Bishop: Migration concerns only for ‘brown people’
The British were economic migrants during colonisation, says Bishop of Dover
The Bishop of Dover says she finds “it interesting” that concerns about migration are “only for the brown people”. Talking to the ý HARDtalk programme about concerns her congregants may have about the arrivals on small boats on the south coast of England, Rose Hudson-Wilkin said: “I don’t hear people saying that about the Ukrainians coming or even the Hong Kong Chinese people coming. Isn’t that interesting? I find it interesting”.
Challenged by Stephen Sackur about her previous comments on fears around migration being “fuelled by plain ignorance”, Hudson-Wilkin, who is the first black female bishop appointed by the Church of England, said she meant there is an “ignorance in understanding” of “why people want to come here”. Speaking in Canterbury, the bishop, who was born in Jamaica, said that some British people “do not understand their own history” when it comes to migration.
Britain’s history is one of migration, Hudson-Wilkin said: “I love to remind the British that they were economic migrants when they went to Africa, when they went to Asia, when they travelled to the Caribbean. They wanted to improve their lives. That’s what these people are doing.” It’s because of those global historic links that “people feel a natural affinity and connection” with Britain and want to come here, Bishop Rose said. “People do not understand the connection with Britain, that Britain has with the rest of the world”.