World Watch
January 12, 2009 10:53 AM

Harry And The Culture Of Casual Racism

By
Sheila MacVicar
Topics
World Watch
Oh, Harry …

Having once been pictured wearing a Nazi uniform to a costume party, you would think Britain's younger prince would have learned something about offense, and how to avoid causing it.

But in another example of casual, stupid thoughtlessness, Prince Harry offers up a further example in a running commentary in a home video he shot.

The video was obtained by the British tabloid newspaper News of the World and posted on their Web site.

In it he focuses the camera on a Pakistani comrade across an airport waiting lounge (named Outstanding Overseas Soldier by the Princes' grandmother the Queen at their Sandhurst graduation) and says, "Ah, Ahmed, our little 'Paki' friend."

During a night training exercise, he tells another soldier decked out in camouflage headgear, "F*** me, you look like a 'raghead.'" ("Raghead" is a racist slur used to describe Arabs.)

A royal aide at Clarence House issued an apology, saying Prince Harry "was in no way seeking to insult his friend," and that he used the word Paki "without malice."

This royal spokesman, a supposedly thinking and certainly well-paid PR professional, then added that the term raghead had been used by the prince to describe a "Taliban or Iraqi insurgent."

So, That's All Right Then. Racist slurs are perfectly acceptable if a) they are not meant to be racist, or b) they are applied to an enemy.

No one thinks Harry is a racist, at least in the visceral Ku Klux Klan sense of the word. But he is part of a culture where this casual, everyday racism is prevalent and no one seems to pay much attention.

Harry himself is the product of some of Britain's finest schools (even if he could not be accused of being overly intellectual), he has his family (and his grandfather, Prince Phillip, is famous for some stupid and racist remarks of his own), and he is a graduate of Sandhurst Military Academy. Somehow, no one has bothered to communicate to him, and probably to his fellows, that — even if not meant with "malice" — this kind of derogatory and racist language is hateful, hurtful and unacceptable.

Colleen Harris, a former press secretary to Harry, his brother William and his father, Prince Charles (and herself black), writes in today's Telegraph about the wider problem within Britain's armed forces.
"The Army has been trying for years to stamp out the impression that bullying and racism are institutionalised within its ranks. There have been several inquiries, lots of training on racism awareness and dozens of initiatives. And yet the attitudes that were there do not seem to be shifting."
I called Britain's Ministry of Defense to see what would happen to any soldier, not just Prince Harry, if there was an accusation of racism. The most the spokesman would say was that there would be an investigation, and that Harry (like any soldier) would be called in for "an interview." He was also at pains to point out that "racism and bullying is not endemic" in the military.

But the scope of the army's problem can be found in the statistics. Sixty-one million people live in Britain, with about ten percent claiming membership in an ethnic minority. In Oct 2008, according to the Defence Analytical Services Agency, 186,170 men and women served in all branches of the UK's military, with 10, 961 claiming membership in a non-white ethnic group. Certainly less than ten percent of the population, but perhaps not terribly unrepresentative …

… Until you get to the officer corps. The army, with 31,700 officers, had only 752 officers from ethnic minority groups. That's less than 2.5%.

As Harris writes, "Why would a young man or woman want to join an organization where they think they will be unwelcome or treated in a disdainful way?"

The palace and royal aides may try to defuse yet another unwelcome Harry row by pointing out that the video was shot three years ago, and that the Prince is now much older and wiser.

What they cannot excuse away is the racism demonstrated by their own spokesman, or the telling numbers of the Army's officer corps.

Add a Comment
by runningralph January 14, 2009 12:19 PM EST
So Harry referred to someone as a ***. The British call Americans Yanks. Americans call British limeys. French are called frogs. Germans are krauts. Italians are dago. Jews are kikes. So what. Move on. Get over it. Take care of your business.
Reply to this comment
by newslink January 13, 2009 7:38 PM EST
Well Class is not automated. Because we all know by now. That what is In you, will come out. And it can not be hidden.
Reply to this comment
by myeyedea January 12, 2009 5:45 PM EST
Casual racism?... I don''t think there''s any such thing. Racism is the insipid hate of another group of humanbeings, inclusive of not only fearing them but also wishing for their degredation and destruction. What''s casual about that??

