Hindu and Muslim leaders in Leicester have called on “inciters of hatred” within their community to put an end to weeks of violent disturbances. Photo: Sky News

By / Byline Times

AG: The disturbances are a surprise because, from the outside, Leicester always looks to be one of those places where multiculturalism works very successfully.

SA: You’d be absolutely right to think that Leicester has been the byword for diversity; cohesion. Yes, we’ve had our problems, but we are always seen as a beacon for other cities around the world… Traditionally, this area of Leicester is where many migrants first moved to in the city. It was the place where I landed from Africa, along with my Hindu brothers and sisters and Sikh brothers and sisters in the 70s.

That was the area I grew up in. It’s cohesive, we went to school together, we grew up together, we played football together. And we worked together. Yes, we had our issues, every society does, but nothing to this extent and never on the lines of religion.

The violence flared initially at the end of August following an India versus Pakistan cricket match

India and Pakistan have been playing cricket for decades. One wins, the other loses. There’s always a little bit of cheering, little bit of banter. It has never, to my knowledge, erupted into violence in our city. In fact, the majority of the people in Leicester who have Muslim heritage are from India, so a lot of them who follow cricket support India.

So what’s changed?

There are two strands driving what is happening in Leicester.

One is, we have had a very new community arrive in this city [from the west of India]. They (and when I say ‘they’ I don’t mean the whole community, but parts of the community) have taken a little bit of time to settle into the norms of the area – the culture. So, for example, drinking out of hours, loud music, partying, littering, etc., which causes friction in any community.  This then increases to loud music being played at prayer times, loud music being played in cars and hooting outside the mosque after cricket matches on independence days, etc. So this all adds to the anxiety in the community. Individuals then drink at night, they harass or hassle women going by, but it’s not because they’re Islamophobic, it’s because they’re drunk.

Unfortunately, our authorities and our police have not got a handle on this and resentment has been allowed to fester and grow between different communities.

The second issue is that there has been an undercurrent of the RSS (Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh) and [Hindu] nationalism creeping into our city. Some of these members of the new community have come to this country from an India which is in the fervour of nationalism, and the RSS, so they have come with a background of [Hindu] supremacy.

What is the RSS?

The RSS has a nationalistic agenda. It’s not Hinduism. Hinduism is a great religion and it’s a generally peaceful religion. RSS was an ideology that was formulated approximately 100 years ago as a theory of the supremacy of the Hindu community over everybody else.

So RSS were against the secular formation of India, and the individual who assassinated Mahatma Gandhi belonged to the RSS. Now it has a political wing, the BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party), which is in power in India [under Prime Minister Narendra Modi].

This story was originally published in bylinetimes.com . Read the full story here