- Asim Qureshi said he and other ethnic minority children were ghettoised
- Claimed rich white boys bullied him at £18,000-a-year Whitgift in London
- Campaigner made himself chief apologist for Mohammed Emwazi of ISIS
Published:
00:37 GMT, 3 March 2015
|
Updated:
19:10 GMT, 3 March 2015
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Islamist campaigner: Asim Qureshi is research director of the Cage human rights pressure group
The
Islamist campaigner who described Jihadi John as a ‘beautiful young
man’ claims he himself was turned into an ‘anti-white racist’ at private
school.
Asim
Qureshi, 33, said he and other ethnic minority children were ghettoised
at £18,000-a-year Whitgift School in Croydon, south London.
Rich white boys – particularly rugby players – apparently bullied and racially abused ‘five foot nothing Asians’.
The campaigner sparked outrage last week when
he made himself chief apologist for the suddenly-unmasked British
Islamic State killer Mohammed Emwazi, claiming the terrorist was
radicalised by security service harassment.
Mr
Qureshi, the research director of the controversial Cage human rights
pressure group, has known Emwazi for years, and has previously been
caught on camera urging Muslims to support jihad during a rally the
American embassy in London.
But
the Daily Mail can reveal that the campaigner had previously told how
he became actively ‘anti-white’ himself – and blamed it on rich white
pupils at elite Whitgift. Fees for full boarders there are
£35,000-a-year.
Mr
Qureshi, who lives in a £530,000 detached house in Surrey, was born in
Britain to Pakistani parents and – thanks to his mother’s ice-cream
business – was sent to 400-year-old Whitgift.
He
said: ‘It is a very expensive private school. It is one of those
schools that has every single facility available. I did not necessarily,
from an academic perspective, take the best advantage of it.
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Bullying claims: Mr Qureshi said he
and other ethnic minority children were ghettoised at £18,000-a-year
Whitgift School (pictured) in Croydon, south London
‘Every single student who goes to that school is expected to come up with straight As.
‘But
even within that school, we formed a ghetto very, very quickly amongst
our ethnicities because, even though these kids came from very well-off
families, they still had an intense level of racism.
‘Especially
the rugby lads, who were known to be extremely racist because they were
built like tanks, all of them. Us small Asians, five foot nothing,
would not stand a chance against them.’
Mr
Qureshi, speaking to American academics four years ago - a transcript of
which has now surfaced - continued: ‘We formed cliques very quickly.
‘The
Chinese, the blacks, the Pakistanis, and the Indians, we would all be
together in the same crowds. We would move around in the same circles.
‘Many of the white kids would be coming from very rich areas, and we would be taking the bus.
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Terrorist: Mohammed Emwazi was suddenly unmasked last week as the Islamic State killer Jihadi John
‘Their
parents would be picking them up in their Bentleys, and their
Rolls-Royces, and their Aston Martins from the front of the school.
‘We
would be going to bus stop at the back of the school and going back
down to our area, which was not so affluent. In fact, there was a bus
stop in Croydon, which is on our way back home.
Us small Asians, five foot nothing, would not stand a chance against them
We
used to call this bus stop Terminal Three. In Heathrow Airport,
Terminal Three is the terminal that all the ethnic minorities take to go
back to their countries of origin.’
Mr Qureshi added: ‘Sports was one of the things that helped get me through in many ways. I played squash at a county level.’
He
said that after his GCSEs his parents could no longer afford the
Whitgift fees so instead sent him to grammar school Wilson’s, in nearby
Wallington, Surrey.
In marked contrast to the public school, he said, the races mixed freely.
Mr
Qureshi continued: ‘When I turned up, I came with the same kind of
anti-white racist attitude that I had developed in Whitgift because I
felt that all white people must be like this.
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Outspoken: Mr Qureshi has known Emwazi
for years, and has previously been caught on camera urging Muslims to
support jihad during a rally the American embassy in London (pictured)
‘What
was amazing is how that was broken down completely. For the first time
in my life I had white friends. For the first time in my life I could
relate to white people.’
After
‘doing not very well’ at A-levels – spending much of his time listening
to ‘hardcore hip hop’ - Mr Qureshi went on to study law at London
Guildhall University, which he described as ‘not a great university but I
did enjoy my time there’.
The Chinese, the blacks, the Pakistanis, and the Indians, we would all be together in the same crowds
While a student he said he ‘began to choose an Islamic identity’ for himself.
The
Whitgift headmaster from before Mr Qureshi started until today has been
Dr Christopher Barnett – who says in his welcome to prospective pupils
the school staff ‘welcome boys from a wide variety of ethnic and
cultural backgrounds’, and ‘regard the diversity and richness that this
brings as a real strength of the school.’
He
was unavailable for comment last night. The historic school was founded
in 1596 by Queen Elizabeth I’s last Archbishop of Canterbury John
Whitgift.
It
now educates 1,300 boys in the former stately home of Lord Howard of
Effingham, who fought the Spanish Armada. The school motto is Vincit qui
patitur – ‘He who perseveres, conquers’.
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