by JOHN PILGER
When I first reported on child poverty in Britain, I was struck by
the faces of children I spoke to, especially the eyes. They were
different: watchful, fearful.
In Hackney, in 1975, I filmed Irene
Brunsden’s family. Irene told me she gave her two-year-old a plate of
cornflakes. “She doesn’t tell me she’s hungry, she just moans. When she
moans, I know something is wrong.”
“How much money do you have in the house? I asked.
“Five pence,” she replied.
Irene
said she might have to take up prostitution, “for the baby’s sake”. Her
husband Jim, a truck driver who was unable to work because of illness,
was next to her. It was as if they shared a private grief.
This
is what poverty does. In my experience, its damage is like the damage of
war; it can last a lifetime, spread to loved ones and contaminate the
next generation. It stunts children, brings on a host of diseases and,
as unemployed Harry Hopwood in Liverpool told me, “it’s like being in
prison”.
This prison has invisible walls. When I asked Harry’s
young daughter if she ever thought that one day she would live a life
like better-off children, she said unhesitatingly: “No”.
What has
changed 45 years later? At least one member of an impoverished family
is likely to have a job – a job that denies them a living wage.
Incredibly, although poverty is more disguised, countless British
children still go to bed hungry and are ruthlessly denied opportunities.
What has not changed is that poverty is the result of a disease that is still virulent yet rarely spoken about – class.
Study
after study shows that the people who suffer and die early from the
diseases of poverty brought on by a poor diet, sub-standard housing and
the priorities of the political elite and its hostile “welfare”
officials – are working people. In 2020, one in three preschool British
children suffers like this.
In making my recent film, ‘The Dirty
War on the NHS’, it was clear to me that the savage cutbacks to the NHS
and its privatisation by the Blair, Cameron, May and Johnson governments
had devastated the vulnerable, including many NHS workers and their
families. I interviewed one low-paid NHS worker who could not afford her
rent and was forced, to sleep in churches or on the streets.
At a
food bank in central London, I watched young mothers looking nervously
around as they hurried away with old Tesco bags of food and washing
powder and tampons they could no longer afford, their young children
holding on to them. It is no exaggeration that at times I felt I was
walking in the footprints of Dickens.
Boris Johnson has claimed
that 400,000 fewer children are living in poverty since 2010 when the
Conservatives came to power. This is a lie, as the Children’s
Commissioner has confirmed. In fact, more than 600,000 children have
fallen into poverty since 2012; the total is expected to exceed 5
million. This, few dare say, is a class war on children.
John Pilger for more