To be able to say that this book is so timely and necessary, which it is, is a source of no pleasure at all. Racism, in forms sometimes new and sometimes horribly familiar, is resurgent in the UK, fuelled by the poisonous politics of the Tory Party, Reform UK, openly fascist groups and now the leadership of the Labour Party. The background is a world of falling living standards, widespread poverty, wars, a housing crisis and the erosion of public services.
We desperately need to find new ways to unite and give purpose to the anti-racist majority, and to beat back today’s Nazis. Geoff Brown’s A People’s History of the Anti-Nazi League is a very important resource for this task. Not because it offers us a blueprint of ‘how to do it’, although it assembles a whole host of inspiring examples, and paints a vivid and inspiring picture of what a successful united front looked like in practice. And not because the 2020s are like the late 1970s – while many of the generation radicalised by the ANL are still very much alive and kicking, the world has changed in so many ways, although there are many important lessons which still apply.
Most of all, this book hits the spot by recreating a sense of the creative energy of tens and hundreds of thousands of ordinary people which was unleashed by the combination of the Anti-Nazi League and Rock Against Racism, the togetherness which made people feel strong, optimistic and able to face down their fears and become the force which in the end sent the National Front and their allies packing. Sometimes the account, going backwards and forwards in place and time, can feel chaotic, but that is in some ways an accurate reflection of the times.
Our times, chaotic in their own way, are different, and we will need to find our own solutions. We will need every tool in the box, and along the way we should definitely read this book.