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NationCymru A news service by the people of Wales, for the people of Wales.

Opinion

Solidarity built my town. Division won’t save it

By Mark Mansfield
Picture by Llywelyn 2000 (CC BY-SA 4.0).

Siân Summers-Rees, Chief Officer of City of Sanctuary UK

My first memory is of being on a sledge. I was very small. It was during the great snow of 1982, and my dad had loaded it with tins of food.

We went door to door through the snow, delivering to older neighbours in Caerau — an ex-mining town in Maesteg, one of the most deprived areas of Wales.

A few years later, I went with him again, this time delivering food to striking miners and their families.
I didn’t have the words for what I was witnessing then. I do now. It was solidarity. It was community. It was what Wales, at its best, has always been.

I grew up lucky, and I knew it. Both my parents had good jobs — my mum was a nurse and my dad a technician at the local paper mill. Before that, he’d worked in the docks in Cardiff as an engineer on ships, a life that brought him friends from across the world.

He didn’t use words like “equality” or “social justice”. He didn’t need to. His life expressed those values. He welcomed everyone, without question. And he would have been appalled — genuinely appalled — by the Wales some politicians are now trying to build.

Our neighbours in Caerau had very little. My grandfather — an ex-miner and union representative — spent his days helping people write letters to the council, untangle their finances, navigate systems that never seemed designed for them.

He taught me something I’ve never forgotten: systems matter, and some are built to keep certain people down.

I went to study law in Kent, convinced it was a route to justice. That belief didn’t last. Tutors told me to tone down my accent. A judge at a moot competition told me my arguments were good — it was just a shame I was Welsh.

And then I met Neville Lawrence, Stephen’s father, around the time of the Macpherson report. That meeting changed everything. The law, I realised, does not protect everyone equally. The systems I had trusted were not neutral. They were not innocent.

That realisation has shaped my life. It is why I have spent my career working with people seeking sanctuary, standing alongside those the system is stacked against.

Pressures

Now I am back in the town where I grew up. And my life is shaped by the same pressures so many Welsh families face.

I have a child with special educational needs. I care for my mother, who has disabilities. I watch friends — brilliant, capable women — forced out of work because the demands of caring for their children are overwhelming, and the support simply isn’t there.

People in my community cannot put food on the table. They cannot afford to heat their homes. They fight, exhausted, to have their children’s needs recognised by systems that no longer have the resources to respond. This is everyday life for many people in Wales. And it makes me furious.

But I know what is causing it. And it is not the refugee families who have come to rebuild their lives in towns like mine.

The reason people are struggling is not migration. It is that wealth has been hoarded, public services have been stripped back, and working-class communities like the one I grew up in have been systematically left behind.

This is not accidental. It is a choice — one that serves those with power, who benefit when we are encouraged to look at each other instead of at them.

Fear

The fear being stoked — of people who look different, speak differently, come from somewhere else — is corrosive. It shrinks our communities. It makes people wary of their own neighbours. And it is not new.

It is one of the oldest distraction techniques there is.

My father would have recognised it immediately. He worked alongside Somali sailors in the docks, welcomed people into his home, and understood — without ever using the language of politics — where the real lines were drawn.

Working-class Welsh communities have always been places people come to, and move through, in search of work and a better life. That is the history of the valleys. That is the history of the docks.

Welcome is not an abstract idea here. It is part of who we are.

And I am tired of watching politicians try to rewrite that story. To tell us our communities will be stronger if we turn inward, if we close ourselves off. They won’t be. They never have been.

Hope

What gives me hope is what has always given Wales hope: ordinary people showing up for each other. The quiet acts of solidarity I see every day — food shared, lifts given, support offered without question, across differences, to people who now call our town home.

My dad delivering food on that sledge.

That is the Wales I love. And it is still here, if we choose it.


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23 comments

Richard Jenkins

Wonderful, heartwarming I know my parents would be heartbroken to see the rabid hate in some people being exposed. We can do this. Reform is not the Welsh way.

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M Thomas

If that is true, how do you explain the Welsh vote in Brexit?

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Steve D.

The majority of people in Cymru are open minded, accepting, understanding and tolerant. We should not be dragged into the dark by the minority with closed minds. We are better than that.

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Padi Phillips

We may need migrants, but we should never have to compromise on maintaining who we are. There is nothing at all wrong with expecting migrants to learn our language - in the future for many jobs it will be a requirement anyway, so that they can do their jobs (and should have been a requirement for decades too). Most migrants from outside of Britain recognise, respect and understand that (as do a significant number of English people, it is only fair to say). It's rather fatuous to say that 'we are one world now'. We have always been one world. Travel is a little faster now is all. Modern Wales as we know it only exists because people migrated. Our language, our culture, even our religions are evidence of that. We should celebrate that, value it and yes, welcome the people we need, but we should never allow this to compromise who we are. So long as we are clear about this it should not present a problem. Those who do not want to deal with that will not come - and would they be the people we need anyway? Nations need to stand in solidarity with one another to combat the likes of Trump and acolytes like Orban, Fico or Farage, and be their best selves, not self-destruct. There can be no internationalism without first there being the nation. Internationalism is simply respect between nations. Non-hierarchical and without hatred.

