“I am sitting down shivering whilst writing this piece.
I am dressed in my down jacket, boots, long johns and a hat. I am indoors and
the cold from the floor is startling. But there is no snow on the outside.
Neither below zero degrees. In reality it is 7 degrees Celsius and
raining. And this is the normal
day. The house my family and I are
living in is a traditional Victorian house from 1909 that once housed cotton
mill workers and their families. The walls are thin, there´s moisture and mould
on most walls, insulation is missing almost entirely and the electricity and
gas are expensive. We pay it with a card, which charges us more than double
compared to people who have proper electricity supplied centrally, and when you
most need it to work, it stops. I have
to run down and top it up at a corner store, run by a Pakistani family who also
sells camel milk for 6 pounds a liter. This has been one of the coldest winters I have
ever experienced. This is Moss Side, England 2014.”
My experiences in Moss Side have changed
my image of England. For better and worse. I had no idea that such poverty that
I have come across here existed in England, the 6th richest country
on earth. But neither did I have an idea that such a vibrant, diverse cultural
society like the one in Moss Side existed on this continent. For me it has been discovering a hidden gem! That is why I have decided to do a
walk from Moss Side to a suburb of London named Buckhurst Hill.
This is where I spent my first eleven summers. Buckhurst Hill is in a pretty much all white
affluent English area back then and it was a time, which turned me into an Anglophile.
The plan is to walk 450 miles from Moss
Side. This foot journey is together with
a partner and my 20 months old daughter Sardana, who I will push in a stroller.
I am bringing her for two reasons, first of all because I cannot, like most
English people, afford paying 800 pounds a month for a daycare. Secondly, it seems like the English are the
most private people on earth. In this
case, since I need them to open their doors, and I believe my daughter will be
very helpful!
I believe that I, like most people on
earth, have an image of what they believe England is like. An image I have
noticed many English still try to sell today. An England of an equal society
dominated by polite and proud people, quite reserved and always drinking tea,
dressed in bowler hats and thick coats, who loves the past, rugby, fox hunting,
the royals, their gardens and who with great conviction believe they saved the
world from the Nazis and that the island still has a lot of influence on the
world and its future.
The England I have experienced so far is
quite different. During my 10 months of living in the
north of England I have realized that very few people fully understand the
great changes which are taking place in England and Great Britain. For example,
more than 1 million need help from Foodbanks today, and unemployment is rife
and growing. Most English I come across today have a migrant background from
Asia, the Caribbean, Eastern Europe or Africa. In my part of Moss Side, quite a few women
are dressed in niqab and abbaya (full covered Islamic dress for women) and men
and women go as much to the mosque, gurdwara (sikh temple), hindu temple as to
the Anglican church. A major part of the kids in my daughter’s school are Afro-English. Some of
the white neighbors I have lack healthy teeth due to no help from the
government. And most of them are in their early twenties.
So, the question is, what does the ‘real’
England look like today? This is what I want to find out during my walk through
the heart of the island. The main goal is to do a positive documentary about
this extraordinary island, which seems stuck in between the US and Europe. So far,
including the demanding winter experience, the newer England for me is a
positive experience. But I also know that by 1922
the British Empire had control over about 458 million people, one-fifth of the
world's population at the time and they held sway over almost a quarter of the
Earth's total land area. As a result, its political, legal, linguistic and
cultural legacy is considerable. 92 years later the Empire is all but gone, but
Great Britain (especially its engine England) is still one of the global
powers. For this reason, what happens in England, have major implications for
the rest of the world.
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