From Sylhet to Spitalfields

Bengali Squatters in 1970s East London

Author: Shabna Begum

£18.00

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ISBN: 9781913546748 Categories: , ,

Format: Paperback

Publication date: March 10, 2023

Page extent: 232

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This important and inspiring book recovers the radical history of the Bengali squatters’ movement active in Tower Hamlets in the 1970s. Through sparkling vignettes of the individuals involved, Begum provides deep insights into the forms of solidarity that sustained the movement and the political differences that also characterised it. It’s a powerful contribution to working-class and multicultural histories of Britain.

 – Gurminder K. Bhambra, Professor of Postcolonial and Decolonial Studies (Global Studies), University of Sussex

Shabna Begum has written a brilliantly nuanced and long overdue study of the Bengali squatters’ movement in 1970s London. Through foregrounding varied and vivid voices of Bengali women and men of different generations and experiences, she demonstrates how their claims to dilapidated houses, as they faced down violent physical and institutional racism, were integral to a shared struggle to establish their rights as equal citizens.

From Sylhet to Spitalfields captures how the battles for housing of British Bengalis and their allies were, in different ways, framed by anticolonial imaginations and the Bangladesh Liberation War.

 – Georgie Wemyss, Co-Director, Centre for Research on Migration, Refugees and Belonging (CMRB) at the University of East London

For too long, Britain’s postcolonial migrants have been neglected by histories of squatting and housing campaigns. From Sylhet to Spitalfields brings to life the community-based anti-racists that struggled for housing in East London, and a home in Britain. Begum’s moving accounts and sharp analysis are crucial for understanding how the right to housing is bound up with freedom from racism.

 –  Adam Elliott-Cooper, author of Black Resistance to British Policing, Manchester University Press, 2021

Begum covers a fascinating yet neglected aspect of British South Asian history. The book details, with great vigour, the necessary political activism Bangladeshi communities engaged in in the 1960s and 1970s to forge a better life for themselves and those who came after them.  An engaging read, reflecting on and critically evaluating the historic political activism that has shaped the lives of British Bangladeshis in the present.

 – Taj Ali, Industrial Correspondent at Tribune magazine

As a child of parents who made their first home in an East End squat and who were actively involved in this important but long overlooked social movement, Dr Shabna Begum’s book offers a compelling and long-awaited social history. A richly researched document, this book is not only an important historical record but gives a voice to the slowly forgotten activists who were in danger of becoming forgotten faces in fading photographs of the period.

The struggle for equality took place with the backdrop of far right nationalism; Begum’s record reminds us how hard won some civil rights are. This book is a fitting testament to the struggles of a generation which was forced to appropriate a home out of necessity and neglect in the heart of Brick Lane, and from the humble origins of this squatting movement went on to build a key place in British society.

 – Dr Halima Begum, CEO Runnymede Trust

Shabna Begum’s From Sylhet to Spitalfields, a devastating, extraordinary book on the lives of Bengali squatters in East London in the 1970s, is a chilling reminder of how migrants in the United Kingdom were – and continue to be – treated by local authorities and the wider state machinery.

Ashraf Hoque, Himal SouthAsian

This groundbreaking book introduces us to some remarkable people… [From Sylhet to Spitalfields] contributes hugely to the broader historical tapestry. It not only provides a solid foundation for future scholarship but also serves as an inspiring catalyst for further research in this field.

Seán Carey, Oral History Journal

Begum makes important points about how the self-activity of squatting spread to the collective self-defence of the community from racist attacks, and on to other forms of community activity. Most squat communities have experienced this more general sense of and need for social expression. She brings this up to date with the current struggle to “Save Brick Lane” and its contradictions.

There is too much in this book for me to do it justice so you’re going to have to read it. It’s a must for anyone interested in squatting, housing, racism, migration, oral history, London.

Myk from Advisory Service for Squatters, Freedom News

This book explores the hidden history of the Bengali squatters’ movement. Faced with institutional discrimination in council housing and the existential threat of the National Front, hundreds of Bengali families in 1970s East London decided to squat, taking over entire streets and estates.

With the support of the Race Today collective, squatters formed the Bengali Housing Action Group (BHAG), which organised support and vigilante groups to keep the community safe. Using oral history interviews and archival research, this book looks at the Bengali community’s contribution to this little-known episode of East End history, and how it can inform present-day housing struggles.