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Dave C

Da iawn and thank you for this. Your Dad sounds like so many people who shaped my view of our beautiful country. Solidarity.

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Adam

We need to do more to keep our country clean from the filth of racism, it needs stamping out from our communities in all shapes and sizes. Where there is racism there are always other sinister things.

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Clive hopper

Agree entirely let's not use immigration as an excuse for all the nations problems.

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David Parry

They've nowhere near started yet. The first shoots are yet to appear.

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Johnny

Always easy to blame other Nationalities for things that don't work out in your sad life.

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Tina

Wanted to put my 2cents in. I'm a migrant, I came to the UK in the 90's been in Wales for nearly 4 years and been working , I can speak a little bit of Welsh and learning as it's a beautiful language and should be preserved in some way . English is a given , my stance is if you come to this country , learn the language and you can get further job wise. I absolutely love Wales and the Welsh people and culture and I call it home.

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Nia Jenkins

Excellent read and sentiments that are so recognisable in my own life. X

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Jeff

Funny how the sharia law thing is doing the rounds in the US, it's a big talking point when CPAC types are interviewed. Wonder why to has traction. Only it's not true. Never has been. But a handy thing to make up for the usual suspects. We saw the worst crime when far right types tried to murder people in hotels and attacked the police and tried to set up race hate with the raise the flags fiasco.

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Annie R

Sorry, not commenting on his post but you do need to research the Sharia thing. Around 80 such courts in the UK. Guaranteed women will come off second best in them in divorce etc. Although not legally binding, you can guarantee a woman would face huge community pressure to abide by a decision (made by men) etc. Not great to say the least.

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Jeff

Not legally binding and not rife in the UK.

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In reply to Jeff

Gethin W

She is right. You pretty much said they don't exist which was wrong. They do. 80 is a large number.

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In reply to Gethin W

Jeff

Nope. And by far the biggest threat to women's rights in the UK will be reform, especially if you are not white (see who is investing in farage, see the commentary from Goodwin)

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In reply to Jeff

Johnny

Jeff it looks as if you have upset G Crybabies News Viewers and Members of the Tommy 10 Names and counting Fan Club.

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In reply to Johnny

Johnny

It's a great privilege and a badge of honour for me to be down voted by G Crybabies News viewers and fans of 10 Names

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In reply to Jeff

Cadwgan

Jeff, you are ignoring the fact that it has consequences. Firstly it is regarded as arbitration and so it's decision are final. Secondly and this affects women greatly. Many marriages, indeed 90% are conducted solely under Sharia law. This leaves the woman unprotected by UK law in divorce. The husband that has all the property in his name takes all. She is dependent on the clemency of the council. There was a case reported recently in The Conversation, where a British born woman was divorced under Sharia, the husband remarried in Asia, the woman went to. British court which could do nothing to protect her assets. No if in Rome, and if in the UK there should be one law for all.

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In reply to Cadwgan

Sarah Sufragette

A balanced response that highlights the issue rather than pretending it doesn't exist.

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Johnny

Andy if you want to vote Reform then that's your democratic choice. A vote for Reform will destroy the Heritage, Language and Cymru as a Nation. Cymru has already suffered enough from Mass Uncontrolled Colonization from East of the Border and with Homegrown Uncle Tom's who detest everything about Cymru.

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Adam

Why do you despise us and threaten the safety of our communities by allowing the filth of racism into our country? If you're going stick with that view, please would you consider staying away from Monmouthshire, I genuinely dont want you within 10 miles of my children.

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Neil Summers

Great piece Sian. Like you, nostalgia for the community of Caerau runs deep. It has a unique geography at the top of the valley, an almost worlds end feel even though the Afan valley is just over the hill, it kind of instilled a culture of self-sufficiency as well as the help thy neighbour spirit, Dad worked in merchant shipping and he mixed and worked with a a rainbow of cultures in Cardiff and overseas. I once met a chap in the Grange pub on a Nanty outing for a 6 nations home match. I’ve always been naturally inquisitive about origins. I should have been an anthropologist! He told me that each of his grandparents was from a different country. Scotland, Somalia, Jamaica and Morocco. I asked him how he identified culturally and he said that he was drinking Dark a mile from the Arms park and for me to take a wild guess! Whist Cardiff built its reputation on providing work and sanctuary for people from the far reaches of the world. I’m glad that this permeated up the valleys, although it had to be said, only a fraction of Cardiff which remained as the culture-central for South Wales. The few non-white and mixed families that Caerau was home to in the 70s were simply part of the fabric, no second glances in the street and not a sniff of marginalisation. It was a great place to grow up. I’m still fond of it. It’s my run of choice up the Llynfi way when I’m back at the ‘Steg!

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Replying to Richard Jenkins Cancel

Wonderful, heartwarming I know my parents would be heartbroken to see the rabid hate in some people being exposed. We can do this. Reform is not the Welsh way.

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