Monday 25 June 2012

The Opening of "The Pod"


Saturday June 23rd was an important day in the life of the community on the border of Alum Rock and Bordesley Green. After several years of hard work initiated by Margaret, a local resident, and many twists and turns, Basharat Dad of Our Community was able to preside over the opening of “The Pod”.

Located on Whitacre Road, just over the railway line at the far end of Ludlow Road, “The Pod” has turned a vandalised container and a disused skate park into a colourful venue with the potential to offer many opportunities to local residents.

As Basharat Dad explains:
“This was the hot spot area for anti-social behaviour. The police got Our Community CIC involved in the process and we’ve been working on the ground in the area for over two years, building that relationship with the young people, and working with the council at the same time which is quite difficult to achieve. And then within that two and a bit years we’ve actually managed to take the skate park off the council, and it’s going through community asset transfer, so we’re going to take the actual site. It would be an asset owned by Our Community”.

On the opening day over 150 people came to see the site's possibilities. Basharat’s plan is to use both the skate park and the Pod building itself to widen the range of activities offered by Our Community and one of its associate organisations Evo Youth:

“In terms of going forward, we’ve got this building, “The Pod”. I’m working with a number of housing associations, and a number of local organisations who want to use this for different types of activities. So everything here won’t be run by Our Community CIC, we’re just going to manage that process. But the youth work will be run by Our Community CIC and Bordesley Green Detached Project. They’re part of the Youth Service, and they’ll be delivering some of their programmes from this site.

So it is a community facility and it will be run by the local community. We’ve got local women that want to do something here, so it will be resident-led. We’ve got volunteers that want to support us. All the painting you can see on the Skate Park has been carried out by volunteers, and paint that we got from local organisations”.

Given the alarmingly high unemployment in East Birmingham, Basharat is keen to offer support into employment and training routes:

“We’re looking at working with 24 young people and working with them to progress through to careers advice, education, and helping them make those choices. Not only just sign-post them, but actually step by step working with them and slowly making that change. We’ve already got a project at the Evolution Centre, and hopefully that will be coming here. That’s already in the pipeline. We’re still running our cricket, still running our football, so any young people that want to do that can do that”.

Basharat summarised his feelings having seen "The Pod" open:

“It’s been a bit of a process, but just to see it open on Saturday, and with the feel and vibe of the community, makes it all worth it”.

For more details see the Our Community Facebook page and Twitter feed

Friday 15 June 2012

Faith Watch: The Eyes and Ears of the Community?


West Midlands Police has teamed up with 14 members of the local community and religious institutions to establish ‘Faith Watch’ patrols in the Washwood Heath ward.

As the neighbourhood police sergeant Richard Evans explains, the initiative aims to harness well-respected members of the local community to walk around their area and pre-empt potential incidents of low-level disorder.

“It’s a coining of Street Watch...we have such a really strong community, and if we can get the religious community involved that might act as a strong cohesive unit”.

The name ‘Faith Watch’ reflects the inter-faith work done by the local police in recent years, building on the contacts made by John Bradley, one of the local Police and Community Support Officers:

“It’s almost like an outreach, Faith Watch, understanding that actually we haven’t just got the one faith, although the area is predominantly Muslim, we’ve got multi-faiths in here. So, ‘let’s get you all working together’ which will improve the cohesive nature of the area, and then hopefully everyone will see, and it sounds quite cheesy, but it’s almost quite harmonious. If the leaders can do it, then the members of the public can do it.”

The members of Faith Watch devote at least two hours a month to their patrols, guided by advice from the police on where to focus.

Sergeant Evans emphasised the role of the Faith Watch members in helping to address the long-standing local concern about litter:

“It’s also about empowering the members of the community to take a pride in their own area. It’s not just about anti-social behaviour...there’s a litter thing – A couple of the members are so good, they will knock on doors and say, ‘Is that your rubbish? Who’s responsible for this?’ And that’s so powerful. If we did it, sometimes we might just get lip service. It’s about the community, there’s more respect there, because they’ve lived there for a long time”.

Faith Watch began in March and Sergeant Evans is pleased with its progress so far. For him the spirit of the initiative is to say to people: “Go out there and be the eyes and ears of your community, and make a difference in your community. The enthusiasm of some of the group is infectious, it really is great to see, and I wish I’d started this years ago. Because to harness that positive attitude about the community and about their own area, it’s been great.”
“I have a passion for this area because I think it’s a close-knit community, but there’s a large proportion of people who want to make a difference. I’m fed up of seeing negative stuff about Alum Rock, it’s nice to see the positives because there are lots of them.”

