the Seashore - Edward Canfield 
The Legacy of William Barnes - Don Briggs 
Law & Democracy - Lawrence Middlehurst
Progress
for the English Community
Tony Linsell
The
English Democrats Party magazine English Voice carried an article calling
for members of the party to embrace an inclusive Englishness. I was
given the opportunity to reply to the article and that reply is printed
below. There is no need to print the 'offending' article - you will
get the drift of it from my response.
I was surprised
that no one responded to the piece in The English Voice by
Matthew Aldridge, Englishness
in the eye of the beholder?
Perhaps, like me, others thought someone else was bound to challenge
him.
Matthew Aldridge adopts the usual approach of progressives in that he
assumes that all descent and right thinking (PC) people share his somewhat
confused and ultra-inclusive notions of Englishness - it is clear that
he believes anyone who has a different view must be rightwing and extremist.
After an appeal to emotion and authority (Trevor Phillips and the Queen)
rather than any discernable rational argument, Matthew urges members
of the EDP to promote a more inclusive and plural English identity.
It seems that he is one of those who would agree with the progressive
slogan, 'Whatever your ethnicity you can be English if you want to be.'
He seems to suggest that Englishness has such little substance that
anyone can identify themselves, or someone else, as English - as if
it is a matter of personal choice - or even whim.
In my view, an ethnic group is an extended family - a group of people
who share an ancestry, history and culture. Which means that they share
a language and a unique mix of values and perceptions. They have a way
of life (a mix of customs, attitudes, and beliefs) that is expressed
in such things as architecture, clothing, dance, song, and the crops
they grow and food they eat and the way they cook it. Perhaps the most
important aspect of ethnicity is that it is an instinctive community
of the mind, a place where no foreigner can go. Thus when we are asked
what are the characteristics of English ethnicity - or 'what does it
mean to be English?' - we need only reply that it is indefinable - there
are no firm boundaries and no columns of tick-boxes.
In addition to the above, membership of an ethnic group is dependent
upon acceptance of the individual by the group. If I am a Francophile,
speak French and live in France it does not mean that the French will
accept me as one of them. If I go to live in Scotland, drink whisky,
wear a kilt, buy a DVD of Braveheart and eat porridge and haggis
it's probable that I will still be called an English bastard. When,
as often happens, someone tells me that they have an Italian / Asian
/ Jamaican / or whatever friend who is in many ways more English than
the English and ought to be accepted as English, I simply reply that
if their friend was English he would not be described as an Italian
/ Asian / Jamaican / or whatever friend, and there would be no need
to make a case for him because he would be accepted as part of the English
community and he would naturally feel that he belonged. Likewise I am
often asked, "But surely Ian Wright is English? He supports the
England team and says he is English." No he is not a member of
the ethnic-English community. His communal history is not that of the
English community and it is probable that his ancestors have played
no part in English history except perhaps as outsiders. Put simply,
his origins and family history are not in England or the English community.
This does not mean that I do not respect him, like him, and think he
was a great footballer.
It might surprise Matthew Aldridge but in English law an ethnic group
is defined in much the same way as I have above. The House of Lords,
in Mandla v Lee, defined an ethnic group in the following way.
An ethnic group is a group that regards itself or is regarded by others
as a distinct community by virtue of certain characteristics that will
help to distinguish the group from the surrounding community. Two of
these characteristics are essential:
a. a long shared history, of which the
group is conscious as distinguishing it from other groups, and the memory
of which it keeps alive; and
b. a cultural tradition of its own, including
family and social customs and manners, often but not necessarily associated
with religious observance.
Other relevant characteristics (one or more of which will commonly be
found) are:
c. either a common geographical origin
or descent from a small number of common ancestors;
d. a common language, not necessarily peculiar
to the group;
e. a common literature peculiar to the
group;
f. a common religion different from that
of neighbouring groups or from the general community surrounding it;
and
g. being a minority or being an oppressed
or a dominant group within a larger community. Both a conquered people
(say, the inhabitants of England shortly after the Norman conquest)
and their conquerors might be ethnic groups.
As can be seen from the above, many of the groups mentioned on ethnic
monitoring forms, such as Asian, Black, White, are quasi-ethnic groups
which have been invented by the Commission for Racial Equality for political
and ideological reasons. In short, ethnic monitoring forms do not monitor
ethnicity as defined in law. All becomes clear when census and ethnic
monitoring forms are seen as political and ideological tools.
The quasi-ethnic groups have been created by an administrative sleight-of-hand
so that favoured racial groups can be granted the privileges enjoyed
by ethnic groups - such as the right to discriminate and the right to
gain access to government funding. The census form is important because
it serves as a model for the ethnic monitoring forms used by businesses,
government departments, and other organisations. Little if any statistical
information is collected about ethnic groups that are not specifically
included in ethnic monitoring forms. One of the consequences of this
is that excluded groups, such as the English, become invisible to officialdom.
In short, it is difficult for excluded groups to demonstrate their special
needs and the discrimination they face, or to demand resource allocation
and policies which tackle that need and discrimination. It is no accident
that the ethnic-English are an excluded group.
The Good News
The 2011 census form for Scotland is to have an ethnic-English tick-box
but until very recently the Office for National Statistics (ONS) has
resisted the idea of doing the same for England. They announced earlier
this year that on the next census form for England respondents would
be able to identify themselves as English. This mislead many (as it
was probably meant to) because the intention was not to include the
'English' tick-box under, 'What is your ethnicity' but to ask a separate
question, 'What do you consider your national identity to be'. The tick-box
options being 'English', 'Scottish', 'Welsh', with 'Other - write in'.
This question and the tick-box options seemed designed to meet the wishes
of people like Matthew Aldridge by encouraging people who live in England
to identify themselves as English. In other words, it is possible for
a Somali or Kurd or Palestinian or whoever to retain their 'ethnic identity'
and, for whatever reason, choose to adopt an English 'national identity'.
After lengthy correspondence with ONS it seems that they 'might' also
put an 'English' tick-box under the ethnicity question but we will not
know for sure until they publish the 2007 Test Census for England on
their website in September. I have also been in lengthy correspondence
with the Commission for Racial Equality (CRE) and you might be surprised
to learn that they support the idea of an ethnic-English tick-box. Further,
CRE has recently suggested (on its website) that organisations include
an ethnic-English tick-box on their ethnic monitoring forms. I feel
that we are making real progress and that official recognition of the
English as a racial group and as a quasi-ethnic group for monitoring
and other purposes will have very important consequences.
In addition to claiming an English 'national identity'(inclusive) and
'ethnic identity' (exclusive) the English are one of the few groups
recognised in law (for the purposes of the Race Relations Act 1976)
as a 'racial group' (exclusive). There are therefore three English identities.
If Matthew wants to assert and promote an inclusive English national
identity based on place of residence or birth he is free to do so. I
am also free to assert and promote my English ethnicity and take proper
advantage of the fact that I belong to a recognised racial group. Those
who mock or otherwise insult me and others for asserting our identity
might be thought guilty of racial harassment. No I am not a right-wing
extremist, merely an unhyphenated Englishman who wants equal treatment
with the members of other ethnic groups.
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