Saturday, 20 May 2023

Street

 


Blackstock St in north London has been recognised as a street that represents the whole world. 
Why do you think that is, how can a street represent the world?

Journalist Fiona Dunlop wrote recently, "In Blackstock Rd, you can travel and taste the world. From Africa to the Middle East and Asia, before finally landing in Europe. The choice is infinite, global and unpretentious."

Fiona describes a beautiful gold-domed Mosque at one end of the street which lies near the Arsenal football stadium bringing "armies of football fans" to the area in search of tasty food. Today there over 270 nationalities living in London (ask the children to guess the number before revealing) and over one third of the city were born in a different country. Fiona says this shows how the capital city embraces immigrants.

In the 1 km stretch of road, there is only one chain supermarket; the rest are all independent, family owned stores.  Below is a picture of Hakim Amokrane who owns a halal, Algerian butcher and grocery shop with his two brothers.

Hakim says not all their customers are Muslim although the greeting, "Salaam Alaikum" is often heard; "We want to serve everybody. We feel part of the community. Here I found a culture that fulfilled me, a different way of life and language."

Across the street is an Ethiopian cafe and deli owned by Mohammed Aslam. Mohammed says, "When I opened, customers were mainly Caribbean and English, then came West Africans, Bangladeshis, Somalians and Algerians. Now we have Ethiopians, Colombians and quite a lot of English. We must never depend on just one community in business."

This photo shows Rose Axmu, who owns a Uyghur restaurant selling food from Central-Asian cultures such as hand-pulled flat noodles, meat samosas, dumplings, aubergine stew, pilaf rice, chilli chicken and spiced lamb kebabs (ask children which foods they recognise, can they describe the foods?). Rose says, "It's exhausting work to prepare all these dishes, but we like our customers who even come from far outside London."

Fiona describes a Chinese hardware shop, an Algerian cake shop, an Italian restaurant and a Turkish restaurant, where the owners says just 10% of the customers are Turkish; "the rest reflect this mixed neighbourhood."

Margaux Cras is French and owns a hairdressers. She says, "I came to London by chance 8 years ago, opened this salon and never looked back. London is a very open minded city but I love London and Blackstock Rd in particular. I feel at home in the mix, everyone is respectful of other communities. I feel safe."

Jojos Kitchen is an Ethiopian kitchen owned by Yohannes Asfha. Yohannes came to England as an asylum seeker in 2008 and then learned English. He worked in restaurants before opening his own on Blackstock Rd; "I chose this area for the diversity."

- what is diversity?
- what is an immigrant?
- There are 270 nationalities in London today, Fiona says this shoes how the city embraces Immigrants - what does she mean?
- How does a street like Blackstock Rd benefit from immigration?
- why do the Arsenal football fans come to Blackstock Rd for food? Why don't they go to English restaurants and eat English food? What does this show about Britain today?
- do we all benefit from immigration?
- Fiona describes Blackstock St as, "The choice is infinite, global and unpretentious." what does this mean?
- "We must never depend on just one community in business." What does Mohammed mean by this?
- Margaux says she came to London 8 years ago "by chance". How can someone come to a city "by chance"?
-"I feel at home in the mix, everyone is respectful of other communities. I feel safe." what does Margaux mean by this?
- Yohannes came to England as an asylum seeker in 2008; what is an asylum seeker?
- Why didn't Yohannes learn English before arriving in England?
- Is it easy to learn another language as an adult? Is it easy to open your own business? How would you describe Yohannes?
- "I chose this area for the diversity." why?
- What can we learn from Yohannes, Margaux, and all the business owners on Blackstock Rd?
- How would you respond if you heard someone say Yohannes and Margaux should not be here, and that they were taking jobs from English people? 
- Why is this about No Outsiders?
- How is this story about the Equality Act?
- Which British Value is this assembly about?








Saturday, 6 May 2023

Racing

 






Seven times Formula 1 champion Lewis Hamilton will wear a rainbow flag on his helmet as he competes in the latest Formula 1 competition this weekend in Miami, USA.

Miami is in Florida where a law was passed in March 2023 to stop schools teaching about LGBTQ+ awareness. Books like "And Tango makes three" by Justin Richardson and Peter Parnell (that we have in our school) are not allowed. The law is known as the "Don't say gay" bill.

Lewis says, "I stand by those within the community here. I hope they continue to stand firm and push back. I'll have the rainbow on my helmet. It's no different from when we were in Saudi."

Lewis was asked if he thought F1 should boycott racing in Florida and he replied, "It's not for me to decide that... I did hear and read about some of the decisions that have been made in government here and I do not agree with it and I do not support it. I really do continue to stand with the LGBTQ community."

"The sport is going to be here whether I am or not. but the least I can do is just continue to be supportive and just being here and having that on my helmet hopefully that speaks well to the subject."

