Sentamu urges St George's holiday
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/england/north_yorkshire/7983429.stm Version 0 of 1. The Archbishop of York has said that making St George's Day a public holiday would promote unity in England. Dr John Sentamu asked an audience in Oxford: "Has the time come to make the Feast of St George, the Patron Saint of England, a public holiday?" He said people needed to be more confident about their Englishness or risk extremists filling the vacuum. "The truth is an all-embracing England, confident and hopeful in its own identity, is something to celebrate." Addressing the Sunday Times Literary Festival, he linked a lack of cohesive national identity with political extremism. He said: "Previously an icon of extreme nationalists, a sign of exclusion tinged with racism, the flag of St George instead became a unifying symbol for a country caught up in the hopes of 11 men kicking a ball around a field." The archbishop warned that lack of cultural identity could lead to a "twisted vision" being created by those dissatisfied with their heritage. The archbishop said extremists would fill any vacuum in national identity "Where there is no awareness of identity, there is a vacuum to be filled," he said. "Dissatisfaction with one's heritage creates an opening for extremist ideologies. "Whether it be the terror of salafi-jihadism or the insidious institutional racism of the British National Party, there are those who stand ready to fill the vacuum with a sanitised identity and twisted vision if the silent majority are reticent in holding back from forging a new identity." He emphasised his speech was not intended as a criticism of multi-culturalism, but rather a call for different communities and religious groups to "embrace" England, and to add new elements to England's "fabric". "Englishness is not diminished by newcomers who each bring with them a new strand to England's fabric, rather Englishness is emboldened to grow anew," he said. "Let us acknowledge and enjoy what we are." |