'Our voice may be a drop in the ocean, but enough drops will help to turn the tide.'
Dragos and Alina tried to ignore the negative press that Romanians got in the UK. After all, most Brits they’d met were nice and kind and welcoming and if the locals did agree with what was written in the papers, at least they had the manners not to show it to the Romanian couples’ faces. You always met a few nutters but that was to be expected and you couldn’t judge a whole country on the nutters you met and the right wing press.
They’d been in the UK for the
best part of three years, after being headhunted by an NHS trust looking for
qualified doctors. They settled in a nice two bed rented house on a quiet
suburban street and tried to embrace the local culture as best they could.
Like this Saturday for example, Alina had just been out to buy the Guardian
while Dragos cooked bacon and eggs for breakfast. How much more British could
you get?
But this Saturday wasn’t
going to turn out like any other Saturday they had known. They first became
aware that something was wrong when they heard angry voices from the street
outside. Dragos looked out of the
bedroom window and saw the mob about twenty or thirty strong coming down the street. He
felt a lump in his stomach, it was unusual for there to be demonstrations in
their street. Alina joined him at the window, they put their arms round each
other nervously. What were they shouting? Dragos and Alina couldn’t make it out, but when the demonstration stopped in front of their house they could hear them clearly.
‘Go home, Go home, all
Romanians go home.’
It wasn’t the most eloquent
of chants, but they weren't the most eloquent of people.
‘I’m calling the police’
Dragos said, but he didn’t have time to act before the mob was kicking down
their front door and swarming through their house. A baseball bat took Dragos’s
knees from under him, while Alina was knocked to the ground by a plank of wood
of some kind. Both were then carried out into the street to face the rest of
the mob.
Fears and tears, pain and
confusion, why? Why had the mob turned on them? They were a hard-working family.
Both Alina and Dragos recognised faces in the crowd who they’d treated in the emergency ward. They could even see some of their neighbours for example there was the guy who lived two doors down. Why were their friends and
neighbours turning on them? They expected to hear sirens, saviours with blue
flashing lights but none came. They were aware the mob was thicker now, grown
from twenty or thirty to fifty or sixty, maybe even more.
They were dropped in the middle of
the baying crowd like scared bulls in a bullring. One man stepped forward. He
was the leader, the showman. He swung a baseball bat through the air, a
coward’s show of strength.
‘This is the people’s court
of the United Kingdom,’ he shouted as much to the crowd as to the scared couple
in front of him.
‘You are charged with being
Romanian, how do you plead?’
Dragos and Alina looked at
each other but remained quiet?
‘You are accused of coming
here and stealing our jobs. How you do plead?’
Again the Romanians said
nothing.
He took a step closer to
Dragos and raised the bat? ‘Are you Romanian?’
Dragos nodded in fear of his
brain being smashed in with the bat.
The skinhead turned to Alina.
‘Do you have jobs here in the
UK?’
Alina also nodded, both of
them had seen baseball bat damage in their jobs and it was not a pretty sight.
‘In which case the court of
the people of the United Kingdom finds you guilty as charged.’ The crowd
cheered.
‘Your punishment is…’
I stood in the crowd watching
events unfold. I lived two doors along from the Romanian couple, I didn’t really
know them but we had exchanged pleasantries and they’d seemed nice enough. The noise of the mob had brought
me and my other neighbours out on to the street, swelling the crowd. To start
with I thought it was some sort of carnival, the speaker was entertaining and I
smiled at his patter, but then when they brought out the defendants, I realised
this was no game this was serious. I looked more closely at the crowd and saw that
amongst the causal onlookers were a serious mob that looked dangerous, skinhead
haircuts and baseball bats, hiding their faces behind scarves and hoodies, more
tattoos than in a sailor’s bar in Portsmouth. I was scared, so god knows how
Dragos and Alina were feeling. This was barbaric but what could I do? I was
heavily outnumbered, I could do nothing to save them. I tried to get out of the
mob so I could call the police but I was hemmed in.
The leader was playing to the
gallery. He’d found them guilty and was about to announce their punishment.
Shit, if I let them continue I’d
be complicit in this, I couldn’t blame others, I was in the crowd and if I
didn’t stop this then I was as guilty as the wankers with the baseball bats.
Surely my neighbours and other onlookers didn’t want to see Dragos and Alina
punished for being Romanian. I was scared but that was no excuse, I took a
gamble.
‘Your punishment is…’ said the skinhead with the baseball bat.
‘Stop!’ I shouted at the top
of my voice. ‘This is barbaric.’
The street fell silent, all
eyes turned to look at me. My heart thumped, surely I would be now dragged into
the pit to join the other two ‘defendants’.
The silence lingered on, before another voice
The silence lingered on, before another voice
‘Yeah stop!’
and then another.
and then another.
‘Stop!’
and more.
and more.
‘Somebody help them.’
‘Go home yourselves, you
bullies.’
Voices rang out from all
around now; even some of the original mob were dropping their weapons and calling
for the end to this kangaroo court. It had been my very own Spartacus moment.
The lead skinhead looked around,
his body language changing rapidly as he realised the climate of fear he had
created was melting around him. He no longer controlled the crowd by force and
was reduced to the sorry looking, pathetic man he was.
People pushed through the
crowd to help Dragos and Alina to their feet and back into their house. Men
appeared with tool kits willing to fix the damage the mob had done.
At last blue-flashing lights
arrived in the streets but we hadn’t needed the police. We’d stood up to the
bullies and began to dismantle their myth of fear.
If you enjoyed the theme of this story, you might enjoy this one too.
If you enjoyed the theme of this story, you might enjoy this one too.
the easiest thing to do is say "I can do nothing about it"....
ReplyDeleteis this fiction?!
ReplyDeleteIt is and it isn’t
DeleteOne more drop in the ocean - http://sverigesradio.se/sida/artikel.aspx?programid=2054&artikel=5749032
ReplyDelete(I know this link is not live but it is worth seeing.
this is just great - and it shows that there are people who oppose this kind of unjustified violence... so your story might not be pure fiction at all
DeleteIf only things worked this way ... I'm not a pessimist but reason is the last thing to take charge in situations like this one :-(
ReplyDeleteThis is why I wrote the story, there has been such a lack of reason or truth in the reporting in the UK it is like the words in the newspapers are the violence of the lynch mob. But there are people who are willing to question it and the more we question their prejudice the more we will turn the tide. (I hope)
Deletemost are able to question, think rationally and acknowledge everyone's prejudices; but what most lack is the capability to react even going against our own prejudices when dealing with an inhuman action (not talking about injustice but lack of humanity) .. the difference between being a sheep or not is the ability to react (non-violent) on time.. For me this is the best of this story :-)
Delete