Immigration - The Bigger Picture

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    Immigration: The bigger pictureWhile the politicians try to score points on the subject, those involved just get on with it.Kunal Dutta and Jane Merrick investigate the reality of the immigrant experience, while eightnewcomers tell their stories

    Sunday, 17 April 2011

    Tomas Jurjonas was 18 and had just finished school when he and a friend jumped into a carand drove to England from Lithuania. When Tomas first arrived in Worthing, West Sussex, theBritish-born postman who delivered his mail every day helped him with the English on his CV.His first job was in the kitchens of a Turkish restaurant on the town's Marine Parade. Six

    years later, he is head chef.

    "Worthing is a small town and I think it is difficult when you are new and people are notexpecting you. After they get used to seeing you, they don't insult you any more," he says.

    Tomas's experience of living in the UK has not always been happy early on he sufferedabuse and prejudice. "There have been times where I have been so lonely that I remembergoing to the end of the pier and crying. I remember once being down to my last 100 eurosgiven to me by my mother in case things did not work out. I was so close to cashing it in andgoing home.

    "But she urged me to stay, and said things would get better.

    "Nowadays I feel very friendly towards the local community and love hearing their stories. Ialso have made many English friends."

    Tomas's account and the stories of other immigrants living in Britain that we publish today paints a much more complex picture than that portrayed by David Cameron last week.

    The Prime Minister spoke of immigrants' unwillingness to learn English, clashing with localresidents, and creating "discomfort and disjointedness" in communities following the "largestinflux" in British history. Mr Cameron sparked a cabinet row by pledging to reduce annualmigration from hundreds of thousands to tens of thousands a year, a limit which was not inthe coalition agreement.

    Behind the figures and cabinet infighting, in towns across the UK, the story is richer, and

    more nuanced. From Tomas's helpful postman to the woman from Nairobi living in Falkirkwhose nine-year-old son would rather play for Scotland than Kenya, we reveal howimmigrants are integrating with local communities.

    Our stories confirm, however, that immigration in Cameron's Britain is not without problems.The people we spoke to have experienced racism, abuse and alienation, while a number ofreports have shown that immigrants from all over the world have faced significant hostilityand even attacks from their neighbours in the UK.

    Writing in this paper today, the former Labour minister Margaret Hodge agrees with MrCameron that the previous government failed to tackle immigration. Mrs Hodge says Labourfailed to "respond to legitimate frustrations felt by those working-class communities".

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/immigration-the-bigger-picture-2269074.htmlhttp://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/immigration-the-bigger-picture-2269074.htmlhttp://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/immigration-the-bigger-picture-2269074.htmlhttp://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/immigration-the-bigger-picture-2269074.html
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    And a new report by the University of Brighton, examining racism in seaside towns, finds thatwhile some centres have become more multicultural a "dated, uninformed attitude todiversity" still prevails. "What might be celebrated as 'tradition' and 'nostalgia' for somepeople in the seaside towns ... is often perceived differently by minority ethnic groups," thepaper's author, Daniel Burdsey, argues.

    "These notions are frequently perceived to have racialised connotations, sustaining thewhiteness of [certain] towns and contributing to feelings of exclusion among minority ethnicgroups," he says.

    During our research, we spoke to a number of businesses. Some, for example, a taxi firm inSt Leonards, East Sussex, were forthright in their views. "I'm sorry, mate, we only haveBritish drivers here," one operator said. "Most ethnics don't speak good enough English andtend to want to stick together anyway. Especially in times of recession, they're simply notworth the risk."

    But the stories also hint at the economic and cultural benefits immigration has brought.Immigrants contribute 6bn to the UK economy, according to Treasury figures.

    One of the more surprising elements of the interviews is a sense that many immigrants aremore focused on their own goals and ambitions than concerned about being the victims ofracism or community tensions.

    Despite seven attacks on his shop in the past two months, Nanda Vayanaperumal, ashopkeeper in Portsmouth, was determined that he would stay open and maintain goodrelationships with his local customers. "We have chosen this track in life and these are simplythe risks we face. It's not a big problem. I am educated and have big plans for the future,but I can only get there if I make this work first."

    This weekend there are calls for a "larger narrative of the migrant debate" in the wake of MrCameron's speech, in which he called for "good, not mass immigration".

