Protestors hold anti-racist signs before a line of police in Hi-Vis. On the night of August 7, 2024 in Walthamstow, North-East London, a gathering of over 10,000 people put paid to a wave of racially motivated riots that had swept the UK for nearly two weeks, targeting Muslims, parts of the asylum system and the police. Similar anti-racist protests happened in Birmingham, Brentford, Brighton, Bristol, Newcastle and North Finchley.

Anti-racists quell the violence in Walthamstow, London

August 7, 2024

On the night of August 7, 2024 in Walthamstow, North-East London, a gathering of over 10,000 people put paid to a wave of racially motivated riots that had swept the UK for nearly two weeks, targeting Muslims, parts of the asylum system and the police. Similar anti-racist protests happened in Birmingham, Brentford, Brighton, Bristol, Newcastle and North Finchley. 

Unrest had begun in the spread in the north of the country following the horrific murder of three young girls in Southport, and — as well as overt racism and islamophobia — responded to grievances at rising violent crime, failing public services and falling living standards. Until Wednesday 7th, the UK’s more prosperous south had largely been spared violence, but was now threatened at a series of sites related to the British asylum system, including an immigration bureau on Hoe Street, Walthamstow

Unrest had begun in the spread in the north of the country following the horrific murder of three young girls in Southport, and — as well as overt racism and islamophobia — responded to grievances at rising violent crime, failing public services and falling living standards. Until Wednesday 7th, the UK’s more prosperous south had largely been spared violence, but was now threatened at a series of sites related to the British asylum system, including an immigration bureau on Hoe Street, Walthamstow

Warnings issued by local politicians and the police had led shops to close early and board their windows, while large crowds nervously prepared to counter-protest.

Warnings issued by local politicians and the police had led shops to close early and board their windows, while large crowds nervously prepared to counter-protest.

A woman began writing ‘Call it what it is’ on a white sign before going for something more direct: ‘Nazis fuck off’.

A woman began writing ‘Call it what it is’ on a white sign before going for something more direct: ‘Nazis fuck off’.

She was joined by many more.

She was joined by many more.

Yet as it became clear that the threatened riots would not materialise, what began nervously as a counter-protest quickly morphed into a progressive gathering advancing messages of solidarity with Palestine and the student movement in Bangladesh that had only that morning toppled the authoritarian government of Sheikh Hasina.

Yet as it became clear that the threatened riots would not materialise, what began nervously as a counter-protest quickly morphed into a progressive gathering advancing messages of solidarity with Palestine and the student movement in Bangladesh that had only that morning toppled the authoritarian government of Sheikh Hasina.

A street performer unfurled huge prismatic bubbles and an almost carnival atmosphere set in.

A street performer unfurled huge prismatic bubbles and an almost carnival atmosphere set in.

In an illustration of the rapid shift in tone, I spoke to a man using the wooden sticks of protest posters to whack a traffic island sign as a drum. ‘I’m calling an Uber’, he said in frustration. His return an hour later was announced by loud drumbeats joining the pro-Palestine megaphone calls that had been led all evening by a boy no older than 11.

In an illustration of the rapid shift in tone, I spoke to a man using the wooden sticks of protest posters to whack a traffic island sign as a drum. ‘I’m calling an Uber’, he said in frustration. His return an hour later was announced by loud drumbeats joining the pro-Palestine megaphone calls that had been led all evening by a boy no older than 11.

While the violence has ceased for now, with hatred flattened by unity and joy, the divisions that caused it – economic, social and in the perceived truth — have gone nowhere.

While the violence has ceased for now, with hatred flattened by unity and joy, the divisions that caused it – economic, social and in the perceived truth — have gone nowhere.

Reuben J. BrownWriter,Words, Pictures,Photographer, MakerProjects

 

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