Forty Years In Birmingham Have Taught Me Nigel Farage Is Wrong About Integration

Nigel Farage has been banging on again about migration.  The ‘great patriot’ has been in the United States running down our country. Addressing an audience of young libertarians at Lock Haven University in Pennsylvania, Farage boldly asserted there are “whole streets in Oldham of people who have lived in my country for over 30 years who don’t speak a word of English”.

The last Census tells a different story. Just 1% of people in Oldham speak ‘no’ English and 94% of households have at least one person with English as their main language, as HuffPost editor Jimmy Leach, born and brought up in Oldham, responded in these pages on 29 April.

This is a familiar story. Farage never has a good word to say about migrants. He is forever whipping up fear and distrust about people who have come and settled in Britain. He claims that these newcomers can’t become part of British society. He’s wrong: they can and they do.

It was similar 50 years ago when Farage’s forerunner Enoch Powell issued his bloodcurdling ‘rivers of blood’ speech in Birmingham. Yet his doomsday predictions never arrived. I’ve lived in Birmingham for the past forty years. Today 44% of the city’s population have a migrant background with around half of that number having been born abroad. The contrast with the situation on my arrival in 1977 is palpable. Then Birmingham lived in the shadow of Powell. The city had no black or Asian councillors; the National Front was a constant menace; police relations with black and Asian residents were grim, especially after the Handsworth riots.

But changes were already underway: UB40 and The Specials were emerging as top-line, mixed-race bands playing new kinds of hybrid popular music; three black footballers – Cyrille Regis, Laurie Cunningham and Brendon Batson – were making the breakthrough at nearby West Bromwich Albion; local Brummies were going in increasing numbers to Indian and Chinese restaurants across the city.  My new book, Our City: Migrants and the Making of Modern Birmingham interviews fifty migrants who’ve come to the city over the last fifty years and captures this transition in both the workplace and wider society.

Today, mixed workplaces are the norm: in factories and offices; hi-tech science parks and hospitals. At Aston and Birmingham City universities around 50% of the students come from ethnic minority backgrounds, many from across Greater Birmingham. A third of the city councillors are from ethnic minorities. 5% of the households in the city are mixed-race. As one of my interviewees puts it, “Of course, inter-marriage is happening… our preference is for our kids to marry Indians. But where inter-marriage does happen, we are not going to be Taliban about it.” This is a city that feels comfortable in its own diversity.

Of course, problems and tensions remain, worsened by a decade of wage stagnation and austerity. As the Indian-born, Nobel prize-winning economist Amartya Sen has warned, a certain type of multiculturalism lapses too often into plural monoculturalism, where some wish to retain a separate, ‘fenced off’ identity, with different ethnic communities living side-by-side but with little, if any, interaction. This is undoubtedly true of parts of some UK towns, as Leach’s article suggests. But it is not inevitable. Rather, we need policies and initiatives that see integration and social change as a two-way process dependent on the host society itself recognising difference and acknowledging that the process of integration means that it changes too. But it also requires newcomers to want to integrate. In other words, there is change on all sides: it’s a two-way street.

My book shows how the migrant experience has reshaped Birmingham: from its football teams and terraces to its food culture; from its workplaces to its universities; from its bedrooms to its popular music. And that’s a microcosm for other cities and the country as a whole. When Liverpool, Spurs, Chelsea and Arsenal made a clean sweep of reaching this year’s European finals, no-one complained that all the goals had been scored by migrants.

There is no going back to Farage’s monocultural world of the 1950s. People with a migrant background are here to stay. They are part of the fabric of modern Britain. My interviewees have a sense of place: they have put down roots, see Birmingham as their home, and have an affection and affinity with the city and the country. Their integration has been a positive story that is all too rarely told. That’s a vision of the future which all who believe that people are born equal should be happy to articulate.

Jon Bloomfield is author of ‘Our City: Migrants and the Making of Modern Birmingham’, published by Unbound