The Daily - Introducing ‘The Trojan Horse Affair’
Episode Date: February 12, 2022A mysterious letter detailing a supposed plot by Islamic extremists to take over schools shocked Britain in 2014. But who wrote it? From Serial Productions and The New York Times, “The Trojan Horse ...Affair” is a mystery told in eight parts. Here’s the first. Find the series wherever you get your podcasts.
Transcript
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Hey, it's Michael. I want to tell you about a new show from Serial Productions and the
New York Times. It's called The Trojan Horse Affair, and it's hosted by Brian Reed of
S-Town and a doctor-turned-journalist named Hamza Syed. It's a mystery that began when
a strange letter appeared laying out a supposed plot by Islamic extremists to infiltrate schools
in Birmingham, England. This letter set off a national panic, led to multiple investigations,
and to lifetime bans from the British education system. But no one could answer a simple question,
But no one could answer a simple question.
Who wrote the letter?
That's what Brian and Hamza tried to figure out.
Take a listen to the first episode,
and if you want to hear the entire series,
search for the Trojan Horse Affair wherever you listen to podcasts.
And thanks. This is my first story as a journalist.
I hadn't planned for it to be my last story,
but it probably will be,
given what's happened in the years I've been working on this.
It's about a letter that surfaced in my city
and had huge consequences for Britain.
This letter launched four government investigations,
changed our national policy
and ended careers. It's hurt some of the country's most vulnerable children.
A letter that many people who've seen it agree is ridiculous.
It's unsigned, undated.
Didn't it look like a serious document? It just seemed comical. What the hell is this?
I remember looking at it for some time thinking, what on earth is this? The infamous letter, was it written on parchment, in blood?
So you're presenting me with a document that turned our lives upside down.
I first learned of the letter in 2014. I wasn't a journalist then. I was a doctor,
who'd quit medicine, living in Birmingham, England, making my breakfast
at 1pm, listening to the news, when I heard about the discovery of a secret communique between
Muslim extremists. They were discussing a plot to infiltrate our city schools and run them on strict
Islamic principles, potentially with the aim of radicalizing students. Someone had forwarded the
letter anonymously to the local government,
the Burma City Council, but it was missing the first and last page, so it was unknown exactly who wrote it or who they were sending it to. According to the intercepted pages, the plot
had a codename, Operation Trojan Horse. I have to admit, when this story about Muslims in Birmingham first broke,
as a Muslim in Birmingham, I was alarmed.
It sounded possible.
Kids across Britain, across Europe, were flying off to Syria to join this group called ISIS.
And Birmingham has been home to quite a few terrorists.
My neighbour was a terrorist.
The guy who killed five people and then tried to run into parliament with a knife.
He did his planning in a flat above the Persian restaurant across the street from me.
So I wasn't surprised watching as over the next several months,
Operation Trojan Horse snowballed into a huge national story.
A number of schools in Birmingham have been infiltrated by hardline Muslims.
Headlines like Islamist plot, jihadist plot,
and the government responded with full force.
The prime Minister got involved
convening his cabinet to discuss the threat.
The National Government
sent in a bunch of investigators
including Scotland Yard's former head of counter-terrorism
to look into two dozen schools
in majority Muslim areas of Birmingham.
Like I say, it was all very frightening.
Until a few months later when the various investigators Like I say, it was all very frightening.
Until a few months later,
when the various investigators finally started reporting their findings.
They'd found no plot called Operation Trojan Horse.
They'd seen no signs that anyone had been radicalized,
no evidence of violence or planned violence.
They didn't bring any terror charges against anyone working at the schools they'd looked into.
But despite all of that, despite finding no plot,
investigators still concluded that something terrible
was happening in Birmingham schools.
The letter helped them uncover
that Muslims had influenced the schools in a dangerous way.
Government officials snapped into action.
Things that should not have happened in
our schools were allowed to happen. Our children were exposed to things they should not have been
exposed to. The fallout has been huge. Prime Minister David Cameron, as we said, is calling
a special meeting of the government's extremism task force. Officials removed educators, revamped
schools and renamed them. They mandated all schools in the country start teaching what they termed British values
to make kids less susceptible to extremist ideas.
They beefed up Britain's counter-extremism laws
by making public sector workers like teachers and doctors
part of the state's surveillance apparatus
to now inform on their co-workers and students and patients.
Today, if you stop someone on the streets of Britain
and ask them what happened in Birmingham schools in 2014,
if they follow the news, they'll likely tell you
that a bunch of Muslims were up to no good.
There is another version of this story, though.
It's one less told and far less popular.
That version of the Trojan Horse
affair is that nothing happened.
That these bearded brown
educators were set up
and the nation fell for it.
But it's always
seemed to me that there's a simple way
to figure out what really happened here.
The letter.
Even with all the government inquiries,
no authority, none of the investigators, ever figured out who wrote it. Remarkably,
none of them even tried. And that, to me, seemed like a pretty glaring oversight.
