Watch Hanan Issa and Jade Forbes talk about anti racism in social care, in a discussion chaired by David Pritchard our Director of Regulation.
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1 00:00:07,800 --> 00:00:10,760 Well, welcome to this very special event 2 00:00:10,760 --> 00:00:14,720 as part of this year's Social Work Week. 3 00:00:15,120 --> 00:00:18,680 Today we're going to be talking about racism, 4 00:00:19,200 --> 00:00:23,880 but I hope also more significantly about anti-racism 5 00:00:24,040 --> 00:00:29,000 and the part we can all play in creating an anti-racist Wales. 6 00:00:29,640 --> 00:00:31,120 My name is David Pritchard. 7 00:00:31,120 --> 00:00:34,240 I'm the director of regulation at Social 8 00:00:34,240 --> 00:00:38,960 Care Wales, the national body that works to support the workforce 9 00:00:39,600 --> 00:00:43,480 and to support social care and social work in Wales. 10 00:00:45,120 --> 00:00:48,120 This year's theme for Social Work Week, 11 00:00:48,760 --> 00:00:50,920 about professional identity. 12 00:00:50,920 --> 00:00:54,600 It's about well-being and it's about relationships. 13 00:00:55,440 --> 00:00:57,920 So I'm really delighted to be joined 14 00:00:57,920 --> 00:01:00,920 by two very special guests today. 15 00:01:01,200 --> 00:01:03,160 Firstly, 16 00:01:03,160 --> 00:01:07,200 Hanan Issa, who is the national poet of Wales 17 00:01:07,200 --> 00:01:11,360 but has a history of working in social care and social work. 18 00:01:11,720 --> 00:01:15,880 And Jade Forbes, who is a social worker, 19 00:01:16,920 --> 00:01:19,920 and has been a vocal, 20 00:01:21,000 --> 00:01:23,960 a proponent of anti-racism 21 00:01:23,960 --> 00:01:27,120 in our society for the last few years. 22 00:01:27,480 --> 00:01:31,680 So we're going to have just a conversation about some of the key themes, 23 00:01:32,320 --> 00:01:35,360 about creating an anti-racist Wales. 24 00:01:35,560 --> 00:01:38,440 And hopefully we can gain some insight into what 25 00:01:38,440 --> 00:01:42,560 it's been like to live in our country over the past few years, 26 00:01:42,800 --> 00:01:46,680 but also an insight into where we can go to make life better, 27 00:01:47,240 --> 00:01:50,200 and to move towards the anti-racism, anti-racist 28 00:01:50,200 --> 00:01:53,200 Wales that we 're all, 29 00:01:53,400 --> 00:01:54,880 ambitious for. 30 00:01:54,880 --> 00:01:57,040 Great. Well, thank you both for joining. 31 00:01:57,040 --> 00:01:58,320 Fantastic to have you. 32 00:01:58,320 --> 00:02:00,720 I'm gonna start with you, Hanan. 33 00:02:00,720 --> 00:02:03,600 You are the national poet of Wales. 34 00:02:03,600 --> 00:02:07,800 You've, published poetry and essays, 35 00:02:08,760 --> 00:02:11,400 on identity. 36 00:02:11,400 --> 00:02:16,560 'My Body Can House Two Hearts' is the book that I'm most familiar with, 37 00:02:16,560 --> 00:02:21,120 and I genuinely urge people to look out for that because it really, 38 00:02:22,120 --> 00:02:23,440 is insightful. 39 00:02:23,440 --> 00:02:27,640 I wondered what is your experience of racism in Wales? 40 00:02:29,040 --> 00:02:31,840 You know, what has it been like for you growing up 41 00:02:31,840 --> 00:02:34,840 and living in Wales with dual heritage? 42 00:02:36,240 --> 00:02:37,800 Yeah. 43 00:02:37,800 --> 00:02:40,240 It's been an interesting journey. 44 00:02:40,240 --> 00:02:44,360 So I grew up in Penarth, which is a small town right next to Cardiff. 45 00:02:45,160 --> 00:02:49,640 And growing up there in the 90s, it wasn't particularly diverse. 46 00:02:49,640 --> 00:02:53,200 It would be like the local cornershop or, you know, one 47 00:02:53,200 --> 00:02:56,200 or two people that you could name or people of color. 48 00:02:56,920 --> 00:03:01,560 And so there were things that are a part of my childhood. 49 00:03:01,560 --> 00:03:04,560 So they would be like racial slurs used, 50 00:03:04,560 --> 00:03:05,920 that I didn't actually know were 51 00:03:05,920 --> 00:03:08,280 racial slurs. 52 00:03:08,280 --> 00:03:11,240 And, you know, particularly things like the 'p' word, 53 00:03:11,240 --> 00:03:15,800 that would be bandied about and my mum had to say, "Well, you can't say that." 54 00:03:15,800 --> 00:03:17,640 "That's, that's that's a bad word." 55 00:03:17,640 --> 00:03:20,040 "That's a racist word", you know? 56 00:03:20,040 --> 00:03:24,080 And so, you know, that was kind of like the, the beginning of it. 57 00:03:24,080 --> 00:03:27,160 And I had quite a formative experience at about eight or nine, 58 00:03:29,080 --> 00:03:31,720 where I was sort of made to confront 59 00:03:31,720 --> 00:03:34,720 with the fact that I wasn't white because up until this point, 60 00:03:35,840 --> 00:03:39,720 race didn't really come into my understanding of the world. 61 00:03:40,440 --> 00:03:42,440 But I we were playing in it. 62 00:03:42,440 --> 00:03:46,280 We used to live next to a farmer's field, and me and this 63 00:03:46,560 --> 00:03:49,560 boy had an argument that turned into a fist fight. 64 00:03:50,440 --> 00:03:55,640 And I won, and he wasn't happy. 65 00:03:55,840 --> 00:03:57,800 So he went home crying to his mum. 66 00:03:57,800 --> 00:04:01,520 His mum came and actually confronted me and told me to keep my filthy black 67 00:04:01,520 --> 00:04:02,800 hands off him. 68 00:04:02,800 --> 00:04:05,800 And of course, I'm not Black. 