Senior
academics and politicians have condemned UK universities for failing
to tackle endemic racism against students and staff. Scores of black
and minority ethnic students and lecturers have told the Guardian they were dissuaded from making official complaints and either
dropped their allegations or settled for an informal resolution. They
said white university staff were often reluctant to address racism,
with racial slurs treated as banter or an inevitable byproduct of
freedom of speech, and institutional racism poorly recognised.
University staff from minority backgrounds said the findings showed
there was “absolute resistance” to dealing with the problem.
Official figures are believed to underestimate the scale of racism in
higher education. The vast majority of universities also said they
did not record informal complaints, while more than half did not
record antisemitism and Islamophobia as racism.
Heidi
Mirza, visiting professor of race, faith and culture at Goldsmiths,
University of London, said universities’ poor handling of
complaints was driving BAME staff and students to quit.
Ilyas
Nagdee, black students’ officer for the National Union of Students,
said racism on campus continued to be brushed under the carpet. “As
students of colour continue to face harassment in their places of
study and abuse in their halls of accommodation, universities
remain ill-equipped and unwilling to tackle the issue at large,” he
said.
The
divisive fragmentation of working people, which contains groups of
many races and national origins, is one of the strongest props of
capitalism. As long as it continues to obscure the lines of class
struggle, the policy of divide and rule will pay dividends to the
small class that remains unchallenged. There are a thousand
ways the profit-system keep our fellow-workers fighting among one
another, competing for the scraps from the masters' tables. It keeps
workers whose children go to bad schools fighting with workers whose
schools are worse. It pits low-paid workers against even lower-paid
workers, those with bad housing against those with terrible housing.
In each case it is workers who suffer when they fight each other
instead of the system that is their common enemy.
Ending
racism will take much more than moral appeals to people's tolerance
or the passing of anti-discrimination laws. Such
approaches leave untouched the root causes of racial division. Recent
events has shown how vulnerable and temporary reforms are regards
equality are under capitalism. The underlying forces of the profit
system, which make poverty, urban decay and unemployment permanent
problems, continually overwhelm patchwork efforts to improve the
status of African-Americans, Hispanics, Native Americans and other minorities
within the working class. The concept of "inferior" and
"superior" races that had been fostered by capitalists has
persisted. It will take the successful outcome of yet another
struggle -- the class struggle -- before workers of all backgrounds
will have the power to collectively enforce their claim to "liberty
and justice for all."
To
eliminate racism effectively requires two things -- a clear exposure
of the capitalist roots of racism and the class-conscious unity of
workers to oppose it. Only a class-conscious position can expose the
decades of racist propaganda. It is impossible to work for a
socialist society without fighting against racial divisions among
workers. But it is equally impossible to mount any really effective
campaign against racism that is not at the same time a fight against
its capitalist cause. The Socialist Party appeal to the workers of
all colours and national origins, and to all persons who recognise
the evils of capitalism, to join with us in our efforts to bring a
speedy end to the criminal capitalist system and to create the
economic and social conditions for freedom, equality and fraternity
by establishing the free society of socialism, thereby extinguishing
the cause of racial prejudices. All the evidence proves that the
racism arises from the exploitation of the many by the few and that
it can be solved in but one way, by the socialist reconstruction of
society.
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