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'I thought days of race hatred were over' - Riots take British Asians back to 1970s

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People gather outside a shop with boarded up windows on The Broadway in Southall following rioting, picture date 4 July 1981Image source, Getty Images

Mosques attacked with bricks and stones. Marchers chanting 鈥渨e want our country back.鈥 And a man鈥檚 head reportedly stamped on during a racist attack.

These scenes from the past week in England and Northern Ireland have sparked painful memories among British Asians who remember the 1970s and 80s, when racist violence was widespread and the National Front was on the rise.

Harish Patel, in his 70s, says it broke his heart.

He says teenagers will have heard from their parents and grandparents about what life could be like in this country.

鈥淭hey鈥檒l have thought it was all over. And now they are experiencing it for themselves.鈥

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Rioters clashed with police in Sunderland on 2 August

The disorder was triggered by the fatal stabbing of three young girls in Southport - followed by false speculation that the suspect was a Muslim asylum seeker.

It sent a thunderbolt of fear down Asian and minority communities.

Mungra, an elderly Asian woman who arrived from Kenya 50 years ago, was taken back to her early days in London.

She worried the escalating violence would make it too frightening to get milk from the corner shop. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 how we felt in those days, and I worry.鈥

Tens of thousands of South Asians came to work in the the UK's factories and public services in the 1950s, as the country rebuilt its post-war economy.

By the early 1970s, the population had grown to around half a million - because of family reunions and Asians fleeing East Africa, many of whom had been expelled from Uganda.

Immigration became a politically charged issue. In 1968, Conservative MP Enoch Powell had given his explosive 鈥渞ivers of blood鈥 speech, in which he said that by permitting mass immigration, the country was 鈥渉eaping up its own funeral pyre鈥.

The extreme right-wing National Front was at its most vocal and regularly held rallies. Asians had to contend with day-to-day harassment and police brutality.

鈥淭he climate and fear of racism was so profound that it was hard to ignore that I was of coloured skin,鈥 Mungra says.

鈥淚t was the usual name-calling when walking on the street, the p-word.鈥

Mungra witnessed the riots in Southall, a predominantly Asian part of west London. They took place in 1979, three years after the racist murder of local Sikh teenager Gurdip Singh Chaggar.

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Thousands attended the funeral of Blair Peach, the teacher killed during the 1979 race riots in Southall

Weeks before a general election, the National Front decided to hold a meeting in Southall's town hall.

Thousands - mainly Asians, but also anti-racist allies - took to the streets in protest against the far-right and police brutality.

Forty were injured, including 21 police, , probably by an officer who struck a fatal blow, according to a Met Police report.

These were brutal times which left a lasting trauma on those who lived through them. And they bring me back to my own childhood.

I was only a toddler when a lit firework was put through the letterbox of my parents鈥 home in Hampshire. Our neighbours didn鈥檛 like Asians living on the street.

My mum recalls grabbing my brother - a hyperactive child a few years older than me - as he ran towards the front door.

She was shaking for hours afterwards. She鈥檒l never forget how frightened she felt in that moment.

It happened months after the p-word was scrawled on our garage door. We were living with my Gujarati sari-wearing grandmother at the time, and my parents felt incredibly vulnerable.

They felt they were being targeted for looking different when all they were doing was trying to live a happy life in 1980s Britain. We moved shortly afterwards.

It鈥檚 striking that decades later, I鈥檝e heard Asians - including members of my own family - saying they were again scared to leave their homes.

Nervously tugging his fingers, Iqbal, a father from Bolton in his 50s, told me he was terrified and that his children had told him to not go outside.

鈥淚 thought these days of race hatred were over,鈥 he said.

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Demonstrators from across the community came together to protest against racism in Sheffield on Wednesday

Over the seven days of riots, hotels housing asylum seekers were attacked, minority-owned businesses were looted and cars and buildings set alight. More than 400 arrests were made.

Muslims were particularly targeted - with missiles hurled at mosques, Islamophobic chants and Muslim gravestones in Burnley vandalised.

Police patrols were ramped up, but some younger people said they didn鈥檛 trust officers to protect them.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 feel like they鈥檝e got our back when they haven鈥檛 protected us so far. We feel vulnerable and feel like we鈥檝e got to protect ourselves,鈥 said Mohammad, in his 20s.

But Wednesday felt like a turning point.

As communities braced for a night of disorder, after names and addresses of immigration lawyers were spread online, the unrest largely failed to materialise.

Instead, thousands of anti-racism protesters rallied in cities and towns across England. People chanted 鈥渞acism off our streets鈥.

In Accrington, Lancashire, Muslim anti-fascist protesters who went to protect a local mosque were embraced by pubgoers, in a 鈥渕assive鈥 moment of unity.

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Anti-racism protesters also gathered in Walthamstow on Wednesday, after reports of possible far-right demonstrations in the area

"There were a few shouts of 鈥榬espect鈥 which was fantastic; we need to see unity to stop all this far-right violence," said Haddi Malik, who was in the group.

The show of force has offered people a moment of hope and courage, and a sense of relief.

But the ripples of intimidation haven鈥檛 yet settled. Some have been left wondering whether they鈥檙e really accepted in this country.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to be made to feel like that,鈥 says 20-year-old Muslim Hamza Moriss. 鈥淚鈥檓 a part of this country as much as they are.鈥

Meanwhile, Mungra feels a deep sense of unease.

鈥淭he last week has made me think that not much has really changed, that racism is still very much alive and we won鈥檛 ever actually be seen as the same鈥 not really.鈥

Top image shows a damaged shop on The Broadway in Southall following rioting in the area, taken on 4 July 1981.