69 00:04:06,480 --> 00:04:11,360 But it really sort of forced me to confront the idea 70 00:04:11,880 --> 00:04:16,200 that I wasn't White and other people didn't perceive me in that way. 71 00:04:16,520 --> 00:04:20,080 And so my journey of kind of understanding what racism, 72 00:04:20,080 --> 00:04:23,880 what race, what identity and belonging means stemmed from there. 73 00:04:25,400 --> 00:04:27,920 And yeah, I mean, I'm 74 00:04:27,920 --> 00:04:32,040 it's unfortunate to say that that's not been my only experience of racism. 75 00:04:32,040 --> 00:04:34,920 I've had experiences in a professional capacity. 76 00:04:34,920 --> 00:04:37,920 I've had experiences and just walking down the street. 77 00:04:39,360 --> 00:04:42,360 But I think that each of those experiences has taught me 78 00:04:42,360 --> 00:04:45,360 something a little bit more about myself and about what I can manage 79 00:04:45,360 --> 00:04:49,440 and what I can do to overcome and actually support other people who 80 00:04:49,600 --> 00:04:52,600 who have these experiences. 81 00:04:53,720 --> 00:04:56,720 I mean, it's very difficult for someone who isn't from, 82 00:04:57,640 --> 00:05:01,400 Black, Asian or minority ethnic background to really understand 83 00:05:01,400 --> 00:05:03,160 those experiences. 84 00:05:03,160 --> 00:05:05,520 I also find it very difficult. 85 00:05:05,520 --> 00:05:07,960 You've worked in social care and social work. 86 00:05:07,960 --> 00:05:10,600 Hanan and Jade, you currently do. 87 00:05:10,600 --> 00:05:13,680 You do, some really important 88 00:05:14,720 --> 00:05:19,640 work in that sector, in mental health and in emergency call outs. 89 00:05:21,600 --> 00:05:22,480 You've made. 90 00:05:22,480 --> 00:05:25,080 You've described racism in social care 91 00:05:25,080 --> 00:05:28,080 and social work as exhausting. 92 00:05:28,160 --> 00:05:32,640 Do you want to tell us a little about what's behind that kind of description? 93 00:05:32,960 --> 00:05:36,440 I think exhaustion, frustration, 94 00:05:36,440 --> 00:05:41,280 frustrating. I think you go for social work 95 00:05:41,280 --> 00:05:46,360 training, you challenge your own, bias and understand. 96 00:05:46,360 --> 00:05:49,000 you've lived a life where you experience racism. 97 00:05:49,000 --> 00:05:51,480 You come into a profession where, 98 00:05:51,480 --> 00:05:54,360 generally we as social workers are there to challenge 99 00:05:54,360 --> 00:05:56,200 oppression and discrimination. 100 00:05:56,200 --> 00:05:59,280 But actually coming into a profession 101 00:05:59,280 --> 00:06:03,000 and realising that not everyone has the right values. 102 00:06:03,960 --> 00:06:06,960 And then you're still experiencing it on a day to day basis. 103 00:06:07,640 --> 00:06:10,560 In the workplace, by colleagues, 104 00:06:10,560 --> 00:06:13,560 by colleagues within different organisations. 105 00:06:14,680 --> 00:06:18,720 It's exhausting because when we have to challenge it 106 00:06:19,040 --> 00:06:23,800 or we have to raise something, often we then the person has to educate 107 00:06:23,920 --> 00:06:27,800 the person around, you know, their, lack of understanding. 108 00:06:28,680 --> 00:06:32,440 And often in a position then where we're having to comfort someone 109 00:06:32,440 --> 00:06:37,040 because they end up upset or offended that they've offended you. 110 00:06:38,040 --> 00:06:41,000 It's quite an unusual position. 111 00:06:41,000 --> 00:06:44,000 So where we're actually, you know, 112 00:06:44,440 --> 00:06:48,480 trying to vent frustration, we end up then going into a rescue mode 113 00:06:48,480 --> 00:06:51,400 because someone ends up in an a victim state. 114 00:06:51,400 --> 00:06:54,360 So it is massively exhausting. 115 00:06:54,360 --> 00:06:58,800 It's also exhausting having to raise it on an official level as well, because, 116 00:06:59,440 --> 00:07:01,920 even probably up until today, 117 00:07:01,920 --> 00:07:06,480 there's not really an infrastructure within policies to really protect people. 118 00:07:06,840 --> 00:07:10,960 An example of that is I'm currently, last week, experienced a microaggression 119 00:07:11,280 --> 00:07:14,080 and, going through another, 120 00:07:14,080 --> 00:07:15,840 procedure where I'm having to raise it. 121 00:07:15,840 --> 00:07:18,840 You know, I understand that, 122 00:07:19,000 --> 00:07:21,840 it's always best to try and mediate, 123 00:07:21,840 --> 00:07:22,640 first. 124 00:07:22,640 --> 00:07:25,920 And that's what I'm, you know, that's my intention at the moment. 125 00:07:25,920 --> 00:07:28,600 But the people I've raised it with 126 00:07:28,600 --> 00:07:31,600 are probably panicking because they've got no understanding of it. 127 00:07:32,360 --> 00:07:34,880 And I it's kind of, I'm being stonewalled a little bit 128 00:07:34,880 --> 00:07:37,920 at the moment, so I'm not hearing anything back, you know. 129 00:07:37,920 --> 00:07:41,880 So again, it's time that is precious, that I 130 00:07:41,880 --> 00:07:45,840 then have to take out to then address something because if it's happening to me, 131 00:07:46,400 --> 00:07:48,440 you know, I'm in a management position. 132 00:07:48,440 --> 00:07:51,440 If it's happening to me, then it's definitely happening to, 133 00:07:51,800 --> 00:07:55,080 you know, social workers, students and more importantly, 134 00:07:55,080 --> 00:07:57,600 the people that we we support in the community. 