The reason the country was looking at these scores with suspicion, the reason they were
investigating them at all, was because this dodgy letter showed up
portraying the people who worked there
as nefarious plotters,
claiming they were sneaking Islam into schools
like a Trojan horse.
The letter is what put the idea
in authorities' heads.
So I didn't see how you could know
what Operation Trojan Horse was or wasn't
unless you got to the bottom
of the Trojan Horse letter.
Who wrote it and why?
A few years later, I decided to go to school for investigative journalism.
But my professor wasn't completely sold on a story I wanted to report
for my student project, Operation Trojan Horse.
This was investigative journalism.
He wanted me to unearth something new, not rake over some years-old story.
As a doctor, though, I'm familiar with the concept of a second opinion.
So the night before my master's was set to start, I went looking for one.
A doctor came to see me for a second opinion.
One night in fall 2017, I'm in a theater in Birmingham.
After my podcast S-Town came out, I went around doing some Q&As.
Afterwards, people will sometimes come backstage to chat.
And so this guy comes in, introduces himself as Hamza Syed.
He said he was changing careers to become a reporter.
He was beginning a master's program in investigative journalism the next day, actually.
And he wanted some advice. He was speaking fast, like I might walk away at any moment.
To be fair, I was told that I had five minutes with Brian Reid,
after which I'd be squirted out the building.
I did not know that. Anyway, Hamza ran through the Trojan horse story for me,
elevator pitch style. I'd never heard of it, but a guy I was with backstage,
a producer I know from the BBC, he had.
And he jumped in as Hamza was talking.
Yeah, yeah, Trojan horse, he said. That was a big thing a while ago.
Some bad stuff went down. Muslim educators had been up to no good.
But it was cleared up. Old story.
There was something Hamza said, though, which afterwards, I couldn't get out of my head.
He kept talking about a letter which had set off this whole cascade of consequences,
whose origins were still a mystery. So when I got home to New York, I read the letter.
It looked like a caricature of a missive between two terrorists, filled with Islamophobic tropes
about conniving and scheming Muslims. It's missing pages. Parts of it are too dark to read,
like it got jammed in the Xerox machine. It instructs the recipient to destroy it after reading. It struck me as a funky
document for a government to take seriously, especially because from what I read, the
government hadn't even looked into who wrote the letter or why. There was a strange lack of curiosity
about this instigating document. I thought to myself, it seems like somebody should
try to figure out who wrote that thing. And then I thought, well, wait, this journalism student's
doing that. Maybe I ought to give him a hand. And here we are, years later, at the end of a dizzying,
farcical, and enraging investigation in which one mystery led to another, led to another,
tracing this letter's path of destruction across multiple continents.
In defiance of many unhappy officials and some aggressive attempts to shut our reporting down.
From Serial Productions and The New York Times, I'm Brian Reed.
I'm Hamza Syed.
Presenting to you the most elaborate student project ever.
This is The Trojan Horse Affair.
I got the call from Brian while I was in class.
My phone started ringing from a New York number.
I asked my professor if I could take it.
He said no.
I asked if I could go use the toilet.
He said yes.
I answered, and Brian told me he wanted in on my investigation,
but that I would need a producer.
I said yeah, sure, all casual.
I had no idea what a producer did.
Soon, he started getting in touch with missions for me to complete.
First one, he'd secured a recorder for me in Birmingham and said there was something I had to do.
It was supposed to be a basic bread-and-butter assignment.
Go record a meeting.
Hamza had seen an event advertised called Trojan Horse The Facts,
where some of the educators who'd been accused of carrying out the plot would be speaking publicly.
They insisted the Trojan Horse affair was just an Islamophobic stitch-up.
The event hashtag was Trojan Hoax, and they were trying to clear their names.
They'd never gotten their lives back on track after the story died down.
They'd lost their jobs and been made into pariahs by the national media. But afterwards, Hamza calls me and says when he showed up at the spot,
a community center, at 5 p.m., the receptionist told him,
It's been canceled. The event's been canceled.
Did they give you any, well, wait, did they give you any other information?
No, they just said it's been canceled, and that was it. I said, no, this is, you know,
I spoke to the event organizer a few days ago. I said, no, this is, you know, I spoke to the event organiser a few days ago.
They said, yeah, it got cancelled today.
So I felt like an idiot, to be honest,
because I stand there with this big, you know, mic stand
that looks like a fishing rod.
I've got my box of equipment.
This can't be a good omen, I thought,
to mess up your first journalism assignment.
But then more people started showing up,
confused, like me,
until a man in one of those safety vests swings around the corner,
tells us to follow him,
and takes us up the street to a wedding hall
where everyone was gathering instead.
It's a lot of people, maybe over a hundred.
And as I explained to Brian while I'm setting up the microphone,
I started catching all the whispers in terms of what happened.
And it turned out that the original venue
had received phone calls from the national newspaper,
specifically this guy, Nick Timothy.
