Hope not Hate

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HOPE not hate
File:Hope not hate.jpg
HOPE not hate
Founded 2004
Founder Nick Lowles
Type Civil Rights campaign
Anti-hate organisation
Focus Hate groups
Racism
Civil rights
Location
Area served
United Kingdom
Product campaigning, lobbying, media, research
Key people
Nick Lowles, chief executive
Website www.hopenothate.org.uk

Hope not Hate (stylized as HOPE not hate) is a Marxist-Leninist advocacy group based in the United Kingdom that "campaigns to counter racism and fascism,"[1] and to "combine first class research with community organising and grassroots actions to defeat hate groups at elections and to build community resilience against extremism."[2]

It was created in 2004 by Nick Lowles, a former editor of anti-fascist magazine Searchlight (from which it split in late 2011).[3][4] It is backed by various progressive politicians and celebrities,[5] and has been backed by several trade unions.[6] The organization has been described as the British equivalent of the American Southern Poverty Law Center, which it has known ties to.

History

Founded in 2004 by Nick Lowles, former editor of the left-wing Searchlight magazine, Hope not Hate functioned as part of the latter organisation until 2011, when the two parties split.[7] As a standalone organisation, HOPE not hate took with it two of the three units of Searchlight: Searchlight Educational Trust (SET), a charity; and Searchlight Information Services (SIS), its research and investigative function. The organisation now consists of HOPE not hate Educational Ltd (a charitable wing) and HOPE not hate Ltd (focused on campaigning and investigative work).[8]

Funding

During late 2012 and early 2013, the Searchlight Educational Trust (SET), which later renamed itself to HOPE not hate Educational Ltd (HNH Ed: the "charitable wing" of HOPE not Hate[9]), received three separate payments totaling £66,000 thanks to a funding agreement signed by the Department for Communities and Local Government. Conditions in the funding agreement prohibited the funds to be spent on anything other than "educational work", which also included a prohibition on political campaigning. The focus of the allocated funds was to establish community partnerships in four key areas which were prone to EDL activity, including sharing positive local stories and strengthing community bonds.[10]

Campaigning

Initially established to counter the electoral rise of the right-wing British National Party (BNP)[11] the HOPE not hate campaign "mobilises communities by providing an alternative to the politics of hate".[12] It encourages voters to support alternatives to far-right extremist movements; it also publishes allegations of violent activities by anti-Muslim organisations[13][14] such as the English Defence League and more recently has also focused on Islamist extremists and issues of communal division, such as grooming.[15][16][17] It presented a 90,000 person petition to the European Parliament protesting against the election of Nick Griffin as an MEP[18] and a 33,000-signature letter (delivered via the Daily Mirror) criticising far-right groups for using the murder of Lee Rigby to push their "own agenda".[19] The group regularly holds nationwide bus tours during elections, sponsored by the left-wing Daily Mirror newspaper.

Changing focus

The organisation has increasingly focused upon community-based campaigning, particularly building what it calls "community resilience"[20] and focusing more on women voters.[21] It has launched initiatives in support of British foods, Hate Crime Awareness Week, and reported extensively on the activities of the anti-Muslim counterjihad movement of Robert Spencer, Pamela Geller, and bloggers such as "Fjordman".[22][23] It claimed a small number of extremists online expressed ideology shared by the Norwegian killer Anders Behring Breivik.[24]

Fear and Hope survey

In 2012 the group published original research looking at the attitudes of voters towards far-right political parties in the UK, which concluded that nearly half of those polled by a Populus Ltd survey supported the creation of an English nationalist, anti-Muslim political party.[25][26] Nick Lowles recently claimed that politicians, including the Labour Party, need to address the way they talk about immigration and move away from encouraging "hate speech".[27] Liz Fekete, of the Institute for Race Relations (IRR), has said that Lowles has not taken a hard enough line against racial narratives on the grooming issue.[28]

UKIP

In 2013 the organisation initiated a nationwide consultation among its supporters about the UK Independence Party (UKIP).[29] The move attracted considerable criticism from some on the right.[30] It went on to campaign vociferously against UKIP during the run-up to the 2014 European elections.[31] UKIP won more UK MEP seats in the European Parliament than any other party.[32]

Child grooming

Lowles is one of the founders of a new (2013) anti-child sexual exploitation initiative called CAASE (Community Alliance Against Sexual Exploitation), featuring many Muslim and Christian organisations, victim support groups, survivors organisations, and local community networks. The network is a response to multiple "grooming" cases reported in the British press.[33]

