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Interview with Clive Foster MBE

Title
Interview with Clive Foster MBE
Description
Clive Foster MBE was born in Birmingham to parents of Jamaican heritage. He is a senior pastor at a church in Nottingham. He started to become aware of the impact of Theresa May’s hostile environment policies in 2013. The scandal came as a shock to members of the community who had by then been settled in Britain for several decades.
Associated dates
2013
interviewee
Clive Foster MBE
Location
Nottingham
Collection
Restricting the Right to ‘Britishness’
Provenance
This oral history excerpt has been drawn from the three-year AHRC-funded project ‘The Windrush Scandal in a Transnational and Commonwealth Context’.
Rights
This material, including photograph, cannot be reproduced without permission.

Transcript:

"The talk of immigration was very much around your colour. You know, I was told on many occasions, like so many people, go back to your own country. Well Jamaica was founded in 1655 as a British colony, so to tell me to go back to Jamaica, well, it was a British colony, 1655, you know. So what we were finding, just before 2014, there was a surge of like, particularly Jamaicans, who were being detained and deported. We became aware of that, we had people in our own congregation who were, come over, and then were told they’ve got to leave the country and so forth. Why is it that they seem to be targeting Jamaicans and people seem to be getting deported and detained, you know, there’s obviously some kind of story, you just don’t understand it. The Home Office came to us and were, like, saying well we’ve heard you are concerned about this particular area. We’re trying to run this kind of a voluntary service of like, you know, if people come voluntarily and want to leave, we can help them do that, no questions asked, sort of thing. And they started to talk to us in those terms, you know. We weren’t even aware of the ‘go home’ vans at that time. They were coming down and saying well look if you want to work with us, you know, if you know anyone – couching it in a very, you know, this is a nice thing to do. And we stuck to our guns and said something’s not right here. We’re not going to come and sort of tell you things about people in the community to put them at risk. And we told them, what we’re going to do is talk to people about the importance of getting themselves, their status right, and getting the legal advice to do that. Then the Windrush scandal broke and the rest is history, as they say."

Photograph of Clive Foster

"The talk of immigration was very much around your colour. You know, I was told on many occasions, like so many people, go back to your own country. Well Jamaica was founded in 1655 as a British colony, so to tell me to go back to Jamaica, well, it was a British colony, 1655, you know. So what we were finding, just before 2014, there was a surge of like, particularly Jamaicans, who were being detained and deported. We became aware of that, we had people in our own congregation who were, come over, and then were told they’ve got to leave the country and so forth. Why is it that they seem to be targeting Jamaicans and people seem to be getting deported and detained, you know, there’s obviously some kind of story, you just don’t understand it. The Home Office came to us and were, like, saying well we’ve heard you are concerned about this particular area. We’re trying to run this kind of a voluntary service of like, you know, if people come voluntarily and want to leave, we can help them do that, no questions asked, sort of thing. And they started to talk to us in those terms, you know. We weren’t even aware of the ‘go home’ vans at that time. They were coming down and saying well look if you want to work with us, you know, if you know anyone – couching it in a very, you know, this is a nice thing to do. And we stuck to our guns and said something’s not right here. We’re not going to come and sort of tell you things about people in the community to put them at risk. And we told them, what we’re going to do is talk to people about the importance of getting themselves, their status right, and getting the legal advice to do that. Then the Windrush scandal broke and the rest is history, as they say."