He's like a reporter or a publisher? What is he?
He's a columnist, I think, for the Telegraph.
And not just any old columnist.
Nick Timothy used to be the chief of staff to the prime minister.
He was essentially Theresa May's right-hand man.
I spoke to the guy who ran the community centre,
who told me Nick Timothy had actually emailed, not called.
He wouldn't let me see the email,
but according to others at the meeting, the implication was,
if you hold this event, I will associate you with extremists in the newspaper.
And that worked.
The community centre pulled the plug,
and Nick Timothy published a triumphant column, which I'd missed because I was on YouTube all day watching instructional videos on how to use my recorder, in which he confirmed his paper had gotten the event cancelled, and wrote that the proposed meeting was, quote, a shocking attempt to deny the Trojan horse scandal, and, quote, the people behind the Trojan horse are trying to do it all over again, and right under our noses.
Good evening, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Trojan Horse or Hoax, the discussion and debate.
So here they were, the teachers and school volunteers, allegedly behind Operation Trojan Horse,
along with their defenders, academics
and activists, and an educational barrister and a union leader, packed in this wedding
hall instead.
I am really, really concerned that simply holding a public open meeting like this becomes
controversial. Just the fact we are holding this meeting
seems to be an act of resistance right now.
The people at this meeting called for an inquiry
to correct the record on the Trojan horse affair.
They believed the government had set them up.
So the fact that a former chief of staff to the prime minister,
Nick Timothy, went out of his way to attack a grassroots event
at a community centre years after the Trojan horse affair.
It just reinforced their suspicion, and mine quite honestly,
that there was something dodgy that authorities were still keen to hide.
And then it was like a witch hunt.
The heads were rolling this way and that way.
Hamza sent me the recording of the meeting.
I listened to it, and I was interested to hear
that one of the people who got on stage and spoke
was the man named repeatedly in the Trojan Horse letter as the mastermind of Operation Trojan Horse,
the plot's alleged ringleader, a longtime school volunteer named Tahir Alam.
I've never been a danger to anyone. I've never hurt anyone.
I've never had any police case against me or anything of the kind.
I wasn't running a plot. You know, we are very proud of what we did in this.
I do not regret nor apologize for anything that I've done.
There was nothing clandestine, hidden, or sinister about what we were doing.
We were very open and very transparent.
So when I landed in Birmingham to begin reporting,
that's who we decided to go to first, to hear Alam.
We figured, we're looking to find the source of this mysterious
letter. Might as well start with the guy it outed as an extremist plotter.
Is this about to be the first radio interview you've ever done?
Yeah. I need to be schooled beforehand, man.
What do you mean? Like, how so?
Well, I mean, if this was me flying solo, I'd be like, well, whatever, I'll just do it my style,
you know? But this is, you know.
And what is your style? Do you have a style?
I don't know. I feel like I'm a lot.
How many of these have you done?
None.
But I have an idea in my head of what my style could be.
I think you're a lot more sensitive than I am, put it that way.
Do you know what I mean?
I'm the more sensitive one?
Don't you think so?
I don't know. I don't know you that well.
I wonder what we're wearing.
Salaam-Salaam.
Hello.
Ill-fitting button-down shirt.
Khakis.
Welcome.
Thank you.
We're going to be in that room there.
This room?
We kick off our shoes.
He shows us to a room at the front of his place.
Sorry, you have to sit on slightly uncomfortable chairs there.
Hamza and I squeeze behind two school desks meant for children.
There are protractors lying around,
a whiteboard with sketches of geometric shapes,
a creative writing workbook titled Descriptosaurus.
Tahir's converted this room from his garage
into a tiny makeshift classroom
where it appears he tutors students quietly.
Because one result of the Trojan horse letter is that the government has banned him
from ever volunteering or working officially in schools again.
Tahir's in front of us in his office chair, confident, erudite,
framed by his bookshelf filled with texts about Islam and British history.
I pull a copy of the letter out of my backpack. You know, it's a completely anonymous letter, undated, claiming that there
is a plot to take over and Islamize the schools in Birmingham led by Tahir Alam, which is myself.
But I speak from a vantage point where I actually know the truth. I know the reality.
Tahir denies being an extremist. He denies engineering a plot. He says the reality is
that rather than corrupting schools as a radical conspirator, he, a first-generation immigrant
from a poor Pakistani family, was responsible for one of the most miraculous school turnarounds
in British education. Until, he says, the letter arrived and destroyed him.
The story of this turnaround, it's not a secret. It's one Tahir shared with journalists before.
Not that it's done him much good in terms of clearing his name. But this backstory does
explain why the Trojan horse letter was so persuasive.
Because, the hare told us, some of what was in that letter was true.
The hare begins his story one night in 1993, when he's watching TV and a show caught his attention.
I just happened to be just lying on the sofa really and the program came on.