- What is Formula 1?
- why a rainbow helmet?
- why do you think laws exist in some countries that stop schools talking about difference?
- what do we say in our school about different people?
- what do we say about being LGBTQ+?
- what law exists in the UK that means schools here can talk about LGBTQ+ people? (Equality Act) 
- What other groups of people are protected in the Equality Act?
- Can wearing a helmet change anything?
- why does Lewis say it's not for him to decide whether Formula 1 should boycott racing in Florida? Who does decide? Can the competitors do anything about this? Should Formula 1 be held in Florida where there is a "Don't say gay" bill? Does that matter? 
- Does this story remind you of any other sport story recently where people stood up for LGBTQ people? (World cup. rainbow armband https://no-outsiders-assembly.blogspot.com/2022/11/world-cup-armband-follow-up.html) 
  - what happened in the World Cup? Did Harry Kane wear the rainbow armband? Why not?
- "just being here and having that on my helmet hopefully that speaks well to the subject." what does Lewis mean?
- You could argue Lewis should respect the law of the country he is visiting and not wear a rainbow helmet. What are the arguments for and against this view?
- Lewis could just wear the helmet in countries where LGBTQ+ visibility is allowed, then he wouldn't be disrespecting any law. What do you think?
- Can we learn anything form Lewis Hamilton?
- Which British value is this story about?
- Why is it about No Outsiders?







Monday, 1 May 2023

Soldiers

 

What do you see in the picture? Who are they, where are they? What do you think this story might be about? 

Vladyslav and Pavlo are soldiers in the Ukraine army and are a couple. They got engaged the day before this photo was taken and they hope that same-sex civil partnerships will soon be allowed in Ukraine. 

LGBTQ+ soldiers in Ukraine have been speaking out about their Pride and about the significance of Eurovision next week after they won the contest in 2022. Vladyslav says, "Ukraine's victory last year showed that Ukraine is invincible and that we can overcome any difficulties and adversities, whether it is a war or a contest. I believe it's a message to the world that despite the war we can show our creativity."

Another LGBTQ+ couple, Antonina, who identifies as non-binary, and Oleksandr, describe the moment Ukraine won Eurovision last year; "It felt like a miracle that Kalush had a chance to represent Ukraine with dignity. I thought, "Oh my god we won Eurovision, we are going to win this war!"

Oleksandr says, "Lots of people said that there were no gay people in the army," and the couple expected to receive homophobic abuse from soldiers when they joined up, but they have been pleasantly surprised; "It's more tolerant than we expected, and I think that is partly because of other LGBTQ+ military who came out." Oleksandr wears a rainbow badge on the front line and both wear another badge in army colours: a unicorn head which has become a symbol for LGBTQ+ soldiers serving in the Ukraine army.

Oleksandr says, "We are looking forward to seeing Ukraine perform in Eurovision this year. We've had very difficult times and Eurovision is like a breath of fresh air because when you see people doing what they like, enjoying what they are doing and that life is still going on, when you see people in Europe supporting Ukraine, that's very important. Especially when you're on the front line."

- Where is Ukraine, what is the war about?
- How do you think winning Eurovision last year affected people in Ukraine? What message do you think they felt from Europe?
- "I believe it's a message to the world that despite the war we can show our creativity." what does this mean?
- "It shows us that life is still going on..." How is Eurovision impacting on these soldiers today as they work on the front line? (what is a 'front line'?)
- "Lots of people said that there were no gay people in the army," why do you think this is?
- Antonina tells us she is non-binary; what does that mean? (gender identity that is neither make or female) What pronouns should we use for a person who is non-binary? (if you have to use pronouns, ask them, they will tell you)
- Why does Oleksandr choose to wear a rainbow badge, why does he want people to know?
- The unicorn is an interesting choice of a symbol for LGBTQ+ soldiers, why do you think this was chosen (rather than a lion, a dolphin or a hedgehog, for example)
- Vladyslav and Pavlo got engaged, yet they cannot marry or have a civil partnership in Ukraine. So what is the point of getting engaged?
- Vladyslav and Pavlo are fighting for a country that does not legally recognise their relationship. How do you think this makes them feel? What should they do about that? Can they do anything about that?
- What can we do about it? (we can tell their story, talk about it and show our support by making sure in the place where we are, that LGBTQ+ people are respected).
- Should we all vote for Ukraine in Eurovision this year to support Vladyslav and Pavlo, Oleksandr and Antonina? Do you think that is what they would want? (You can vote for whatever country you want on the night; it is your choice- which British values is that about? (democracy))
- What can we learn from Vladyslav and Pavlo, Oleksandr and Antonina?
- Why is this about No Outsiders?
- Which British values are referenced in this assembly?

Download for free the Eurovision scheme of work for KS2/ KS3 - 8 lesson plans linking Eurovision to PSHE, maths, art and design, historical enquiry, geographyhttps://excelsiormat.org/eurovision-scheme-of-work/