    Rob Berkeley, director of the Runnymede Trust, said: "The Tories' lack of interest in thereality behind the numbers has done very little other than to confuse people further andtriangulate the BNP.

    "Whether 200,000 people have arrived in the UK in the last year or not is simply not theissue. Nearly a million people are out of work and the bigger structural issues of thegovernment are being disrupted by an immigration debate that suggests short-term thinkingand electioneering."

    Nanda Vayanaperumal, 33

    From India. Newsagent, Paulsgrove, Portsmouth

    It would have been easy for me to land up in one of the bigger cities like London orBirmingham. But you cannot just arrive and set up a business anywhere. You have to thinkstrategically. The competition between retailers is fierce, particularly in large multiculturalcities like London or Birmingham. So I have to choose this area because it is much smallerand there are not that many shops here.

    This is the way of making my living and making a better life for myself. I am educated andhave bigger plans for the future but can only get there if I make this work first.

    This is a small community, and many people have strong opinions. I don't want to cause anyproblems. I just want to run a peaceful business. Many of my customers know that, and Ikeep good relationships with them.

    Sometimes you do get frustrating incidents. The shop has been attacked nine times in thelast two months. I recently had a guy come to the door with his face covered with a scarf.

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    He came in with a tub of paint and splashed it in my shop. That's really bad and can makeme really worried to be here.

    Most people, though, are just glad a shop like this is in the community, and appreciate it forproviding what they want, on their doorstep. The majority of people want to shop here, andI have some really good customers, many of whom are trying to help.

    Shahid Ali, 40

    From Pakistan. Taxi driver, Newport, Wales

    My family moved over to Newport in 1964 and there I was raised. Someone from my parents'village in Pakistan had come over to Wales and a stream of others had followed. At that timeit was usually just the men. Newport is generally OK. There's less crime here than many ofthe big cities. Growing up here I didn't really notice racism. But as soon as you get older,leave school and go into the workplace, then it starts to become more prevalent.

    Racism and discrimination go on all the time. The laws are in place for racism it's just thatit's done under the carpet, isn't it? What can you do? If you go to a place for a job or forwork and they're racist, they're not going to say it's because of your colour. It's

    institutionalism, isn't it?

    Wales is my home. You never fit in 100 per cent, but it's still classed as home. Generally inworkplaces and when you're out and about, you do notice racism. You just get on with it;I'm not going to ponder over it. Most times you have to work twice as hard to get the sameposition. You have to prove yourself twice as hard for the same thing as anyone else.

    Serah Kimuyu, 46

    From Kenya. Acting general manager, Falkirk, Scotland

    In March 2006 I left Kenya with my two children to join my husband who was working in theScottish Highlands as a chef. We lived in a nice, beautiful village called Tyndrum. It was alovely place to live and everyone was friendly, but it was in the middle of nowhere. I wantedto get a job in something I was trained in.

    So we moved to Callander, which was completely different from Tyndrum; it was a busierplace, where everyone minded their own business, so it was harder making new friends, andwe felt very isolated. No one called you names or anything, but you'd just feeluncomfortable.

    I moved to Falkirk where I felt even more isolated because people were even more distantwith us. I kept wondering: "Why? At least give me a chance."

    My 17-year-old daughter hasn't really had any problems with racism. It's harder for my nine-year-old son. Sometimes his friends can be playful and then they will ignore him. That said,he loves this country. He's obsessed with football and he said he'd rather play for Scotlandthan Kenya. When I asked him why, he said it was because his friends are here and this ishis home.

    Ahmad Samar, 28

    From Iran. Taxi driver, St Leonards-on-Sea, East Sussex

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    I remember when Saddam dropped chemicals in my city of Sardash, where I lived. I was alittle boy holding my father's hand during the Iran-Iraq war of 1988. I am still affected bythat moment, and it makes many of the problems here very small by comparison.

    I have been all over Europe and spent time in Birmingham and London. But I have alwaysreturned to St Leonards. Eight years ago, this was the place for rich people. Now it feels likea dumping ground for some of the poorest people in the country. There is also a big drugproblem here. Things can be rough. I frequently see robberies and experience racism. A lot ofthis has become worse under the government of David Cameron. Now it just seems likeeveryone is struggling and unhappy.

    Of course there is racism here but it happens all over the world and you choose whether ornot you want to take it seriously. But I think it's all about how you deal with that and yourown emotions. That's how you earn respect.

