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You need to realise that after WWII we had immigration from the common wealth to help rebuild and fill job roles - First we had peoples from the Caribbean and later from Pakistan and India, who mainly came to work in the textile industry, hence why there are large populations of Indian and Pakistani people in places like Bradford and Blackburn where the cotton mills and textile works were centered.
Many indigenous people of the UK still held rather colonial beliefs based around the Empire and British superiority. For those people, the idea that essentially lesser human beings perceived through the lens of as 'natives' with all the conantations of not being as civilised and cultured as 'us British', led to considerable prejudice and upset at the idea of those 'natives' being able to live and work amongst the British like 'normal' people.
An example of the attitudes is exemplified by a campaign leaflet for the Tory party in a Birmingham borough for the elections:
"If you want a for a neighbour, vote Labour" - Peter Griffiths Conservative MP campaign slogan 1964. |
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