It was a documentary part of
the bbc series panorama nine times out of ten i would switch to something else but i was just
sitting there and i started watching britain's new underclass is asian and it's muslim a once
tight-lipped community is now in crisis with drug abuse crime and family breakdown on the increase
And the title of this documentary was Underclass in Perda.
Perda meaning, you know, cover.
Meaning a veil, if you like.
Underclass in the veil, yeah?
In tonight's programme, we lift the veil on this new underclass.
The documentary opens with shots of brown men skulking around dark, cobblestone streets in a Muslim neighbourhood
in what the correspondent calls the Muslim ghetto.
At night, it doubles as the local red-light district.
It's a seedy world of vice and illicit drug dealing.
Lurking in the shadows is a new Manningham phenomenon The Pakistani pimp
He's like a regular pimp, but in a kurtha
Part of the documentary takes place in Tahir's neighbourhood in Birmingham
Called Alam Rock, on the east side of the city
It's one of the poorest areas in England, and is majority Pakistani and Muslim.
If you're not from Birmingham, and you're not brown,
you may have heard that Alam Rock is a great place to find a terrorist.
If you're not from Birmingham and you are brown,
you'll have heard Alam Rock is a great place to find a wedding dress.
Admittedly, this BBC documentary is racist in a 90s TV kind of way, but it had a big
impact on Tahir because amidst the awkward brown gazing, some truly sobering facts emerge.
The presenter reports that Pakistani Muslims are incarcerated at disproportionately high
rates.
She says they have some of the highest rates of joblessness.
They're suffering from devastating health issues, terrible housing, domestic violence, with one underlying cause of it all, a lack of education. This is a number I found most shocking.
About 20% of white students were leaving school without any qualifications, meaning they failed
to pass the exams that would essentially be the equivalent of a high school diploma in the US.
And that rate, 20%, was roughly the same for most people of colour as well.
But for Pakistanis and Bangladeshis, an astonishing 50% hold no qualifications whatsoever.
50%, half of us were basically failing school. That hit the hair hard.
That the extent of education failure was so bad that we were at risk of creating an underclass of Muslims who were basically uneducated, prone to crime and unemployment.
because I was one of the few people who made it from my family,
one of the first ones to make it into university and to have a good job and so on.
But there was also a sense of humiliation, really, because I was from this community.
The Hayres family brought him to England in the 70s,
when lots of people from Kashmir were moving here,
largely because the British designed this huge dam that flooded swaths of land and displaced tens of thousands of people. And one solution the Brits got behind was to invite displaced Pakistanis over to England so they could improve the British economy by
working in British factories and mills, which is what Tahir's dad did. Tahir arrived in England
as a nine-year-old who didn't speak any English and wouldn't become fluent for several years. I knew one word of English only, which was F-O-R-D.
I mean, I don't know X, Y, Z, but I know F-O-R-D. That's it.
I couldn't speak any English when I first came here.
I couldn't even speak Ford. I was just like mute.
Football, that's what I knew, football.
That's right. So that's how we arrived here.
And the first school
when I came here, we
arrived in Birmingham.
...is growing up angry and alienated
from white society.
Now the hair watched as a documentary
captured the next generation. Pakistani
kids who were born in Britain, being
educated in state schools, still
struggling to read, not able to recall
basic English words.
The camera cuts to a park in Birmingham.
It looked at the hair like Ward End Park,
which is right across from where he went to school in Alam Rock.
I recognised the park because we used to go and play there
and then I saw some children and I said,
oh, that's our neighbour's children.
I recognised the kids, yeah, even though it was from a distance,
but I recognised who the kids are.
We filmed an encounter with two Asian lads in a park in a Muslim quarter of Birmingham.
These Asian lads, we use Asian to mean South Asian, by the way,
they're skipping school, and Tahir knew which school they were skipping.
It was the one he'd gone to as a kid, right next to that park.
Parkview School.
Another majority Muslim school with miserable
academic results. It's a secondary school, ages 11 to 16. It was a school where Tahir had done
well enough to make it to college and then university before getting a good job in
telecommunications. The documentary made him realize how rare his success was and how little
he'd done with it. So Tahir decided to do something.
He started a tutoring program for kids in the neighborhood.
But what he was really interested in was volunteering at his old school, Parkview,
on what's known as their governing body.
In England, a governing body oversees how a school is run,
like a corporate board does a company.
It's sort of like a school board in the U.S., except it's specific to one school.
They can have a lot of influence.
So anyway, Tahir says one afternoon,
a couple of Parkview parents he didn't know
knocked on his door.
We hear you're interested in becoming a governor, they said.
It was like they'd read his mind,
though actually, Tahir had been talking about
wanting to be a governor at a recent wedding,
and these parents got wind of it.
Resentment and frustration had been festering for years among parents in Alum Rock, who'd been trying and trying to get
the authorities to do something about the dismal schools. These parents at Tahir's door had joined
the Parkview Governing Body in an attempt to make a change, but they didn't speak fluent English
and hadn't gone to university. Tahir was a professional with a degree who still lived in the neighborhood.
