Lessons on racism must be learnt from history, says bishop on Windrush Day

The Empire Windrush carried hundreds of immigrants from the Caribbean to Britain. Wikipedia

A senior Catholic leader has called for prayer and reflection over Britain's treatment of migrant and ethnic minority communities.

Bishop Paul McAleenan, the Catholic Church in England and Wales' Lead Bishop for Migrants and Refugees, said it was important that BAME communities are valued. 

The call came on Windrush Day, being observed on Monday to mark 72 years since the arrival of the Empire Windrush at Tilbury Docks in 1948. 

The ship was carrying migrants from the Caribbean to help rebuild Britain after World War Two but those who disembarked and the many more who followed in their wake experienced racism both in churches and wider society.

Some are still awaiting compensation from the Government over a recent scandal that saw the Home Office remove their legal rights, including access to the NHS and housing, with some being deported or barred from re-entry.

"The story of the Windrush Generation is one of people coming to the UK, settling and building their lives here and making an enormous contribution to society; yet all too often these same people were failed by the state, as the scandal of the detention and deportation of innocent people made tragically clear. Many of those harmed still await redress from government," said Bishop McAleenan. 

He said learning lessons from history was an essential part of the process to bring about racial justice.

"Racial justice depends upon many things, including learning from our history," he said.

"This Windrush Day we should unite in prayer and reflection, with a shared commitment to properly recognise the profound importance and value of the UK's migrant and ethnic minority communities, never allowing their human dignity to be violated."

News
Churches urged to be ready amid reports of growing Bible curiosity among young adults
Churches urged to be ready amid reports of growing Bible curiosity among young adults

A sharp rise in Bible sales and reports of growing spiritual curiosity among young adults in the UK has prompted calls for church leaders to be ready to respond. 

Memorial art for Holocaust heroine unveiled
Memorial art for Holocaust heroine unveiled

Haining said she'd be "back by lunch", in fact she was on her way to Auschwitz.

The Christian Churches and the Nazis
The Christian Churches and the Nazis

Why were so many German Christians supportive of the Nazis in their rise to power and why were so few involved in active opposition once the realities of the Third Reich became apparent? 

The problem with Labour’s Islamophobia definition
The problem with Labour’s Islamophobia definition

Whether it's called Islamophobia or "anti-Muslim hostility", the threat is the same.