Frankly, as a mixed ethnicity American I say "SO WHAT" Harry said these things? I don''t see that he hates a race of people; I don''t see that he wants all Pakistanis destroyed and degraded; I don''t see that he fears all Arabs. It''s commentary that happens all over the world among all friends and acquaintances. I get irritated when people outside of the United States refer to me as a Yank (I grew up in the South), but I''ll have just as much luck changing X-billion peoples'' ''off'' reference to any American as this author will have in irradicating all levels, however minute, of any form of racial difference commentary. It''s not going to happen - people are different, and people, being people, are going to comment on that.

When people start crying about subtle, ultimately innocent banter instead of paying attention to the overt and malintentioned commentary they show their own irrationality. Go after the white drill sergant screaming slurs in the face of an asian recruit - that''s much more insipid and obviously malintentioned and degrading. Leave Harry and his personal home videos alone.
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by barbaraf4 January 12, 2009 5:40 PM EST
This incident happened in 2006. Get over it.
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by whitemale08 January 12, 2009 4:09 PM EST
When are people going to understand that these so-called monarchies in europe are nothing but parasites on welfare who use the credit-derivate-swap market to suck blood from the rest of the world with the main vein located in the caymen islands?

They need to be SHUT DOWN!
Reply to this comment
by rebelrepubli January 12, 2009 4:05 PM EST
OK - so by this "standard" calling someone a "brit" would be considered a racial slur. Right?
Reply to this comment
by barbaram99 January 12, 2009 4:03 PM EST
Amen to that. I can''t blame His Highness for it . I don''t think he forget who he is. Sure the bully in the military. I am not a vet but a duaghter of a vet. I am American and I am against the war. I have seen the good visuals but the bad is withheld, I am sure there is bullying. America has no business over there controling nations. The Prine is doing his duty. People are human. War is a waste. When it is oven America will have rebuild their nations. It hurts all. Vets thank ye.
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by vcofreason January 12, 2009 3:40 PM EST
Harry is just saying what everyone else does, except he got caught. People do it every day and will never stop. It''s how people feel. In every day circles all over, people openly discuss how they feel. It''s OK though for blacks to constantly use the n word on a daily basis, using it as a greeting to each other, slathering it generously throughout their degrading rap music. Even though they came up with the humorous word cracker to describe white people, they think it''s OK. If they are using it to degrade a race, then they are guilty of their own whining about racism. Give me a break; people have names for every race and it will never change. How long ago was Archie Bunker on TV and we were all LOAO at it? I still think it''s hysterical. They should revive it. What about Dave Chappelle? Is what he does funny? He makes fun of race; so does Chris Rock. Such double standards. What a joke. There is no "racism". It''s how people REALLY feel.
Reply to this comment
by quapawsix January 12, 2009 3:40 PM EST
I think there are more Important things to report than this. If you don''t like what you hear put ear plugs in or better yet go hang out somewhere else.
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by spiritwalk January 12, 2009 3:12 PM EST
Harry was probably just talking the same way as everyone else in his outfit.
As any honest veteran would tell you, your sons and daughters are over in Irag calling the people "towel heads" and a lot of other names that would get automatically censored if printed here.
If you give any young person a weapon and put them in a position of control over another they will see that person as inferior and verbal abuse comes first and soon followed by physical abuse. To believ otherwise is naive.
As we have seen, military PR will flood the media with pictures of soldiers feeding children and suppress pictures of guards abusing prisoners. You wil of course see 100 pictures of the good things to every one picture of the bad things, but nobdoy is shredding the pictures of the good things.
Harry''''s problem is that he forgot who he was and was thinking he was one of the gang. He forgot that he was more of target for paparazzi than snipers.
As for "The Army has been trying for years to stamp out the impression that bullying and racism are institutionalised within its ranks...." if the Army would stop going into other countries and bullying other races maybe the soldiers would get the idea that bullying races is not something the institution approves of.
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