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Changing places: Even as once-racist Britain became multicultural, the opposite is tr

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prasad1

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Are Britain and India changing places in social and cultural terms? When i first visited Britain 43 years ago it was a patently monocultural — a euphemism for racist — society, meant primarily for white Anglo-Saxon Protestants. Though the British economy needed cheap labour from its erstwhile ‘native’ colonies — largely doing menial jobs like cleaning lavatories in Heathrow airport — dark-skinned immigrants were looked on with dire suspicion.

Enoch Powell had made his infamous ‘Rivers of blood’ speech, evoking a Britain locked in violent inter-community conflict. If you were a ‘Paki’ — a generic term for all sub-continentals, irrespective of nationality — you risked being bashed.

Forty-odd years down the line this has totally changed. Today’s Britain — or ‘Cool Britannia’ as it calls itself — is overtly proud of its multiculturism, which includes people of all colours and creeds. In the higher echelons of the political and corporate worlds there are indeed ‘glass ceilings’ which restrict membership to an all-white elite. But racism as an everyday fact of life has been eliminated from British society.

The reverse might be said to hold true of India. Post-independence India joyously celebrated its cultural and social pluralism with the national mantra ‘In our diversity is our unity’. Today that slogan has become a cruel mockery of itself.

India’s once much-vaunted diversity is being demolished under the seemingly irresistible advance of the Hindi-Hindu steamroller of ‘cultural nationalism’, which seeks to impose a cookie-cutter homogeneity on what took pride in calling itself a ‘rainbow republic’ of many cultures and creeds.

The physical attacks on people from the northeast that have taken place in several parts of the country are just one instance of Indian society’s increasing intolerance of any difference or deviation from an alleged ‘norm’ of Indianness. To be ‘different’ in any way — in dress, appearance, customs or food habits — is to be in danger of being deemed an undesirable alien who, given half a chance, will subvert ‘Indian culture’ as seen through saffron-tinted spectacles.

This is nothing but a form of cultural racism which Britain abolished many years ago. And which India appears to have imported through the back door of post-colonial bigotry.
http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatime...&utm_campaign=TOInewHP&utm_medium=Widget_Stry
 
Millionaires love this culture and style of life. It is said that more than 40000 Indian millionaires (in dollars > 6.4 crores) have migrated to Britain with family to enjoy the rest of their life.
 
While the impact of racism might have come down in Britain, subject to verification, UK still maintains its religious identity.

The recent naming ceremony of the child from Royal Family was performed in Caterbury, the headquarters of Protestant Christianity. Still ceremonies are being performed in Churches only. There is no threat to its official religion yet. The situation may become different, once minorities have a say in politics and day to day life.

Did UK not participate in the grand alliance to fight against terror and kill innocent people.
 
Did UK not participate in the grand alliance to fight against terror and kill innocent people.

Who is this special people? In a declared or undeclared war, innocent people do get killed.
War kills, terroist kills, business kills, etc? So what is the solution?
 
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