While on recent
flight to India I was offered drinks I asked if they served any mulled wine .
Promptly I was told this was against company policy as celebrating Christmas
would be seen as offensive. ‘To whom?’ I asked ‘to our Indian passengers
madam’. I did not bother asking why it is the case of the British speaking for
the other as usual. India is a secular nation we celebrate as many festivals as
we can, the state even gives us holidays to do so. I have grown up celebrating
festivals with friends of every religion. While in recent years we have become
intolerant we aren’t trying to annihilate religion in order to achieve some
pseudo idea of peace.
Things are not
ideal in India religious minorities face persecution, however the state does
not deny people the right to practice their religions. We can tell the
difference between religion and fundamentalism. In Britain, on the other hand
all signs of religion equal fundamentalism and superstition. I suspect this is
a cause for a lot of antagonism amongst immigrants who are offended by the lack
of symbols and sanctity in public life.
I have grown up
learning about religions through festivals. Food offered by neighbours and
friends was a way to know them better.
It was an earnest gesture which said look I think you are important
enough for me to share my traditions with you. While I wont romanticise
religion I wont demonise it either. Yes some wars are caused due to religion
some wars are also caused by greed. I found the airlines pre-emptive
politically correct stance offensive. I am a vegetarian why not ban meat on the
fight? There would have been Brahmins and vegans on the why not ban all animal
products then.
The guilt most
British people feel for being British never ceases to amaze me. Religion, food,
festivals traditions do not racially attack people, people attack people. This
suppression of British culture has led to a quiet animosity against people of colour. While we are to be known
by our culture and spirituality the white person must be stripped of these and
made to feel invisible. As a friend pointed out recently isn’t white a colour?
This stripping away of ones identity also affects the way a person of colour is
treated polite on the surface but still thought of as an invader.
What I would
personally like to see in the Britain is not pseudo guilt over things that are
not offensive.
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