Sunday 7 July 2013

The Future of the Community in the Brick Lane London E1 Area

DATELINE Brick Lane London E1 in the East End of London UK 1320 Hrs GMT Sunday 07 July 2013 Images for the FUTURE OF The Community in the BRICK LANE London E1 Area. UPDATED on 06 July 2013 by © Muhammad Haque Main picture of Kay Jordan by © Muhammad Haque taken at a KHOODEELAAR! Action Event in the Greatorex Street and the inset, photographed by © Muhammad Haque showing two of the founding members of the Spitalfields Housing Cooperative [since re-designated ‘Spitalfields Housing Association’] and the Spitalfields Small Business Association. For over 30 years Kay Jordan stewarded the Spitalfields Small Business Association and in doing so made unparalleled contraction to the defence, stability and cohesion of the many small traders, businesses, families, individuals and their extended families both in the UK and beyond [The Action Archives Continue to be Reported, UPDATED by © Muhammad haque] DATELINE BRICK LANE: Original Commentary on the British Media on Sunday 07 July 2013 খেদাইলার! The © Muhammad Haque Daily Socio-Linguistic and Ethical Commentary: The Future of the Community in the Brick Lane London E1 Area - Introducing the context for the follow up reports on the Action Seminar that I had organised and conducted on Saturday 06 July 2013 [1] 1320 [1225] Hrs GMT London Sunday 07 July 2013 This খেদাইলার! [above] is a Seelotee Language word - transliterated into English by using phonetics: Kheydaieelaar! - that I UPDATED in 2012 in the context of the then proposal by the "Boundary Commission" about "England and Wales" to drop the word "Banglatown" from the official name of the Tower Hamlets Council Ward "Spitalfields and Banglatown". They, the Community’s Biggest, the most resourced and the most politically and economically powerful Enemies in Britain including and acting as extensions of the Agenda of Big Business, the Big Conglomerates, the Big Power-Wielders, are displacing, driving the Community out, pushing the Community out of our home, our neighbourhood, our Society, our land.. As can be seen from y description at the top of this Commentary, I am addressing the battle for the existence of the Community that is facing the threats from the very same sources and their likes which were threatening the same Community previously when they had plotted to dig the Community out of the area via the “Crossrail hole”. More than 13 years ago, the UK Labour Party controlling Bureaucracy and Clique, then very much Bliared and Right-wing, was allowing the BiG biz, Conglomerates and the Military industrial Complex [MIC] interests to add new pressures behind the already ongoing City of London Interests’ push for the takeover of the East End of London. The idea of the Brick Lane London E1 Area as a politically galvanisable entity in the context of what passes for “democratic mobilisation” had already been tested and given expressions to. In fact that was 40 years ago in 1973 when the pre-Murdoch [EVEN the pre-Murdoch!!!!] Sunday Times “Colour Supplement” [Magazine] carried an upfront naked assault on the Community as located in Brick Lane! I had no option in December 1973 but to mobilise immediate Opposition to the contents of that Sunday Times Colour Magazine attack on the Brick Lane Community but also to its immediate and long term impacts and implications. And the 1973 SUNDAY TIMES Colour Magazine ASSAULT on the Community in Brick Lane London E1 had an even more concentrated focus against the people it had decided constituted the central part of the population here: the Seelotees! Sylhet! The Sunday Time Colour Magazine Attack on the Brick Lane London E1 Bangladeshi was given extra toxicity by targeting the people who had come to the UK, to London from Sylhet. So why had the Sunday Times Colour Magazine carried that piece? Who had given the Sunday Times Colour Magazine ANY excuse to even mount that naked attack? What was the “response” [NONE at all!!!!] from the “Bangladeshi political activists employed in Britain at the time” to the Sunday Times Colour Magazine attack on the SEELOTEE-speaking Bangladeshis in 1973? [To be continued]

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