"We went to war because Germany invaded Poland, but none of us had ever seen a Pole. Then the Polish soldiers arrived and we found that they were so polite and good looking. They had gold fillings in their teeth and they used to kiss the back of the ladies' hands. That was certainly something new in Scotland. And they had nice names too, like Leon."
I found this interesting. History, eh? I wonder what Polish Bay 12 users make of the Scottish assessment of Poles from that time-period. An awful lot of Scottish women were wooed by those dashing Polish army officers; there's a fair number of their descendents around today. Then again, our women (including my grandmother) were also wooed by the many dashing Italian immigrants. I think Scottish women in the 1940s and 50s just had a real thing for foreign men, you know?
I can name three leading figures in the SNP who are apparently second-generation Italians; Lindia Fabiani MSP, Marco Biagi MSP (who gave his oath to the Queen in Italian) and there's also Toni Giugliano, a senior member of the Yes Campaign who was actually born in Italy and left the country at 7. He'll probably end up in the European Parliament pretty soon.
Here's an article on the subject from an Italian weekly news magazine.But yes, I think the SNP should make Scottish political history by putting forward the first Polish and Hungarian born candidates for the next elections in 2016, in contrast to Westminster parties like Labour and the Conservatives who are trying to stave off the UKIP advance by scapegoating immigrants from the EU and elsewhere. We've got excellent people from pro-Yes groups like Poles for Yes and Africans for Independence who could either stand in the Scottish Parliamentary election in 2016 or the Council Election the year after. It would be bold, but I'd love to see it and it would show these Scots that they will have good representation in their new home. Better Together campaigners regularly intimidated immigrants by telling them they'd get deported if they voted Yes and the biggest problem for them was that they didn't really have anyone to go to. If we could get two or three representatives from these communities and put them front and centre then that will change things for the next time, and help immigrants get integrated into our society in general.
There's a number of figures that will probably take prominent positions in 2016 from the Scottish Asian community too like Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh and Anum Qaisar. Though Asians have been well represented in the SNP for a long time it would be great to get some Scots Asian women in parliament. I should add that I think they both have a lot of potential as politicans; Anum Qaisar especially.
EDIT:
I'm getting a sense of de ja vu. Did I make the exact same post 3-4 weeks ago, or did I dream it?