135 00:07:57,600 --> 00:08:01,560 I hear you kind of nodding agreement, essentially 136 00:08:01,920 --> 00:08:05,920 this idea that not only do you receive those, 137 00:08:07,240 --> 00:08:10,600 microaggressions, but you are almost required 138 00:08:10,640 --> 00:08:13,640 to then handle and deal and respond to them. 139 00:08:14,200 --> 00:08:17,120 This isn't part of your experience as well, Hanan. 140 00:08:17,120 --> 00:08:18,760 Yeah. 141 00:08:18,760 --> 00:08:21,000 It's still hard to hear that 142 00:08:21,000 --> 00:08:24,120 someone who is doing all the incredible things that you're doing. 143 00:08:25,280 --> 00:08:29,440 I mean, to quote Toni Morrison, she says that racism is a distraction. 144 00:08:29,440 --> 00:08:31,240 It distracts us from the work. 145 00:08:31,240 --> 00:08:32,760 And that is so true. 146 00:08:32,760 --> 00:08:34,320 And that's exactly what I'm hearing. 147 00:08:34,320 --> 00:08:36,120 You know, there are so many, 148 00:08:36,120 --> 00:08:39,120 much more worthy things you could be doing with your time. 149 00:08:39,120 --> 00:08:43,440 And I worry that so much of your energy is getting taken up with having to 150 00:08:43,480 --> 00:08:46,720 not only what you said, experience and endure these things, 151 00:08:46,720 --> 00:08:49,720 but then having to coddle the people that have done it. 152 00:08:50,120 --> 00:08:54,400 But I think that for me, one of the things that is very important 153 00:08:54,400 --> 00:08:58,200 is to start becoming comfortable with the discomfort. 154 00:09:00,000 --> 00:09:01,080 You know, 155 00:09:01,080 --> 00:09:04,480 it is uncomfortable to think that we've made a mistake. 156 00:09:04,480 --> 00:09:05,760 We've said something wrong. 157 00:09:05,760 --> 00:09:09,720 We've internalised a bias and then acted upon it. 158 00:09:10,320 --> 00:09:13,360 But something that we lose in childhood 159 00:09:13,360 --> 00:09:16,360 is that ability to admit we don't know. 160 00:09:16,840 --> 00:09:20,360 You know, as children, we're always asking why, what, where? 161 00:09:20,880 --> 00:09:23,040 And I don't know why we lose that. 162 00:09:23,040 --> 00:09:26,360 I don't know why we make a decision that at some point in our life 163 00:09:26,360 --> 00:09:29,360 we have to know everything because we really don't, 164 00:09:29,640 --> 00:09:32,200 you know, like, if you took an evening class in Renaissance art 165 00:09:32,200 --> 00:09:35,320 and you went once a week on a Friday for an hour, 166 00:09:36,040 --> 00:09:38,160 you would not say, I'm an expert on Renaissance art. 167 00:09:38,160 --> 00:09:41,080 You'd be like, gosh, there's so much more for me to learn. 168 00:09:41,080 --> 00:09:43,080 And that's just the case with with everything. 169 00:09:43,080 --> 00:09:47,080 And so, yeah, for me, it's like you said about, you know, social care is about 170 00:09:47,080 --> 00:09:50,080 supporting people and addressing oppression. 171 00:09:50,280 --> 00:09:51,000 And part of that 172 00:09:51,000 --> 00:09:54,280 really should be getting comfortable with the discomfort of asking. 173 00:09:58,440 --> 00:09:59,880 Tell tell us a little bit 174 00:09:59,880 --> 00:10:03,480 more about, about those experiences, perhaps for you, Jade. 175 00:10:03,800 --> 00:10:07,000 And, and one thing I'm quite interested in is you talk about 176 00:10:07,560 --> 00:10:10,960 the response of people who are challenged and, 177 00:10:11,400 --> 00:10:14,680 and that you almost describe a defensive wall going up 178 00:10:14,680 --> 00:10:18,960 rather than an openness to learn as Hanan has said. 179 00:10:19,080 --> 00:10:19,960 Yeah, yeah. 180 00:10:19,960 --> 00:10:25,080 So, quite common ones, I think I find and I'm not sure, you know, 181 00:10:25,080 --> 00:10:28,280 if you experience the same, but there's definitely a glass ceiling. 182 00:10:29,040 --> 00:10:33,720 So, I've had to and I've said this before on, you know, other occasions 183 00:10:34,160 --> 00:10:37,960 I've had to work harder and I've had to shine brighter to get where I am, you know? 184 00:10:38,280 --> 00:10:42,360 So if I think about the training, the qualifications 185 00:10:42,360 --> 00:10:46,360 that I've got, the ongoing training and qualifications that I continue to do, 186 00:10:47,520 --> 00:10:49,360 you know, even now I'm 187 00:10:49,360 --> 00:10:52,680 doing another post-grad and another, you know, specialist, bit of training. 188 00:10:53,880 --> 00:10:56,880 I want to continue to learn and be the best I can. 189 00:10:57,080 --> 00:10:59,320 But I'm very much aware 190 00:10:59,320 --> 00:11:02,320 that I have to be almost, 191 00:11:03,240 --> 00:11:05,240 I can't always ... 192 00:11:05,240 --> 00:11:05,760 You need to be excellent. 193 00:11:05,760 --> 00:11:08,400 Yeah, yeah, because you can't coast on being mediocre. 194 00:11:08,400 --> 00:11:10,840 Absolutely, absolutely. 195 00:11:10,840 --> 00:11:12,520 And I don't know whether it's. 196 00:11:12,520 --> 00:11:13,640 And this is another thing, isn't it? 197 00:11:13,640 --> 00:11:15,600 Because often we can then, 198 00:11:15,600 --> 00:11:19,560 question our own kind of thoughts and feelings around it. 199 00:11:19,560 --> 00:11:20,520 Am I overthinking this? 200 00:11:20,520 --> 00:11:23,520 Is this, you know, and that's another thing that, you know, 201 00:11:23,520 --> 00:11:26,280 you know, people of color and other ethnic, 202 00:11:26,280 --> 00:11:29,920 you know, backgrounds have to constantly have to deal with on a day to day basis. 