A parallel society is developing in parts of Muslim Britain
As a new book by Ed Husain explains
BRITAIN HAS a glorious tradition of writers getting on their bikes, real or metaphorical, and pedalling off to discover the country. Two of the best examples of the genre were published during the Great Depression, J.B. Priestley’s “English Journey” (1934) and George Orwell’s “The Road to Wigan Pier” (1937). Bill Bryson had such a hit with “Notes from a Small Island” (1995), selling more than 2m copies, that he decided to repeat the exercise with “The Road to Little Dribbling” 20 years later.
This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Tolerating intolerance”
Britain June 5th 2021
- Boris Johnson seeks a state fit for crisis
- The fight to define the great British garden
- Rishi Sunak is worried about rising interest rates. He should relax
- MPs are returning to Parliament in a rebellious mood
- England’s school catch-up tsar resigns in protest
- London is starting to build more council homes
- Boris Johnson’s government wants more patriotic cultural institutions
- A parallel society is developing in parts of Muslim Britain
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