    Life is not hard. Life is what you make it. One thing I know is that if you have brains and astrong mind, no one can take that away from you. No matter where it is you stand and makea go of life, it is the same sky that is above you.

    Ibrahim Harbi, 33

    From Somalia. National co-ordinator for Somali Integration Society, Cardiff

    When we moved to England, we faced all of the difficulties someone faces when they moveto a new country, the language, the culture. Where we moved in London there were a lot ofpeople with an Asian background. I went to school there. It wasn't easy, but I think it wouldhave been more difficult if I had moved to an area only full of indigenous people.

    I moved to Wales because I went to Cardiff University and there were contacts to theSomalian community, one of the oldest minority groups in the UK. I realised how isolated theywere and they felt they were the victim of negative press. Somalis have made a largecontribution to the fabric of Wales, and I don't think that was understood by the mainstreamcommunity. People felt there was a lack of understanding.

    I have never experienced people shouting at me in the street, however. Things are gettingbetter but we still have a long way to go.

    Jalf Ali, 36

    From Bangladesh. Property investor, Newcastle

    My father came here in 1962, and for the first few years he was in Manchester and Stoke.He then moved to Newcastle in 1968, and in 1969 he set up his own business. He went backto Bangladesh to get married and I was born there. In 1980, when I was five years old, we

    came to England.

    My father was one of the first Bengali people to settle in Newcastle, but we moved to aplace called Fenham, which had more Asian people than other areas. The community waspretty small in Newcastle. We all knew each other well.

    Growing up, I was constantly faced with racism. We used to go to a youth club in Newcastleand we had to go as a group so that we were less likely to be attacked. There's still racismin the area, but many people are just naive. They don't have black or Asian people in thearea and their only contact with them is through shopkeepers or taxi drivers.

    Last week I was walking through town, and outside the pub people started shouting"Mohammad". I go to a lot of football matches, and in the past black players used to get

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    ripped to pieces. Now, I've noticed a definite shift in the language. There's less open racism.

    James Fayiah, 24

    From Sierra Leone. Support worker at Asphaleia, a youth welfare charity in Worthing, WestSussex

    In Sierra Leone there was another war, so we decided to come to Britain for a better life, on16 June 2004. I arrived at Gatwick airport and was seeking asylum, and they told me if Icame to Worthing they would be able to help me. I have experienced racism many times overthe years, but now I don't care. I feel part of a community so it does not bother me.

    I used to work in Subway and people would come there as they were leaving nightclubs andwould say "You nigger, go back home" and "Go back to your country. We don't want youhere." It still happens occasionally, but while I used to take it personally, now I don't care. Ijust ignore it.

    I have English friends and people from my country, but I hang around most with people fromother African countries. But I feel 100 per cent safe as people know if something was tohappen the police wouldn't take it easy. They would be hard on it.

    Two years ago, as I was going out of work, there were bouncers outside this one placehitting a guy from my country. He said, "Please call the police" so I went to try and one ofthese two bouncers attacked me.

    I was happy when I saw the police coming, but they didn't ask me any questions andarrested me. After 15 hours in the police station they watched the CCTV and realised I didn'tdo anything wrong. That made me very sad.

    Everywhere you go in the world there are two or three people doing stupid things anyway. Itis not the majority.

    Agnieszka Tarajko, 29

    From Poland. Hotel manager, Manchester

    I arrived in the UK in 2006. There were no more career opportunities for me in Poland, so Idecided to join my husband and start a new life in the UK.

    I was really scared when I first arrived. Every day at work was a little scary, as I was goingto be told that I was from Poland and taking other people's jobs, so I was terrified andscared at the beginning. But I think the mentality has changed in this country.

    I own my own beautiful house and I have passed my driving test which I wasn't able to do in

    Poland ever. My confidence has been built up a lot and I am not scared any more.

    It was quite upsetting at the beginning [the comments] especially when you are notconfident and don't know how to respond. But after speaking to my colleagues and Britishpeople who liked me or loved me I got used to it. Eventually the comments just stopped.

    I would agree that there are a lot of people coming into the country. It is not as much as itwas a few years ago but I understand that it could be a problem, and I understand why[Cameron] says that about immigration.

    I think we had too many people and there was a competition for jobs, you can physically seethat. If the numbers we had five years ago were going to start again, then something needsto be done, but if it stays at the same level as now, we are fine.