To find out more about Faith Watch contact the Washwood Heath Neighbourhood Police Team via

Friday 4 May 2012

Mariam Khan wins in Washwood Heath

Further to the previous post Mariam Khan has been elected as councillor for Washwood Heath.

The result in full:

Mariam Khan (Labour)  6608 (80.55%)

Mohammad Azam (Liberal Democrat) 1049 (12.79%)

Arthur Davis (UKIP) 185 (2.25%)


John Bentley (Green) 184 (2.24%)

Allister Du Plessis (Conservative) 178 (2.16%)

Majority: 5559

Mariam Khan , aged 21, together with her newly elected colleague Josh Jones in Stockland Green, thus becomes one of the youngest ever City Councillors in Birmingham's history, as in modern times the age at which someone could stand for political office was only reduced to below 21 in summer 2010.

Thursday 26 April 2012

Mariam Khan: Political History in the Making?

Mariam Khan, aged 21, is on the brink of making political history in Washwood Heath. Standing as the Labour candidate in the May local council elections, both local and national trends point to a victory that would make her one of the youngest ever councillors in Birmingham.

Mariam set aside some time from a busy campaigning schedule to talk to Alum Rock Life about her political influences and aspirations.

She grew up just off the Alum Rock Road and attended primary schools in Ward End. Her exposure to the world of politics began at a young age, with her elder family being long-standing Labour party members, and her uncle Ansar Ali Khan has been a Washwood Heath councillor for a decade.

She recalls attending a residents’ meeting at the age of 14 which led to her appointment to the panel for Youth Opportunities Funding and Youth Capital Funding in Hodge Hill and Yardley.  She sees those years of involvement in decision-making as crucial to her current role:
“If I didn’t take part in that, a lot of the skills I’ve developed I wouldn’t have had now, because there’s only so much you can learn in the classroom. Actually making decisions about real things that happen in the area, from such a young age, it sort of developed in me to have a natural care about the area, about what young people are able to do in the area, and giving them a chance to do things they wouldn’t otherwise be able to do.”

Alongside this role and other voluntary work, Mariam, like many other young people in Alum Rock, was exercised by events in Gaza in early 2009 and helped organise a spontaneous assembly for young people in Birmingham city centre. After some reflection thereafter she decided to work for change within the Labour party and considered pursuing a political career after her university degree.

However, in late 2011 the Labour Party in Birmingham moved towards adopting all-female shortlists for council seats like Washwood Heath where two of the three existing councillors were male. Mariam allowed her name to go forward, and was successful in being nominated for the seat. Since then the last few weeks have involved frenetic rounds of door-knocking, leafleting, and meeting her electorate.

Mariam is at pains to acknowledge the influence of her uncle  whilst expressing her individual contribution: “I am me, I am myself, I am my own person. Please don’t just tie me down because I’m part of the Khan family”.

She sees her role as championing the needs of young people and of women:

“Throughout childhood I’ve always noticed living in Ward End all my life that we’ve always had a gap in the area in that we’ve never had a female and we’ve never had a young person. The population, if you have a look at that, we’ve got a lot of young people and 50% female, but there’s no one who’s ever represented them. I think it’s really important in order to make a difference to the actual lives of people, to have somebody to represent them.

Up until now, and I don’t want to say anything bad about all three of our councillors, they’ve been working well, but there’s always that gap because a lot of women I know have issues in the area, but because of our culture and religious reasons, they’re not going to approach a male. I think it’s not fair for women in the area and for young people in that they’ve always had the problem. So I’m hoping to make a difference in the sense that I understand the issues because I’m young and I’ve lived there all my life.

We’ve never had a young person or a female to actually sit down and have an agenda and change Alum Rock for the better and I really, really want to focus on that.

I just really want to make a mark and hopefully maybe four years down the line we might have a few more aspiring young females to become candidates for other areas, or for Washwood Heath.

Hopefully the negative comments about Alum Rock from both people inside Birmingham and outside Birmingham will change, but that’s only going to happen if the community and everybody accept change”.

The result of the Washwood Heath election will be announced very early on the morning of Friday May 4th.

Aside from Mariam Khan (Labour), the candidates in Washwood Heath are:

Mohammad Azam (Liberal Democrat)
John Bentley (Green)
Arthur Davis (UKIP)
Allister Du Plessis (Conservative)

Alum Rock Life will post the result of the election on this blog.