Dear Editor,
As
someone who was centrally involved in the Unite Against Fascism Conference
last weekend, I would ask that you publish this letter which contains the
facts about the conference and corrects the assertions in the Outrage
press release which you published on February 18. You may want to consider
the validity of that news item in light of this.
Outrage’s assertion that Sir Iqbal Sacranie pulled out of or that he was
‘dumped’ by UAF from Saturday’s conference is completely untrue. Sir Iqbal
had another engagement and the MCB instead sent Dr Daud Abdullah, their
Assistant General Secretary, who was warmly received by all the delegates.
As part of a very broad and inclusive array of speakers, the conference was
also addressed by a number of representatives of the lesbian and gay
community including Ben Summerskill, the Chief Executive of Stonewall,
REGARD, the organisation of disabled lesbians and gay men, Imaan, the LGBT
Muslim support group, the Black Women's representative of the NUS LGBT
campaign and a representative of the Lesbian and Gay Coalition Against
Racism. These organizations and others also signed a statement disagreeing
with Sir Iqbal’s views, but articulating the need for an alliance with all
religious communities against the threat posed by fascism, and in particular
with communities who are on the front line of the BNP’s campaigns of hate.
(This statement can be viewed at
www.naar.org.uk/lagcar)
In
doing so, they reject Outrage’s position: Outrage demands that the
anti-fascist movement should not involve the Muslim Council of Britain. The
MCB is a representative umbrella organisation of 450 Muslim groups.
Moreover Muslim communities have been on the sharp end of BNP race hate
campaigns.
To
exclude the MCB from the anti-fascist movement would not only be to strike a
blow against the unity and inclusion that our movement needs, but would be
to abandon vulnerable communities at the very moment that the BNP are making
advances by attacking Muslims. Where they make advances and gain council
seats, incidents of homophobia increase.
Outrage’s divisive demand is completely opposed to the strategy of the
anti-fascist movement. Moreover this attack is part of a disproportionate
attack on Muslims. It is racist to single out the Muslim community, when
most religious leaders are reactionary on homosexuality.
The
majority of Lesbian and Gay communities understand that dialogue is the only
way to overcome these views. The MCB also issued a statement welcoming
working with the lesbian and gay community: `British Muslims welcome working
with everyone including members of the Lesbian and Gay community against a
common enemy, fascism.”
Furthermore, it is absurd and offensive to compare a religious leader’s
views to those of the fascists, who do not merely have homophobic prejudices
but stand for the annihilation of millions of people, including Lesbian and
Gay people, and the total destruction of all democratic freedoms and human
rights.
It is
because the BNP stands in the tradition of the evil of the Nazi Holocaust
that the anti-fascist movement understands that it threatens all our rights
and, despite differences – which must be debated and hopefully will be
overcome – that the movement must be open to all who oppose the BNP.
Outrage’s ‘support’ for Unite Against Fascism did not even stretch as far as
attending the conference on February 18th, so it is unsurprising that they
were not aware of the facts around the MCB speaking. It appears that they
are more interested in grabbing headlines with press releases, than
seriously addressing the rise of the far right, or indeed, the need to
tackle homophobia within the anti-fascist movement.