We'd love to propose you, they told him.
And with that, Tahir found himself at the next governing body meeting of Parkview School,
being voted in not only as a member, but as the chair.
So that's when I became a governor
on the 7th of January, 1997.
You remember the date?
Yeah, well, I was to remain there for 18 years.
When Tahir started, Parkview was one of the worst secondary schools in the country.
Only 4% of students were passing.
4%.
The National School Inspection Agency had recently placed the school into special measures,
the lowest possible ranking, an emergency status, basically,
meaning Parkview
was in danger of being shut down. There were brawls breaking out in the schoolyard. On a tour
of the building, Tahir saw vandalized bathrooms with stalls missing locks and toilets missing
seats. But where Tahir really trained his focus was on the complacent teachers and administrators.
We initially just started by saying that obviously children should be achieving higher,
that the achievement was not acceptable, and the fact that the school was to blame for the failure.
This statement, so obvious to Tahir, that the kids in Alam Rock were as capable as kids anywhere,
was met with massive resistance. It was very difficult getting the school to accept that
they were the problem. People didn't want to accept that because they've been blaming the community for maybe two decades.
They had such a low expectation of children.
One thing Tahir noticed early on was that the staff of this school with nearly 90% Pakistani students
had only one full-time Pakistani Muslim teacher.
So Tahir began
searching for more Muslim staff and governors. He gave presentations, held workshops. He became
a fixture at events around East Birmingham, standing behind his little table or booth,
evangelizing for people to get involved in their local schools.
I loved it. I loved it with the children because I felt as though I could make a difference.
This is Maz Hussein, the first Muslim teacher Tahir hired.
He taught math.
I could use my language, my background, my understanding of where they come from
to make a difference. I knew their families.
Maz can point to a specific moment, by the way, when he decided to go into teaching.
There's a panorama program.
It's called an underclass in Parda.
Powerful segment.
Maz Hussain says from the very beginning
he encountered serious prejudices among the mostly white staff.
I had a group of children come to me and they said,
look, there's this one teacher in school.
He always calls us pakis.
He's calling us pakis. He's doing it in a jokey way, but we find it offensive.
They're not able to tell anyone else, but they're telling me that, look, he's swearing at us.
That's a slur in any context, but especially shocking for a teacher to say to Pakistani
students. Master Olam, I think the best thing to do, have your parents write the score.
He talked them through the procedure for doing that, in case their parents didn't know. He says eventually the school looked into the teacher's behaviour.
And while you're investigating, he resigned.
And he gave his final leaving speech in the staff room.
And goes, it should be our culture dominant in this school, not the kids.
And he finished off with the words, the West is the best.
And all teachers clapped.
All teachers clapped.
The racism was pervasive.
Razwan Faraz, a former governor and math teacher,
says at one of his first governing body meetings,
he was shown a list of places the students had been given work placements
through a program at the school,
and it was all restaurants, supermarkets, clothing stores.
And there was no surgery, doctor surgery or law firm or anything like that.
And I said, you know, how is it that, like, did the children decide these?
And Razwan says the vice chair told him.
Well, their parents want them to go and become doctors and engineers and etc.
But reality is these kids will become doctors and engineers and etc. But
reality is these kids will become taxi drivers, shopkeepers. So we've got to prepare them now.
And for a good while, I was struggling to process what he was saying. This is me,
a brown person, a Muslim. And he's saying to me that they deserve to have these kind of jobs.
This is this community's role in society.
That's right.
That's right.
We just filed the kids. We just filed the kids and didn't even feel bad about it.
We didn't. We didn't even feel guilty.
John Brockley was one of the non-Muslim teachers at Parkview.
He was a math teacher who'd been there since the 80s.
He was frank with us about the bigotry that he and his colleagues held towards the students and their families.
We thought that we were a superior culture, and we looked down.
We looked down on these people who didn't know about education.
You're talking about yourself here?
I'm talking about myself, but I'm also talking about, you know, many of the people that I work with.
The teacher's attitudes are documented, by the way.
A former head teacher of Parkview, a head teacher is what we Americans call a principal,
did a master's thesis while he was at the school, for which he collected opinions from the staff,
including from John,
as to why Muslim children were drastically underperforming
compared to their peers.
In the thesis, teachers say the kids' parents are ignorant,
wrongly claim the students don't speak English.
The teachers try for a while, one teacher said,
but end up feeling like, who gives a damn?
That's a quote.
It makes John
cringe to think back on it. It's only when you move away from a situation like that, that you
can realize how awful it is. I don't normally think about this sort of thing because it's
too embarrassing. Once we created the shift in the belief of the teachers, then the job became much
easier. Fahir says by the early 2000s, Parkview was changing. The school began taking basic but
transformative steps, setting individualized achievement targets for each student that
followed them from year to year and preparing students for qualifying exams, which amazingly hadn't happened before.