203 00:11:30,360 --> 00:11:33,600 So when we're constantly dealing with that, and knowing that there are these, 204 00:11:34,320 --> 00:11:36,120 invisible to other people, 205 00:11:37,720 --> 00:11:40,600 you know, restrictions, 206 00:11:40,600 --> 00:11:44,680 when we, then, you know, using our professional power 207 00:11:44,680 --> 00:11:48,600 in ways in which to, reduce oppression and then, 208 00:11:49,000 --> 00:11:52,120 enable people to access services. 209 00:11:53,360 --> 00:11:56,360 You then get called things like aggressive, 210 00:11:57,640 --> 00:12:00,920 passive aggressive, intimidating, you know. 211 00:12:01,600 --> 00:12:05,520 Those type of things for me, when you raise that, that type of language 212 00:12:05,520 --> 00:12:08,880 for me is a microaggression because I'm not an 'angry Black woman'. 213 00:12:10,600 --> 00:12:13,040 But that use of language is almost used 214 00:12:13,040 --> 00:12:16,960 to silence you in a way, which is, you're not allowed to do this. 215 00:12:17,160 --> 00:12:19,800 You know, even as a manager, you know? 216 00:12:19,800 --> 00:12:21,440 So wait. Whoa, whoa, whoa. 217 00:12:21,440 --> 00:12:23,400 You know, you're not allowed to do that. 218 00:12:23,400 --> 00:12:26,400 And yeah,, 219 00:12:26,760 --> 00:12:29,600 yeah, it's one of those exhausting things because you then having to, 220 00:12:29,600 --> 00:12:31,520 you know, even at a management level, 221 00:12:31,520 --> 00:12:35,400 having to then justify your use of professional power. 222 00:12:35,560 --> 00:12:40,240 I think growing up and experiencing things that weren't overtly racist, 223 00:12:40,840 --> 00:12:43,840 there was nothing that you could easily articulate, 224 00:12:44,280 --> 00:12:46,440 but you felt that there was something harmful. 225 00:12:46,440 --> 00:12:48,240 You felt that there was something wrong 226 00:12:48,240 --> 00:12:51,240 in what was being said or what you experienced. 227 00:12:51,360 --> 00:12:56,400 And I feel like we're so lucky now to have vocabulary to express ourselves 228 00:12:56,400 --> 00:12:59,520 in this way and to say, yeah, okay, it wasn't overt racism. 229 00:12:59,520 --> 00:13:02,160 That's, you know, to me, that's what microaggression is. 230 00:13:02,160 --> 00:13:06,720 It's that sort of gray area where there's nothing tangibly racist. 231 00:13:06,720 --> 00:13:10,480 But then if you kind of broke it down, you'd see that there was an assumption 232 00:13:10,480 --> 00:13:16,240 made a stereotype, a harmful intention behind a phrase or an action. 233 00:13:16,720 --> 00:13:21,960 And so, yeah, I think that, you know, and as it's famously been explained that, 234 00:13:21,960 --> 00:13:25,680 you know, a microaggression, you experience one and perhaps it's fine, 235 00:13:25,680 --> 00:13:26,760 like a mosquito bite. 236 00:13:26,760 --> 00:13:29,760 But if you experience 20 in a row 237 00:13:29,760 --> 00:13:33,960 that can impact your day, that can impact the way that you approach other people. 238 00:13:35,080 --> 00:13:36,560 And so, yeah, it is really important 239 00:13:36,560 --> 00:13:39,560 for people to be mindful of that. 240 00:13:40,760 --> 00:13:47,160 So, I can quote statistics about some of these things. 241 00:13:47,160 --> 00:13:51,760 So we do a survey of people who work in social care, every year. 242 00:13:52,160 --> 00:13:56,000 They show that people from a Black, Asian and minority ethnic group 243 00:13:56,000 --> 00:13:59,000 are much more likely to report having 244 00:13:59,760 --> 00:14:02,240 faced discrimination in their work. 245 00:14:02,240 --> 00:14:05,560 And interestingly, Jade, we look at our statistics and 246 00:14:06,160 --> 00:14:09,720 in terms of managers and in terms of people who work in 247 00:14:09,720 --> 00:14:14,080 adult care, for example, you're five times more likely 248 00:14:14,400 --> 00:14:17,400 if you're White to be a manager than you are if you are, 249 00:14:18,880 --> 00:14:22,160 in relation to the people who are workers. 250 00:14:22,160 --> 00:14:26,400 So we see a huge disparity between the representation of people 251 00:14:26,400 --> 00:14:31,440 from minoritised groups at that level compared to managerial level. 252 00:14:34,240 --> 00:14:35,960 I suppose that's not a surprise to you, 253 00:14:35,960 --> 00:14:40,520 from what you've said. Of course, we've started to, in Wales, 254 00:14:40,520 --> 00:14:43,760 through the government and through the support of people from, 255 00:14:44,720 --> 00:14:47,640 Black, Asian and minority ethnic groups to develop some plans 256 00:14:47,640 --> 00:14:52,080 and some ideas about tackling racism. 257 00:14:52,080 --> 00:14:56,240 And the Anti-Racist Wales Action Plan is at the heart of that. 258 00:14:56,680 --> 00:15:01,840 I wondered if you had any reflections on that wider attempt 259 00:15:02,200 --> 00:15:05,200 to change the narrative in our society in Wales? 260 00:15:06,280 --> 00:15:09,280 Yeah, I guess 261 00:15:09,400 --> 00:15:11,400 words are important to me. 262 00:15:11,400 --> 00:15:14,400 You would hope, as someone who makes a living from writing them. 263 00:15:15,240 --> 00:15:18,360 And so anti, anti-racism, 264 00:15:18,720 --> 00:15:21,840 you know, when we look at the prefix anti and how we use it. 265 00:15:21,840 --> 00:15:26,400 So you can say anti-climactic which means the opposite something climactic. 266 00:15:26,400 --> 00:15:29,640 So basically the complete total opposite of it 267 00:15:30,160 --> 00:15:34,680 all we say antibacterial which is like preventing the spread of bacteria. 