Al-Muhajiroun and Islamist extremism

In November 2013 the organisation unveiled research into the al-Muhajiroun Islamic extremist network: in a 60-page report 'Gateway to Terror', authored by Nick Lowles and Joe Mulhall, it alleged that with its partner networks al-Muhajiroun had sent up to 300 fighters to Syria, linked a further 70 individuals to terrorism offences or suicide bombings, plus proof of what it said was links to the Westgate shopping mall attack in Kenya, connections to al-Shabaab and a plot by French security services to kill Abu Hamza in the late 1990s.[34][35][36]

On 16 October 2014 the organisation launched a new blog, Generation Jihad, which it said would "be a forum to monitor, expose and understand militant jihadism and extreme Islamism".[37]

Robert Spencer and Pamela Geller

Following a 26,000 signature petition handed in by HOPE not hate to the UK Home Secretary, on 26 June 2013 the US anti-Muslim bloggers Robert Spencer and Pamela Geller were banned from entering the UK.[38][39] Geller and Spencer had been due to speak at an English Defence League march in Woolwich, south London, where Drummer Lee Rigby was killed. Home Secretary Theresa May informed Spencer and Geller that their presence in the UK would "not be conducive to the public good".[40] The decision, which they cannot appeal, may be reviewed in between three and five years.[41]

Publications

File:HOPE not hate magazine.gif
Hope not Hate magazine (September 2012)

The campaign publishes an eponymous bi-monthly magazine; in 2011 it commissioned an opinion poll on electoral attitudes towards English identity, faith and race, published as the Fear and HOPE survey.[42][43] In 2012 it issued a report on the counterjihad movement, the Counter-Jihad Report;[22][23] and in the same year produced a 75th anniversary guide to the Battle of Cable Street.[44] In 2011 Matthew Collins, a former National Front and British National Party member and part of the group's investigative team, published Hate: My Life in the British Far Right (ISBN 978-1-84954-327-9). In June 2014 Collins and Hope not Hate published original research into what they termed a far-right, Christian fundamentalist organisation, Britain First, revealing its links to Loyalist paramilitaries in Northern Ireland and preparation for conflict, after the group held controversial 'Christian Patrols' and 'mosque invasions' in various cities in the UK.[45][46][47] In response, Britain First issued a press release threatening "direct action" against any journalist repeating "any inaccuracies or lies peddled by Hope Not Hate”.[48]

Partners

The group works closely with several other extreme left-wing organisations, including the Extremis Project, the Islamic Society of Britain, Faith Matters (which runs the Tell MAMA anti-Muslim violence helpline), the Community Security Trust, Stonewall, Galop, the Holocaust Educational Trust, the Christian Muslim Forum, No To Hate Crime, the Jewish Gay & Lesbian Group, Mencap, British Muslims for Secular Democracy, Scope, the Coexistence Trust, Student Action for Refugees, the Survivors Fund, Show Racism the Red Card, as well as many police forces and overseas (non-UK) partners, such as The Southern Poverty Law Center in the USA and Expo in Sweden.

Notable supporters

Prominent left-wing and far-left extremist supporters of Hope not Hate include businessman Lord Sugar, boxer Amir Khan, singer Beverly Knight, actress and screenwriter Meera Syal, TV presenter Fiona Phillips, chef Simon Rimmer, songwriter Billy Bragg, entrepreneur Levi Roots, singer Speech Debelle, actress and singer Paloma Faith, presenter Dermot O'Leary, Baroness Glenys Kinnock and comedian Eddie Izzard.[49][50][51][52] However, in December 2015, The Jewish Chronicle withdrew its support for Hope not Hate, claiming that its latest offering on Islamophobia was dangerous and counter productive.[53]

Rivalry with Unite Against Fascism

Hope not Hate has been stated to have a hostile relationship with Unite Against Fascism, despite both groups being "anti-racist" organisations. This may be due to the divide between the different types of communism, as reflected by the bitter rivalry between Joseph Stalin and Leon Trotsky, as Hope not Hate has been described as a regular Marxist-Leninist organization, while Unite Against Fascism is a Trotskyist organization. UAF has been described as being the more extreme of the two, such as by not criticizing Islamic terrorism, possibly reflecting the origin in the more extreme Trotskyist ideology, from which most "anti-racist" groups originate from.

References

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    Celebrities
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  53. http://www.thejc.com/node/151419

External links