Schools started awarding trophies for good marks,
inviting parents to ceremonies when their kids did well.
The Haren governor hired a new headteacher, a non-Muslim woman from a girls' school,
who embraced Parkview's new aspirations.
Test scores started to rise, students were heading to college,
Parkview's reputation was turning around.
But there were other changes at the Hare Institute at Parkview,
which later, officials would view as suspect.
Changes that investigators would point to
as the trademarks of Operation Trojan Horse.
That's coming up.
That's coming up. which the government supported and which has defined Tahir's reputation since then, is that he was Islamizing schools.
This is not a word I'm particularly fond of, Islamize,
because Islamize in relation to what?
Some assumed non-Islamic baseline?
Has this story been Islamized by Hamza's involvement?
Yes.
It's a word that isn't inherently negative, but gets used that way.
Anyway, that's what the letter said Tahir was doing, Islamizing schools.
And funnily enough, it's also what Tahir says he was doing.
We were valuing the cultural
and the faith background of the children,
and we were allowing that to be expressed, if you like.
We catered for children
so they could perform their daytime prayers
if they wanted to.
We made a prayer facility available for them in a room.
Religious accommodations like this are legal in British schools, by the way,
whether they're explicitly designated as a religious school or not,
which Parkview wasn't.
It was the equivalent of a regular public school in the U.S.
And since 98% of the children happen to be of the Islamic faith background,
we obviously are catering for the constituency that the school serves
in line with the regulatory requirements.
Tahir ascribed to an educational philosophy that,
the way he and other Parkview staff talk about it,
reminds me of Afrocentric or Black excellence schools in the U.S.
that students will do better academically
when their schools incorporate and celebrate who they are.
And there's research that backs this up.
So under Tahir's leadership,
Parkview allowed students to pray if they wanted.
They installed facilities for wudu,
the ablutions you do before prayers.
They celebrated Ramadan
and altered the schedule during that month
to facilitate fasting.
They served halal food.
And I felt that, you know, this was our school. I mean,
we were proud to say that this is our school. We wanted our children to say that this was their
school and that they were proud of it. In the wake of the Trojan horse letter,
government officials would declare that the way Tahir and his colleagues were running Parkview
School had undermined quote-unquote British values, that they were limiting the children's
ability to thrive in modern Britain.
Which is an interesting charge to bring against Tahir because, I have to say,
I haven't personally met an English Pakistani more confident that he's British than Tahir.
Deciding whether or not to call yourself British is a fraught and personal thing for us.
Speaking for myself, even though I came to England when I was 8
and became a British citizen with a British passport,
even though I have a British education, went to British University,
worked for Britain's National Health Service, I didn't call myself British.
I was never precious about nationality, so I didn't really care what I was called.
But sure, I'd also picked up on the subliminal messaging
that in order to be proper British, you had to be white.
The Heer, on the other hand, not only calls himself British, but does so proudly.
I got to talking to Tahir about this one day. He and Brian and I were getting tea at my
favourite chai shop on Alamrak Road. This is the hangout. And as we sat outside in one
of the main thoroughfares of Islamic Britain, around the corner from where Tahir grew up,
with double-decker buses passing by sweet shops and fabric stores and halal chippies, I told him my reason for why I'd finally, only recently, started calling
myself British.
So for a long time, I never called myself British.
I was about 30. I'd been reading a book about the British Empire, and I learned how rich
India, which at the time included Pakistan, was, according to some economists, before
the Brits took control.
I believe the statistic is roughly it controlled about 24% or something like that of the world's economy at the time.
23% of the world's economy. It was the richest nation in the world.
24% of the world's economy is roughly what the US controls today.
I know this is somewhat of an apples and oranges comparison
because the world wasn't organized into a globalized economy back then. But it does show how rich India was in relation to other countries at the time.
When the British left the Indian subcontinent after some 200 years of economic exploitation,
India and Pakistan were among the poorest nations in the world.
I didn't learn this stuff in school because Britain's colonization of a quarter of the planet
is not a compulsory part of the national curriculum.
Which is why I only discovered it as an adult,
as so much of the wealth I saw in Britain was actually extracted from the place I come from.
So from that point onwards, I've started calling myself British.
I was just like, well, I'm British. I own this country.
This is my money with which you have raised everything around me.
Yeah, so that's very similar to the position I arrived at.
Except for me, proclaiming I'm British is somewhat of a finger in the eye.
For Tahir, it's sincere.
It also came to him later in life.
He says he was at an event held by a British Muslim organization.
And they began saying, very clearly, you're never going back to Pakistan.
Your children are never going to move back.
It's not going to happen.
That's what you had been thinking up to that point.
Because our parents spoke like that to us.
Our homes are in Pakistan, we are Pakistani.
Our parents spoke to us like that.
My father never told me we are British, because that's not what he felt.
He lived in Pakistan most of his life.
Why would he say that?