268 00:15:35,160 --> 00:15:38,280 And to me that sums up what anti-racism 269 00:15:38,680 --> 00:15:43,200 looks like because in that phrase, anti it's proactive. 270 00:15:43,400 --> 00:15:45,880 You can't be passively anti anything. 271 00:15:45,880 --> 00:15:49,160 If you're voicing or saying that you're opposed to something, 272 00:15:49,320 --> 00:15:51,080 there's an action that goes along with that. 273 00:15:51,080 --> 00:15:56,600 So you know for me being anti-racist it is about strongly opposing 274 00:15:56,920 --> 00:16:00,520 and preventing the spread of racism. 275 00:16:01,720 --> 00:16:02,640 And you know, 276 00:16:02,640 --> 00:16:06,480 I've looked at the anti Anti-Racism Wales Action Plan and you know, like 277 00:16:06,840 --> 00:16:10,080 I couldn't believe some of the stats it was saying that within social care, 278 00:16:10,920 --> 00:16:15,880 the number of people from a Black heritage, it's risen to almost 50 per cent. 279 00:16:15,880 --> 00:16:20,320 I think it was 45, 46 per cent of people working in social care 280 00:16:20,320 --> 00:16:23,160 who are of a Black heritage experience some kind of racism. 281 00:16:23,160 --> 00:16:25,520 And you think it's 2025. 282 00:16:25,520 --> 00:16:28,520 That number should be reducing, not increasing. 283 00:16:29,440 --> 00:16:32,640 But then when you see on a wider scale, on a global scale, 284 00:16:33,840 --> 00:16:36,840 influential people making fascist gestures, 285 00:16:37,240 --> 00:16:39,360 what do you expect? 286 00:16:39,360 --> 00:16:41,400 Jade, I, 287 00:16:41,400 --> 00:16:42,880 look, I'm 288 00:16:42,880 --> 00:16:45,880 a little older than either of you two. 289 00:16:45,960 --> 00:16:48,960 But throughout my life, I've, 290 00:16:49,000 --> 00:16:51,600 I've been in an environment where people have talked about equality, 291 00:16:51,600 --> 00:16:52,440 and that's the goal. 292 00:16:52,440 --> 00:16:56,080 And, you know, I'm going back to the Race Relations Act of the 1970s. 293 00:16:56,680 --> 00:17:01,640 As a society, we've we've all kind of agreed that racism is bad. 294 00:17:02,280 --> 00:17:06,960 So why are we in a stage now that that equality needs to be changed into 295 00:17:06,960 --> 00:17:09,960 something that's a bit more dynamic and anti. 296 00:17:10,440 --> 00:17:13,320 I think they just need something that's just a bit more tangible. 297 00:17:15,480 --> 00:17:16,920 I have 298 00:17:16,920 --> 00:17:19,920 had conversations with the likes of Gaynor Legall 299 00:17:20,800 --> 00:17:23,800 who was a social worker. 300 00:17:24,040 --> 00:17:26,920 And she said, we're in the same position. 301 00:17:26,920 --> 00:17:27,960 Nothing's changed. 302 00:17:27,960 --> 00:17:30,200 She continues to fight the fight. 303 00:17:30,200 --> 00:17:31,800 I think the difficulty is 304 00:17:31,800 --> 00:17:36,720 that there is a narrative that there's no racism. 305 00:17:37,080 --> 00:17:39,960 People who are not experiencing and having lived 306 00:17:39,960 --> 00:17:43,200 and experienced are not identifying that there is a problem. 307 00:17:43,440 --> 00:17:46,240 And I think that's where, 308 00:17:46,240 --> 00:17:49,440 we're encountering that the majority of the difficulty throughout society, 309 00:17:50,760 --> 00:17:52,640 and social media, 310 00:17:52,640 --> 00:17:56,960 the news, the narrative on the news and, you know, political agendas 311 00:17:56,960 --> 00:18:02,720 and so forth change, I think that it exacerbates the 312 00:18:03,960 --> 00:18:07,040 talk around racism and then, 313 00:18:07,560 --> 00:18:10,560 a protection of, 314 00:18:10,560 --> 00:18:13,440 what some people view as a British state 315 00:18:13,440 --> 00:18:17,760 or a Welsh kind of, you know, so, and I think that 316 00:18:19,000 --> 00:18:20,960 historically, 317 00:18:20,960 --> 00:18:22,920 that the has 318 00:18:22,920 --> 00:18:26,440 been, and people perceive people of difference as a threat. 319 00:18:26,880 --> 00:18:27,240 Yeah. 320 00:18:27,240 --> 00:18:31,760 You know, and I think that we're probably being pushed more 321 00:18:31,760 --> 00:18:35,720 or definitely into tribal ways of thinking, you know, 322 00:18:36,960 --> 00:18:39,320 and I think it's massively important 323 00:18:39,320 --> 00:18:42,320 that we lead from the top down, 324 00:18:42,440 --> 00:18:46,880 you know, in regards to, you know, the organisations, 325 00:18:46,880 --> 00:18:50,480 the structures within society to be anti-racist 326 00:18:50,760 --> 00:18:54,000 because actually it's about the use of the words. 327 00:18:54,080 --> 00:18:57,360 It's about the actions then and then the implications. 328 00:18:57,360 --> 00:19:00,440 And you know, that it has on individuals that are accessing 329 00:19:00,440 --> 00:19:03,440 or even working within services. 330 00:19:04,200 --> 00:19:04,800 Yeah. 331 00:19:04,800 --> 00:19:07,880 I'm interested in the word difference you used there, 332 00:19:07,880 --> 00:19:10,880 because we are different, all of us in, in different ways. 333 00:19:10,920 --> 00:19:13,760 And, you know, I think about what you've written about in your poetry, 334 00:19:13,760 --> 00:19:18,320 about identity and you know that perhaps it isn't one thing. 335 00:19:18,320 --> 00:19:20,400 There's lots of things that contribute to that. 336 00:19:20,400 --> 00:19:23,360 There's this idea of cultural competency that's come around. 337 00:19:25,440 --> 00:19:28,440 The idea I think that we have, 338 00:19:28,880 --> 00:19:32,400 we have different backgrounds and different contexts that we live in. 339 00:19:32,400 --> 00:19:34,480 And to understand that, it's really important. 