时间:2019-01-31 作者:英语课 分类:VOA2001-国际风云(2)


英语课

149 英国种族骚乱意味着什么?


What's Behind British Race Riots?
Laurie Kassman
Oldham, England
11 Jul 2001 17:07 UTC


In the past several weeks, at least three English cities have 1)erupted in 2)riots between police and groups of South Asian and white youths.
The community 3)nestles up against the city of Manchester. It 4)thrived for decades on its textile mills and mining operations. The steady work attracted 5)immigrants, mostly from Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Kashmir. They lived near where they worked. Their communities became 6)ethnic 7)ghettos. South Asians represent about 15 percent of Oldham's population of 250,000.
Today the mills are gone. Job opportunities are 8)scarce. England's unemployment rate averages less than five percent. But in Oldham, the jobless rate for South Asian residents tops 15 percent.
Oldham's South Asian youth talk of 9)alienation 1, 10)isolation, 11)frustration, and 12)desperation.
Last May, a fight between a South Asian and a white sparked several nights of rioting that injured scores of police officers and rioters. The violence sent shock waves through both communities.
Deputy Mayor Riaz Ahmad's home was firebombed during the riots. He acknowledges that communication between the South Asian and white communities had broken down years ago. "Politicians, police, community leaders, council, everyone accepts that we made mistakes," he said. "Everyone accepts that we have a problem. We have acknowledged the problem. We are trying to understand the problem and hopefully we will come up with the solutions. So we are trying to stay one step ahead of everyone else."
But the problem is different, depending on whom you talk with.
South Asian teens say nobody is listening. Youth leader Barinu Rashid says the police respond too slowly when violence is reported against his community. Few people, he says, see the police as a source of protection. "We have, a lot of us, tried to make communication with the police, but they have refused and this 13)reiterates the views and the 14)mentality of the youth that the police do not want to know," he said.
Police chief Eric Hewitt, a 57-year-old white who grew up in Oldham, sees the problem as one of drugs and 15)gangs in the South Asian communities, and lots of young people with lots of time on their hands. "Fifty percent of the Asian population is under the age of 16," he noted 2. "Exceptionally high 16)unemployment rate. Exceptionally high under-achievement rate at schools. When you look at that, most of them living in what are recognized as socially 17)deprived areas, then that of itself highlights there is a problem there, a social problem of itself. And that is the kind of policing environment we have got."
Mr. Hewitt agrees on the need for confidence-building measures between the police and the South Asian community. But he acknowledges there are only 12 Asians among his 412 police officers.
Asian community leaders describe the problem 18)in terms of alienation and 19)polarization.
Sharif Salim, who runs a South Asian neighborhood center, says few attempts have been made to bridge the cultural divide between South Asians and whites. So, both communities end up talking past each other instead of talking with each other. "Instead of planning to avoid events, they react to it and the sooner the communication starts, the sooner the youth are heard, the sooner the elders are heard then you break down 20)barriers," he said. "At the moment there are no bridges. We have to build bridges between the Oldham's communities."
Asian leaders also accuse Oldham's newspaper, the Oldham Chronicle, of fueling tensions through 21)racial bias 3 because it reports more on Asian violence against whites than the reverse. The newspaper 22)circulates mostly within the white community.
Editor Jim Williams says he was shocked by the accusations 4 and is taking a look at how to change that perception. "Possibly we were becoming part of the problem simply by publicizing what was happening. We were reporting these attacks," he said.
Mr. Williams acknowledges that news about the South Asian communities was gathered mostly through telephone interviews or police information. He has no Asian reporters and is reluctant to send white 23)staffers into the ghettos because he fears for their safety. Mr. Williams says he is trying to recruit some Asian staffers to provide a more balanced 24)coverage.
Oldham leaders on both sides of the racial divide agree on the urgent need to 25)foster 26)integration.
Sharif Salim says the job was made more difficult by politicians using anti-immigrant 27)rhetoric to gain votes during last June's 28)general elections. "The politicians who raised the issue of 29)asylum seekers gave an excuse for the National Front, the racist 5 Nazi 6 followers 7 an excuse to explode in a place like Oldham, which was a breeding ground with poverty, lack of development," he said. "And it just needed a little 30)fuse, a match."
Residents were shocked when the extreme right-wing British National Party's support in Oldham 31)soared after it campaigned for immigrants to be sent home.
Now community leaders, the police and the politicians are calling for 32)forums and 33)outreach projects to integrate schools and sports and increase cross-cultural communication to ease tensions.
Oldham Deputy Mayor Ahmad says a review is underway to map out strategies for the future. "We want to reach the silent majority, people who have not spoken in the past, people who did not riot," he said. "It is very easy to go and speak to the rioters. They made their points. But what about the rest of the population?" The deputy mayor recognizes he has little time to waste. He says the situation remains 8 34)volatile and could ignite again soon.
 