The people at this event were saying, you live here now.
We were part of this country and that it was important as Muslims,
we should benefit to this country.
So ever since then, I've been kind of dissing the idea that we are other,
that we are outsiders, that we don't belong here.
Islam is part of Britain.
It's not alien.
I don't accept that.
Can you see?
So for Tahir, not only was incorporating Islam into the school an academic strategy,
it was also a British value.
It was really nice for me that I'm doing something at home and now my school is happening.
I didn't want to have a different life at school.
If I'm praying at home, I want to pray at school too.
These are two students who graduated from Parkview in 2014.
We're not using their names because such is the stink of the Trojan horse scandal.
They don't want potential employers to know where they went to school.
They actually keep it off their resumes.
When Hamza and I met them four years after they graduated,
they were both studying law at university,
some of the first in their families to go on to higher education.
They've been best friends since school, the kind of friends who don't need words to communicate.
Are you talking about, um, yeah. I don't know if I should, oh, that. We're telepathic, basically.
The students told us about these assemblies they would have in the mornings, which included religious teachings and sometimes prayer.
This is something that as an American made me do a double take when I first heard about it.
The idea of teachers in a public school leading prayers during an assembly is not normal to us.
But in Britain, there's no separation between church and state. The queen is head of both.
So not only is prayer allowed in schools, some form of worship is legally mandated in all schools
that are publicly funded. Schools don't always adhere to this, but students are supposed to take part
in what's called a daily act of collective worship. By default, it's supposed to be broadly
Christian in character, but schools can apply to change it to other faiths if that better suits
their students, which is what Parkview did. It got approval for its worship to be Islamic.
The students told us at Parkview's assemblies
they would sit in the main hall and a teacher
would tell parables or lessons, usually
from Islam, but other faiths too.
Do you guys remember
actually learning things in the assemblies or did they
make you think or were they just kind of boring teachers
blah blah blah blah blah like
I really enjoyed those assemblies
because I didn't
learn this from anywhere else.
They still remember this one assembly all these years later about charity.
Talking about charity and they say, when you're giving charity, put your hand in your pocket and take it out.
Don't look at how much you're giving, just put it in.
Don't count what you're giving and what you have left.
Because when you give, you receive tenfold.
Yeah. And charity does not make you poor.
Quite literally, like sometimes when I see somebody
who's asking for money or things like that,
I'll put my hand in, in my purse.
Take it out.
I'll take it out and I don't look at what's in it.
I do that all the time.
Just because I remember that one teacher,
he literally said it like that.
Like that.
Gave so that your left hand doesn't even know
what your right hand gave.
Yeah.
Yeah.
When Tehere became chair of Parkview's governing body in 1997,
4% of students were passing.
By 2010, that number was 71%, a 17-fold increase.
We had not changed the children.
We had not changed the parents. we had not changed the parents,
but slowly but surely we took the results so that they were consistently in the 70s,
which means the school actually is kind of guaranteeing an outcome.
Parkview was now actively preparing its students for the eventuality that their academic success would lead them out of East Birmingham.
Something that a lot of teachers said to me, you live in a bubble. Again, the formal
part of you students. And I was like, what do you mean? They were like, you live in an Asian community,
you go to an Asian school, you're very safe, you don't know what it's like to branch out.
I remember we learned about the population and how it's divided in the UK. And I think it was something like 2% of the population in the UK is Asian.
And I was like, wow, only 2%?
I was like, 2%? How is it 2%?
Like, everybody I know is Asian.
Every person that I've come across is proud.
How is that possible?
So it was so odd.
The UK is actually 2% Pakistani,
7% Asian.
But point being, there was a vast majority of the
population that these students and their classmates
were not bumping into day to day in Alam Rock.
The school organised
visits to Cambridge University.
They took them on camping trips. They visited
the Houses of Parliament in London.
Some students went on a week-long trip on a sailboat
with kids from all over, including a bunch of white kids. Apparently we weren't used to mingling with people
who were not Pakistani, so they were exposing us to you guys. Okay, you're looking at me. This is
what they were preparing for us for. Parents clamoured to get their kids into Parkview.
The school had a waiting list.
We were given all kinds of accolades nationally in the press.
We had officials coming in and out of our school, really.
They're saying, what are you doing?
Perhaps we can learn something.
And they invited us, actually, that why don't you support other schools?
The hair became well regarded in education circles.
And over the years
he expanded his reach beyond Parkview. He was certified as an inspector for Ofsted, the agency
that monitors and raids schools in Britain. The Birmingham City Council hired him to train other
governors throughout the city. The National Department for Education even asked the Hare
and his colleagues at Parkview to take over two other troubled schools in East Birmingham, which
they did. The Hare was invited to attend Downing Street and met Prime Minister Tony Blair. Back in Birmingham though, some people
resented him.
He had made enemies of a lot of schools in the head, yeah. He became, like, hated amongst
a lot of people.