340 00:19:34,480 --> 00:19:36,440 So it's not about we're all the same. 341 00:19:36,440 --> 00:19:41,880 It's all we all have different aspects that are rich and wonderful. 342 00:19:42,600 --> 00:19:44,640 Does that make sense to you, Hanan? 343 00:19:44,640 --> 00:19:48,840 And particularly given your, poetry and your work? 344 00:19:50,640 --> 00:19:52,920 Yeah, I guess, in instances 345 00:19:52,920 --> 00:19:55,920 like that, I always ask myself, what would Miriam Margolyes do? 346 00:19:56,880 --> 00:20:00,960 You know, she's somebody who is, you know, because I think there's this fallacy 347 00:20:00,960 --> 00:20:03,520 that you reach a certain age and then you can no longer learn, 348 00:20:03,520 --> 00:20:06,560 you can no longer ask questions, and yet she's somebody who has 349 00:20:07,200 --> 00:20:08,400 she, you know, 80s now. 350 00:20:08,400 --> 00:20:10,520 But I mean, at least late 70s. 351 00:20:10,520 --> 00:20:13,520 And yet she's still phenomenally curious. 352 00:20:13,520 --> 00:20:17,520 You know, she goes around the world encountering people who live completely 353 00:20:17,520 --> 00:20:21,240 different lives to her and just asks questions. 354 00:20:21,600 --> 00:20:25,560 But then also, she's not afraid to say, yeah, what I said ten years ago was wrong. 355 00:20:26,600 --> 00:20:28,840 I've learned from there. 356 00:20:28,840 --> 00:20:31,920 And to me, it's as simple as that as, you know, 357 00:20:32,600 --> 00:20:35,800 seeing difference as something scary. 358 00:20:35,800 --> 00:20:38,040 Yes, we know that that's the truth. 359 00:20:38,040 --> 00:20:41,440 But it's so reductive to try and counter that by saying we're all one, 360 00:20:41,440 --> 00:20:45,520 we're all the same because we're not. I think, a much more 361 00:20:47,560 --> 00:20:51,360 tangible way that we can counter that is, is shifting 362 00:20:51,680 --> 00:20:54,760 our narrative towards seeing difference with curiosity 363 00:20:55,080 --> 00:20:57,640 and just going back to the asking questions. 364 00:20:57,640 --> 00:20:59,360 Yeah, that's really interesting. 365 00:20:59,360 --> 00:21:03,280 And, you know, you're currently practicing in social work 366 00:21:03,280 --> 00:21:06,280 and leading a team of social workers. 367 00:21:07,040 --> 00:21:09,880 You know, that, look, I, 368 00:21:09,880 --> 00:21:14,280 I have this kind of naive idea that everyone in social care is lovely and 369 00:21:14,920 --> 00:21:19,840 goody goody, and all they care about is, you know, a wonderful world of the future. 370 00:21:19,840 --> 00:21:25,240 But clearly, you know, there are real challenges and problems in social work. 371 00:21:25,440 --> 00:21:29,560 And social work is a place where you have to ask questions, don't you? 372 00:21:30,760 --> 00:21:33,840 And, I suppose in that context, 373 00:21:33,840 --> 00:21:37,680 social workers shouldn't be afraid to ask those questions. 374 00:21:37,720 --> 00:21:42,200 No, no, I think professional curiosity should be at the top of everyone's agenda. 375 00:21:43,120 --> 00:21:46,160 And I think as social workers, where 376 00:21:46,720 --> 00:21:49,560 I often talk about, you know, as being in a position 377 00:21:49,560 --> 00:21:52,920 of speaking to people at their most vulnerable points of their lives. 378 00:21:53,920 --> 00:21:57,800 And actually being able to have the most difficult conversations. 379 00:21:58,040 --> 00:22:00,960 And people want you to ask those questions because sometimes 380 00:22:00,960 --> 00:22:04,440 they've not got it in them to be expressing it freely. 381 00:22:04,760 --> 00:22:07,680 So, a doctor will ask 382 00:22:07,680 --> 00:22:10,680 really personal questions about physical health matters, 383 00:22:11,040 --> 00:22:14,040 and they're not afraid to ask because actually that's their, 384 00:22:14,160 --> 00:22:15,000 you know, profession. 385 00:22:15,000 --> 00:22:16,000 That's what they need to know. 386 00:22:16,000 --> 00:22:18,000 So I think it's the same for us as well. 387 00:22:18,000 --> 00:22:19,360 And we're working with 388 00:22:19,360 --> 00:22:22,440 so many different people and we can't make assumptions. 389 00:22:22,440 --> 00:22:28,680 I say that Wayne Reid who does lots of anti-racism work for BASW 390 00:22:28,680 --> 00:22:34,080 as well, describes that people are not one homogenous group. 391 00:22:34,440 --> 00:22:39,160 So you know, you see a group of Jamaicans, they're not one homogenous, 392 00:22:39,160 --> 00:22:41,320 everyone within that group will have some difference. 393 00:22:41,320 --> 00:22:45,000 You know, an example of that is my grandparents from Jamaica 394 00:22:45,000 --> 00:22:47,320 were Jehovah's Witness Jamaicans. 395 00:22:47,320 --> 00:22:50,120 People think 'they have Kingdom Halls in Jamaica?' 396 00:22:50,120 --> 00:22:51,800 Because there would be the assumption 397 00:22:51,800 --> 00:22:56,400 that maybe, the JW didn't reach Jamaica. 398 00:22:56,400 --> 00:22:57,440 But, you know, 399 00:22:57,440 --> 00:23:00,400 I think there's all of those assumptions and I think we do need to ask 400 00:23:00,400 --> 00:23:01,320 those questions. 401 00:23:01,320 --> 00:23:04,440 And it gets I think that we get the best out of individuals 402 00:23:04,440 --> 00:23:07,440 that when they when they feel heard and understood, 403 00:23:07,560 --> 00:23:11,840 because we do have so much power in social work. 404 00:23:12,520 --> 00:23:14,400 It's how we use that appropriately. 