Striking back against racist violence in the East End of London, 1968–1970

Author:

Ashe Stephen,Virdee Satnam,Brown Laurence

Abstract

This article tells the hitherto untold story of how different Pakistani organisations mobilised in response to racist violence and harassment in the east London Borough of Tower Hamlets (1968–1970). In telling this story, the authors analyse the problematic nature of official and public understandings of, and responses to, racist violence, and how it distorted the lives of racialised minorities. Drawing on original archival research carried out in 2014, this piece identifies the emergence of two distinct political repertoires from within the Pakistani community: the integrationist approach and the autonomous approach. The integrationist approach involving the Pakistani Welfare Association (PWA) and the National Federation of Pakistani Associations (NFPA) tried to address the problem through existing local state ‘race relations’ apparatuses and mainstream political channels, while at the same time re-establishing consent for the police as the agents of law and order. In contrast, a network of Black Power groups, anti-imperialists and socialists led by the Pakistani Progressive Party (PPP) and the Pakistani Workers’ Union (PWU) challenged both the local political leadership and the authority of the police in Tower Hamlets, while also undermining the stereotype of Asian people as ‘weak’ and ‘passive’. In recovering this lost episode of resistance to ‘Paki-bashing’, unleashed in the aftermath of Enoch Powell’s inflammatory speeches, this essay makes a contribution to the history of autonomous anti-racist collective action undertaken by racialised minorities in Britain.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Social Sciences,Sociology and Political Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Archeology,Anthropology,Archeology,Cultural Studies

Reference84 articles.

1. Hesse B. Beneath the Surface: racial harassment (Aldershot: Avebury, 1992), p. xxv. See also Fryer P., Staying Power: the history of black people in Britain (London: Pluto Press, 1984).

2. Racism, Class and the Racialized Outsider

3. Sivanandan A., Catching History on the Wing: race, culture and globalisation (London: Pluto Press, 2008), p. 120; Ramamurthy, Black Star, p. 12; Hiro D., Black British: White British (London: Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1971), p. 191.

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