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GANGSTERS
FOR LIFE?
(1 May 2003).
By Claire Alexander. Reprinted by permission of the
IRR.
A
new youth work video explores the myths and realities of Bengali
'gangs' in Tower Hamlets, east London. Claire Alexander, the author
of a book on Asian gangs, discusses her involvement in the project.
It is now nearly two years since the outbreak of unrest that scarred
previously forgotten towns and communities across the midlands and
north of England throughout the spring and summer of 2001. Two years
on, the protests seem to have achieved little. The young men at
the heart of the storm remain now, as then, curiously elusive figures,
their voices unheard and their needs unmet.
Asian
young men in Britain are rarely discussed in public discourse outside
the stereotypes that have sprung up in the nearly-fifteen years
since The Satanic Verses affair brought Asian/Muslim youth dramatically
to public attention. 'The rioter' forms the latest in a series of
off-the-peg folk devils, which also includes 'the fundamentalist',
'the underclass', 'the terrorist' and, of course, 'the Asian gang'.
Each marks a reworking of longstanding concerns about Asian communities
and Black young men in Britain, seamlessly fusing ideas of difference,
dysfunction and the threat of violence. Photos of burnt-out BMWs
and swaggering masked young men with petrol bombs merge with half-remembered
images of bearded crowds and book burnings to mark this new enemy
within.
The
image of the 'gang' conjures US ghetto-style fictions of racially
distinct groups, highly organised, hostile, anti-social and dangerous.
'Gang' members are pictured as Black or minority ethnic, working-class
young men, who are unable to achieve status or success in mainstream
society and fall back on an illusion of masculine strength, achieved
through acts of violence and criminal activity with their peer group.
While
it is possible, and necessary, to challenge this imagery, the uncomfortable
fact remains that the idea of the 'gang' continues to provide a
convenient and self-fulfilling explanation for the ongoing inequalities
and violence that scar the lives of too many young men. And we should
not overlook the attractions of hip-hop machismo on the streets
of urban Britain, as a reach for some kind of control by Black young
men themselves. But questioning the 'gang' stereotypes does allow
them to be placed in context - to be seen not as a natural part
of simply being Black and young and male and urban but as part of
a broader and more complex process. But how does that help to bring
about change on a practical level, for example through youth work?
I recently had the opportunity to explore these issues, with the
invitation to work on a manual to accompany a video project being
produced by filmmaker, Ranjit Lohia, and youth worker, Muksood Shaikh,
on 'gangs' in East London.
"IT'S
A MUG'S GAME" VIDEO PROJECT
If
I am honest, I had some initial reservations about the project:
given that my writing was primarily concerned with questioning the
mythology of the 'Asian gang', how could I be involved in a film
about 'gangs'? As it turned out, Ranjit and Muksood were struggling
with the same questions - wanting to deal with the often very harsh
realities of life for Bengali young men in East London, without
falling back on the too-easy explanations around poverty, culture
and 'gang' life. Most of all, they wanted to make a film which would
offer these young men both a reflection of their lives that they
would recognise and the tools to be able to look critically at themselves
and make changes.
The
resulting film, It's a Mug's Game, explores the myths and realities
of 'gang' life in Tower Hamlets. It is a deliberately local film,
made with a very specific audience in mind - the local Bengali young
men and the schoolteachers and youth workers who work with them
- but its approach has more general implications for work with young
people and for policy-makers. Tower Hamlets has long been considered
a 'problem' area, with high rates of racial violence, bad housing,
educational underachievement, poverty, drug use and crime. Bengali
'gangs' have been a focal point of concern, with unemployment rates
of nearly 60 per cent for Bengali men and rising levels of violent
crime and drugs offences within the Bengali community. Young men,
perhaps as young as 12, spend their free time in groups based on
individual estates, and this has led, on occasion, to territorially
based conflict. To call these groups 'gangs', however, is to attribute
them a coherence and vicarious glamour that is totally unwarranted,
and it is the more mundane realities of 'gang' life that the film
explores and offers up for discussion.
The
film presents what might best be described as a 'career' of 'gang'
life, through the eyes of a small number of former 'gang' members,
who reflect back on their involvement in 'gang' culture. This is
cut with testimonies of victims of 'gang' violence, the police,
youth workers and paramedics, and with dramatic reconstructions
using local Bengali young men. By taking a 'warts and all' view
from 'the inside', the film offers neither judgement nor justification,
but a basis for engagement and critical reflection - sometimes shocking,
but never sensationalist. The purpose of the film is practical,
with a strong commitment to making changes at the local and individual
level. It is designed to be used, not merely seen. As only one half
of a dialogue, it offers more visceral yet empathetic insights into
the lives of Asian young men that the traditional view-from-a-safe-distance
approaches cannot, or will not, attempt.
It's
just a shame the young men of Oldham, Leeds, Burnley and Bradford
never got the same chance.
Reprinted
by permission of the IRR.
Dr.
Claire Alexander is a former youth worker who teaches sociology
at South Bank University, London. She is the author of The Asian
Gang (Berg, 2000). The Institute of Race Relations is precluded
from expressing a corporate view: the opinions expressed are therefore
those of the authors.
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The
Asian Gang: Ethnicity, Identity, Masculinity
by Claire Alexander
Berg Publishers.
In Paperback (September 2000)
192 pages
ISBN: 1859733190
Guide Price: £14.99
Click
here to buy this book today! |
The
It's a Mug's Game video and manual are available from On the One.
Tel: 020 7364 1105.
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