405 00:23:14,400 --> 00:23:17,640 And being able to use that appropriately is having a full understanding 406 00:23:17,640 --> 00:23:18,960 of the individuals we work with. 407 00:23:20,160 --> 00:23:20,880 Absolutely. 408 00:23:20,880 --> 00:23:22,680 And I'm thinking about the people 409 00:23:22,680 --> 00:23:26,600 who will be watching this, often, probably mostly social workers. 410 00:23:27,920 --> 00:23:29,680 And there will be people 411 00:23:29,680 --> 00:23:33,320 who have been victims of racism, who are watching this. 412 00:23:34,000 --> 00:23:36,680 There will also be people who've been observers of racism, 413 00:23:36,680 --> 00:23:39,680 whether they've challenged or not challenged that. 414 00:23:40,400 --> 00:23:43,400 And I am sure there will be perpetrators as well 415 00:23:43,440 --> 00:23:47,880 who will be watching this and perhaps reflecting. 416 00:23:48,920 --> 00:23:53,240 What advice would you give to people who are listening 417 00:23:53,240 --> 00:23:57,640 or watching this about what they could do to help 418 00:23:58,280 --> 00:24:01,880 build an anti-racist Wales, an anti-racist 419 00:24:02,160 --> 00:24:05,840 social work, an anti-racist, team? 420 00:24:06,280 --> 00:24:10,320 And, you know, for them themselves to become anti-racist. 421 00:24:10,560 --> 00:24:14,280 Do you have any particular advice, that they might 422 00:24:14,280 --> 00:24:17,280 want to take? Hanan? 423 00:24:17,480 --> 00:24:19,080 I guess 424 00:24:19,080 --> 00:24:21,240 care is an active verb, right? 425 00:24:21,240 --> 00:24:24,720 Okay. And so in order to care 426 00:24:24,840 --> 00:24:28,520 for the people that surround us in the place that we live, 427 00:24:29,960 --> 00:24:31,920 it requires an action. 428 00:24:31,920 --> 00:24:35,120 Just as to be anti-racism requires an action. 429 00:24:35,120 --> 00:24:40,640 And it sounds terribly simple, but it's about bringing it 430 00:24:40,640 --> 00:24:44,000 back to self-reflection and thinking, how would I want to be treated? 431 00:24:44,400 --> 00:24:48,720 You know, as as you've said, you're meeting people usually at their most 432 00:24:48,720 --> 00:24:49,800 vulnerable. 433 00:24:49,800 --> 00:24:52,840 And if it's not necessarily a service user, a client, it's 434 00:24:53,680 --> 00:24:57,160 you're working with colleagues who are under incredible stress. 435 00:24:57,520 --> 00:24:59,840 And yes, you know, we all cut corners. 436 00:24:59,840 --> 00:25:03,200 We all make snap decisions and snap assumptions in those spaces. 437 00:25:03,480 --> 00:25:06,440 But then it is about taking that time of self-reflection and thinking. 438 00:25:06,440 --> 00:25:07,360 Hang on. 439 00:25:07,360 --> 00:25:08,440 Like checking yourself. 440 00:25:08,440 --> 00:25:09,960 Have I made an assumption here? 441 00:25:09,960 --> 00:25:13,080 You just made the point about, you know, Jamaican people. 442 00:25:13,080 --> 00:25:17,080 And it's like, always makes me think of, this great author, Malorie Blackman. 443 00:25:17,080 --> 00:25:19,040 She wrote this incredible book, Naughts and Crosses, 444 00:25:20,080 --> 00:25:23,080 and she was writing about a Jamaican family eating dinner, 445 00:25:23,440 --> 00:25:25,640 and they were eating spaghetti. 446 00:25:25,640 --> 00:25:26,520 and the feedback 447 00:25:26,520 --> 00:25:29,600 that she got from the editor was, well, wouldn't they be eating rice and peas? 448 00:25:30,360 --> 00:25:33,880 You know, and it's like, if you're the person asking that question, 449 00:25:33,880 --> 00:25:38,320 just take a moment to be like, oh, am I making an assumption here? 450 00:25:38,520 --> 00:25:41,160 You know, would I like it if the tables were turned 451 00:25:41,160 --> 00:25:44,040 and people will make an assumption that I'm just eating beans on toast or, 452 00:25:44,040 --> 00:25:46,280 you know, whatever, whatever the stereotype is. 453 00:25:46,280 --> 00:25:49,920 So, yeah, I think it just it comes back to taking that time to think, 454 00:25:50,080 --> 00:25:53,080 how would I want to be treated in this situation? 455 00:25:53,200 --> 00:25:57,720 And you lead that social work team you want to be, don't you? 456 00:25:57,720 --> 00:26:00,720 An anti-racist social work team? 457 00:26:00,840 --> 00:26:04,200 What are the kind of things that you think are 458 00:26:04,200 --> 00:26:09,000 the characteristics of an anti-racist team working in that way? 459 00:26:09,120 --> 00:26:13,920 I think I would use, and I've spoken before about a fitness, about everything that we do 460 00:26:13,920 --> 00:26:16,920 and thinking of it in a kind of a way of fitness. 461 00:26:17,080 --> 00:26:20,720 And if we engage in trying to ask questions, 462 00:26:21,040 --> 00:26:24,440 you know, it needs to be not just tokenism as well, because, well, 463 00:26:24,480 --> 00:26:27,120 I don't think we want which happens is 464 00:26:27,120 --> 00:26:30,960 there's a big wave of people going, oh, yes, 465 00:26:30,960 --> 00:26:34,800 I'm actively engaged in this and, we're participants and so forth. 466 00:26:35,160 --> 00:26:38,160 And then it kind of it dwindles you know, 467 00:26:38,600 --> 00:26:40,560 and it's almost like an exercise fad isn't it. 468 00:26:40,560 --> 00:26:44,000 So you exercise for a month, you think you're fit and then you don't. 469 00:26:44,920 --> 00:26:47,920 So I think that we need to be doing things every day. 470 00:26:48,160 --> 00:26:52,680 We need to look a bit wider than ourselves, and we need to look at society. 