(1) erupt[I5rQpt]vt.喷出vi.爆发
(2) riot[5raIEt]n.暴乱, 骚动, 暴动v.骚乱, 放纵, 挥霍, 参加骚动
(3) nestle[5nes(E)l]vi.舒适地坐定, 偎依vt.抱, 安置
(4) thrive[WraIv]v.兴旺, 繁荣, 茁壮成长, 旺盛
(5) immigrant[5ImI^rEnt]adj.(从外国)移来的, 移民的, 移居的n.移民, 侨民
(6) ethnic[5eWnIk]adj.人种的, 种族的, 异教徒的
(7) ghetto[5^etEJ]n.犹太人区
(8) scarce[skeEs]adj.缺乏的, 不足的, 稀有的, 不充足的
(9) alienation[eIlIE5neIF(E)n]n.疏远, 转让
(10) isolation[aIsE5leIF(E)n]n.隔绝, 孤立, 隔离, 绝缘, 离析
(11) frustration[frQ`streIFEn]n.挫败, 挫折, 受挫
(12) desperation[despE5reIF(E)n]n.绝望
(13) reiterate[ri:5ItEreIt]vt.反复地说, 重申, 重做
(14) mentality[men5tAlItI]n.智力, 精神, 心理, 思想情况
(15) gang[^AN]n.(一)伙, (一)群
(16) unemployment[QnIm5plCImEnt]n.失业, 失业人数
(17) deprive[dI5praIv]vt.剥夺, 使丧失
(18) in terms of adv.根据, 按照, 用...的话, 在...方面
(19) polarization[ 9pEJlEraI`zeIFEn; -rI`z- ]n.极化(作用),两极化,分化
(20) barrier[5bArIE(r)]n.(阻碍通道的)障碍物, 栅栏, 屏障
(21) racial[5reIF(E)l]adj.人种的, 种族的, 种族间的
(22) circulate[5s:kjJleIt]v.(使)流通, (使)运行, (使)循环, (使)传播
(23) staffer[`stB:fE(r); `stA-]n.编辑, 职员
(24) coverage[5kQvErIdV]n.复盖
(25) foster[5fRstE(r); (?@) 5fC:rstEr]vt.养育,鼓励, 抱(希望) n.养育者, 鼓励者
(26) integration[9IntI`^reIFEn]n.综合
(27) rhetoric[5retErIk]adj.花言巧语的
(28) general election n.大选
(29) asylum[E5saIlEm]n.庇护, 收容所, 救济院, 精神病院
(30) fuse[fju:z]n.保险丝, 熔丝v.熔合
(31) soar[sC:(r)]v.高飞, 高丛, 滑翔, 剧增n.高飞范围, 高涨程度
(32) forum[5fC:rEm]n.论坛, 法庭, 讨论会
(33) outreach[`aJtri:tF]v.到达顶端, 超越
(34) volatile[5vRlEtaIl; (?@) -tl]adj.挥发性的, 可变的, 不稳定的


 



n.疏远;离间;异化
  • The new policy resulted in the alienation of many voters.新政策导致许多选民疏远了。
  • As almost every conceivable contact between human beings gets automated,the alienation index goes up.随着人与人之间几乎一切能想到的接触方式的自动化,感情疏远指数在不断上升。
adj.著名的,知名的
  • The local hotel is noted for its good table.当地的那家酒店以餐食精美而著称。
  • Jim is noted for arriving late for work.吉姆上班迟到出了名。
n.偏见,偏心,偏袒;vt.使有偏见
  • They are accusing the teacher of political bias in his marking.他们在指控那名教师打分数有政治偏见。
  • He had a bias toward the plan.他对这项计划有偏见。
n.指责( accusation的名词复数 );指控;控告;(被告发、控告的)罪名
  • There were accusations of plagiarism. 曾有过关于剽窃的指控。
  • He remained unruffled by their accusations. 对于他们的指控他处之泰然。
n.种族主义者,种族主义分子
  • a series of racist attacks 一连串的种族袭击行为
  • His speech presented racist ideas under the guise of nationalism. 他的讲话以民族主义为幌子宣扬种族主义思想。
n.纳粹分子,adj.纳粹党的,纳粹的
  • They declare the Nazi regime overthrown and sue for peace.他们宣布纳粹政权已被推翻,并出面求和。
  • Nazi closes those war criminals inside their concentration camp.纳粹把那些战犯关在他们的集中营里。
追随者( follower的名词复数 ); 用户; 契据的附面; 从动件
  • the followers of Mahatma Gandhi 圣雄甘地的拥护者
  • The reformer soon gathered a band of followers round him. 改革者很快就获得一群追随者支持他。
n.剩余物,残留物;遗体,遗迹
  • He ate the remains of food hungrily.他狼吞虎咽地吃剩余的食物。
  • The remains of the meal were fed to the dog.残羹剩饭喂狗了。
学英语单词
a man of no fixed abode
ability of anti-nuclear-radiation
adell
admissible character
alabama cotton
alimenting
Ancyrognathus
aqueductus
assubjugating
back pain
benchmarkable
beneathness
bookkeeping typewriter
buying clerk
characeeristic component
chipware
clavicular line
coaxial speaker
cochealed
congenital bilateral dislocation of knee joints
cordles
deianira
depa
developing bacteroidal tissue
direct labour basis
drum operation system
economic extinction
effective discharge
eitner
electrooptic modulation
enter into a partnership with
enzyme action
ethyl sulfate
Excelgrow
facemailed
falchion
falls asleep
fisher-price
floating storage
fluoroorotic
forensic linguistics
general stockholders' meeting
Ghom
globular stage
greenidea brideliae
hardenablity
have not a dry thread on one
high quality
Hollywood science
Hyoscyamus pusillus
index number of retail prices
interim reform package
Iosopan
ITS-90
jugerum
kanzo
knotter disc
Kora Nehir
Lindside
lineariss
lunar communication
Morozovskiy
near-diffraction-limited mirror
NSF check
ohio-based
ophiernus
ora coleopterorum
passholders
peripatecians
peroryctid
personal life
Phlebotomus stantoni
pile fabric
Plush-Capped
political entities
postvaccine
precision machine tool
provided on four sides
put to shame
reaction control agent
refusals
rivergod
sammarai
sanitary
semi-chemical pulping process
shelf-stable
skew arch
slip-tube shaft
soil skeleton
Soton
subcutaneous injury
subiodide
sudachi
tanker ship
tertiary stem villus
took the stage
top hat frames
unilateral hemianopsia
unviewable
v-jointeds
Wallhausen
zea mays indentatas