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Knife culture claims another life

5:56pm Wednesday 27th August 2008

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Photograph of the Author By Claire Hack »

Another young man has been stabbed to death in Walthamstow.

That makes 24 across London this year, and three in Waltham Forest in the last couple of months alone. This is the sort of news that clings to you after you leave the office and sits sickeningly in the pit of your stomach. This boy was just 18 years old and had, to coin the old phrase, his whole life ahead of him. It just seems like such a gargantuan, incomprehensible waste. There's no way to understand what happened the night he died or what was going through the mind of his killer. I can only assume, and hope, that whoever inflicted the fatal wound didn't understand either - that they didn't fully comprehend what would happen when they used that knife.

The scene of the crime is now festooned with bouquets, which look oddly cheery, set against the greenery of Walthamstow town square. Teenagers with hooded tops pulled low over their heads kept silent vigil in the morning after it happened and a handful remained on Tuesday when I visited the scene myself. I spoke to a few of them and they all said the same thing: Charles Junior "CJ" Hendricks was a popular, ambitious boy who was in the wrong place at the wrong time. And reading some of the tributes left to him, it was easy to see just how well-liked he was and how much his death had affected the people that knew him, even in passing.

The question that remains is why this happened. Of course, I'm no expert - far from it, in fact - but it seems to me that this rash of violence sprang almost from nowhere and has been constantly growing over the last few years into a seething, uncontrollable monster. It's a sorry state of affairs when teenagers are in the position to wipe one another out with knives and guns. At any rate, I'll stop myself there at the risk of pontificating. I just wonder when and how all this will end.


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Technomist, Walthamstow says...
9:57am Fri 29 Aug 08

I agree very much with your sentiments. However, you are not quite correct when you sat that there's no way to understand what happened the night he died or what was going through the mind of his killer. There are several. The coroner can investigate and the police can also arrest the killer(s) and ensure there is a trial. There is ample scope for all the people who think they know a bit of what has been going on to give their evidence.

Iftikhar, Forest Gate London says...
3:51pm Wed 10 Sep 08



Muslim youths are angry, frustrated and extremist because they have been mis-educated and de-educated by the British schooling. Muslim children are confused because they are being educated in a wrong place at a wrong time in state schools with non-Muslim monolingual teachers. They face lots of problems of growing up in two distinctive cultural traditions and value systems, which may come into conflict over issues such as the role of women in the society, and adherence to religious and cultural traditions. The conflicting demands made by home and schools on behaviour, loyalties and obligations can be a source of psychological conflict and tension in Muslim youngsters. There are also the issues of racial prejudice and discrimination to deal with, in education and employment. They have been victim of racism and bullying in all walks of life. According to DCSF, 56% of Pakistanis and 54% of Bangladeshi children has been victims of bullies. The first wave of Muslim migrants were happy to send their children to state schools, thinking their children would get a much better education. Than little by little, the overt and covert discrimination in the system turned them off. There are fifteen areas where Muslim parents find themselves offended by state schools.

The right to education in one’s own comfort zone is a fundamental and inalienable human right that should be available to all people irrespective of their ethnicity or religious background. Schools do not belong to state, they belong to parents. It is the parents’ choice to have faith schools for their children. Bilingual Muslim children need state funded Muslim schools with bilingual Muslim teachers as role models during their developmental periods. There is no place for a non-Muslim teacher or a child in a Muslim school. There are hundreds of state schools where Muslim children are in majority. In my opinion, all such schools may be designated as Muslim community schools. An ICM Poll of British Muslims showed that nearly half wanted their children to attend Muslim schools. There are only 143 Muslim schools. A state funded Muslim school in Birmingham has 220 pupils and more than 1000 applicants chasing just 60.

Majority of anti-Muslim stories are not about terrorism but about Muslim
culture--the hijab, Muslim schools, family life and religiosity. Muslims in the west ought to be recognised as a western community, not as an alien culture.
Iftikhar Ahmad
www.londonschoolofis
lamics.org.uk

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