471 00:26:53,000 --> 00:26:57,360 And I think when and it doesn't just mean, you know, when I'm working with someone 472 00:26:57,480 --> 00:27:01,720 that I ask questions, in my day to day, I'll ask questions. 473 00:27:01,720 --> 00:27:04,320 I don't want to ever want to make an assumption. 474 00:27:04,320 --> 00:27:07,320 And I think that adds to the richness of conversation as well. 475 00:27:07,600 --> 00:27:09,840 And also character building. 476 00:27:09,840 --> 00:27:13,440 So I just think that for us to maintain what I would say around 477 00:27:13,440 --> 00:27:17,120 that kind of fitness, around anti-racism, we need to be doing stuff every day. 478 00:27:17,280 --> 00:27:18,760 We need to be asking questions. 479 00:27:18,760 --> 00:27:20,320 We need to be not just of, 480 00:27:20,320 --> 00:27:24,520 like I said, people we we're working with about wider people in society, friends 481 00:27:24,720 --> 00:27:27,400 that maybe you've never asked questions about, you know, 482 00:27:27,400 --> 00:27:29,520 and then you see a completely different side to them. 483 00:27:29,520 --> 00:27:31,800 Just think it opens up our lens massively. 484 00:27:31,800 --> 00:27:36,000 That's such a good analogy about fitness, because I think you said before, like, 485 00:27:36,000 --> 00:27:37,120 our brains are muscle. 486 00:27:37,120 --> 00:27:37,600 Absolutely. 487 00:27:37,600 --> 00:27:38,760 So, you know, if you 488 00:27:38,760 --> 00:27:42,480 if you want to maintain that curiosity, that understanding of anti-racism, 489 00:27:42,760 --> 00:27:44,600 you need to keep on, not just do one course. 490 00:27:44,600 --> 00:27:46,560 And then I'm anti-racist. I got a badge. 491 00:27:48,000 --> 00:27:50,160 I got a card. 492 00:27:50,160 --> 00:27:54,600 I, I noted the word earlier coddled you used, Hanan. 493 00:27:54,760 --> 00:27:57,760 I hate the idea that I might end up being coddled. 494 00:27:57,840 --> 00:28:02,240 I need to reflect myself and take ownership of what I do. 495 00:28:02,800 --> 00:28:06,480 And if I am challenged, perhaps be reflective 496 00:28:06,480 --> 00:28:10,440 and learn from it rather than be defensive and concerned by that. 497 00:28:10,720 --> 00:28:13,720 See it as an opportunity to learn and get better. 498 00:28:14,640 --> 00:28:15,600 Okay. Thank you. 499 00:28:15,600 --> 00:28:19,800 And well, I've been a little bit cheeky, actually, and I've taken the advantage 500 00:28:20,000 --> 00:28:23,880 of having the National Poet of Wales in this conversation, 501 00:28:24,160 --> 00:28:28,760 and I've asked Hanan if she wouldn't mind sharing some of her poetry with us. 502 00:28:29,040 --> 00:28:32,800 So I'm sure you'll be delighted that we're going to close this session 503 00:28:33,160 --> 00:28:36,680 with a little bit of verse from Hanan. 504 00:28:39,160 --> 00:28:42,160 My body can house two hearts, 505 00:28:42,280 --> 00:28:44,760 we say 'qalbayn' for 'two hearts'. 506 00:28:44,760 --> 00:28:47,320 Pumping parts through crimson sea. 507 00:28:47,320 --> 00:28:49,440 Tied to lands history split. 508 00:28:49,440 --> 00:28:52,040 I've tried to fit uneasily. 509 00:28:52,040 --> 00:28:54,080 A blazing of blood combined. 510 00:28:54,080 --> 00:28:59,120 Obsess, rewind, frustrate me. Say between two stools I fall, 511 00:28:59,240 --> 00:29:01,920 those boundary walls formed early. 512 00:29:02,640 --> 00:29:04,920 But my body is enough. 513 00:29:04,920 --> 00:29:09,680 gently tough, stretched agony. Growing a love embracing, 514 00:29:09,680 --> 00:29:11,360 rejecting patriarchy. 515 00:29:11,360 --> 00:29:15,160 No need to shame my peers or let my fears rat-race me. 516 00:29:15,160 --> 00:29:18,160 Two hearts my body can hold, 517 00:29:18,440 --> 00:29:22,800 so I mould my legacy: to make space enough for all, 518 00:29:22,800 --> 00:29:25,680 standing tall I rise, 519 00:29:25,680 --> 00:29:30,360 breathe free. Two hearts a strength none can take; 520 00:29:30,840 --> 00:29:34,320 love's a lake and the world is thirsty. 521 00:29:38,640 --> 00:29:41,080 Well, that was special. 522 00:29:41,080 --> 00:29:43,080 And thank you very much to Hanan. 523 00:29:43,080 --> 00:29:48,600 And thank you to Hanan and to Jade for joining us for this conversation. 524 00:29:48,600 --> 00:29:52,040 I've learned a lot, and I hope my fitness 525 00:29:52,440 --> 00:29:56,000 has been renewed today, but I recognise I'm 526 00:29:56,000 --> 00:30:01,320 going to have to continue to work at this if I'm going to meet my ambitions. 527 00:30:01,680 --> 00:30:04,520 And I think social care's ambitions 528 00:30:04,520 --> 00:30:08,520 to develop an anti-racist society here in Wales. 529 00:30:08,880 --> 00:30:12,560 Thank you for listening and joining us for this conversation. 530 00:30:13,160 --> 00:30:16,440 Please look at the other activities in Social Work Week. 531 00:30:16,440 --> 00:30:21,640 There's a whole range of activities that are really worthwhile having a look for. 532 00:30:22,160 --> 00:30:23,680 And please, 533 00:30:23,680 --> 00:30:26,840 if you do, come into conversation with people, 534 00:30:27,000 --> 00:30:30,960 share with them what you've learned today and indeed share with them 535 00:30:30,960 --> 00:30:35,280 the link that will be available to this conversation, on the website. 536 00:30:35,400 --> 00:30:36,800 Thank you all. Good bye.