Mas Hussain, who became Parkview's acting headteacher around this time, was a full supporter
of Tahir's. But still, he and other former colleagues told us
they wished Tahir was a bit more circumspect
in the way he went around to other schools,
advocating for reform.
He was self-assured, blunt, and particularly unsparing
when laying out for headteachers and other school leaders
the way their schools were failing Muslim students.
To tell other schools, look, Puff, you can do it,
Puff, you can do it, Puff, you can do it.
Same family, same children that you've got, they can do it.
That's not an excuse.
We used to tell Ty and Offa this a lot.
Stop using us as a beating stick because it's isolating us amongst other schools.
He was actually pointing the finger and saying directly to headteachers,
you're not doing a good enough job here for these kids.
Jackie Hughes used to be in charge
of school improvement for the Birmingham City Council and she says she can name headteachers
that she knows the here made enemies with. Many of them were used to having the final word on
academics and then here was the here, this volunteer with no professional teaching experience,
waltzing in and criticising their work. I mean actually people come to me and say
I can't understand why
you give Tahir the time of day. He's a terrible man. He said to me, blah, blah, blah, blah, and
they would go sounding off. Colleagues and friends warned the hair. You might want to consider
softening your approach. But the hair wasn't having it. You have to fight for justice. Justice
is not going to be handed to you on the plate. You know, you have to make space for yourself.
So the fact that some people may not be okay with that
is irrelevant to me.
You know, that's their problem.
In 2012, Parkview received the ultimate validation
in what was probably its proudest moment
in Tahir's nearly 18 years there.
Ofsted arrived for an inspection
and deemed the
school outstanding, the highest rating possible. Among the many things inspectors praised of Parkview
were the quote, wide range of opportunities for spiritual development, including voluntary Friday
prayers. In his time as chair of governors, Tah hero had taken Parkview from the lowest ranking, the verge of closure, to the very top.
The person in charge of Ofsted, the chief inspector, said, quote,
Every school in the country should be like this.
Less than two years later, on November 27, 2013, an envelope arrived on the desk of the leader of Birmingham City Council, a man named Sir Albert Boer. Inside was a cover sheet addressed to him, marked very important, confidential.
when I was clearing my boss's files,
and I think you should be aware that I am shocked at what your officers are doing.
You have seven days to investigate this matter,
after which it will be sent to a national newspaper,
who I am sure will treat it seriously.
Sincerely, A.N.
Anonymous, presumably.
Behind that note was the Trojan horse letter.
Four poorly copied pages, shadows at the edges,
instructions to destroy after reading.
The letter was written as if from a collaborator of Tahir's,
describing a conspiracy Tahir had been running
to take over and Islamize schools by deception.
It took weeks for Tahir to learn about it.
He heard rumors there was a mysterious letter
making its way around Birmingham,
around the city council and to headteachers in town,
which named him as the orchestrator of a plot.
One of Tahir's friends rushed to his house to tell him
that he'd been getting a haircut over on Washwood Heath Road,
and afterwards his friend's barber had beckoned him into the back room of the shop
and showed him a copy.
Tahir did not know what to make of it.
Finally, he got a hold of the document himself.
You know, obviously I was thinking, what is the source of this letter? Who wrote this letter?
Why was this letter written is what's ringing in my head.
The front page was missing, so there was no dear whoever. It just started as if it had been going
on for a page or more already. And the letter ended mid-sentence too, with the phrase,
I would also like. So there's no sign off, which meant Tahir couldn't
tell exactly who it was supposed to be to or from. But whoever wrote the letter said explicitly,
Tahir and I. It's supposed to be from somebody who knows me well in Birmingham, and he's talking to
somebody in Bradford. Another British city that's home to a lot of Muslims. He's talking about Tahir,
what he's done here.
We can do it over there.
And he's your friend or your associate or she, whoever.
Whoever it is, yeah.
Can you keep reading just the first few paragraphs?
Okay.
Operation Trojan Horse has been carefully thought through
and is tried and tested within Birmingham.
Tahir and I will be happy to support your efforts in Bradford.
This is a long-term plan and one which we are sure will lead to great success
in taking over a number of schools and ensuring that they are run on the strict Islamic principles.
In Birmingham, the benefits...
The main tactic of Operation Trojan Horse is to target headteachers at the schools you want to take control of, to make their lives so miserable that they'll resign or else be fired, at which point
you can install your own people who will implant Islamic extremism in the school. The author gives
several examples of schools in Birmingham where Tahir and his cronies were supposedly in the
middle of doing this. We have caused a great amount of organized disruption in Birmingham,
the letter says, and are on the way to getting rid of more head teachers and taking over their schools.
While sometimes the practices we use may not seem the correct way to do things, you must remember that this is a jihad, and as such, using all means possible to win the war is acceptable.
What was your feeling or your attitude?
Were you laughing at it?
Were you actually kind of taking it seriously and frightened? I wasn't laughing actually, because I knew the serious nature of the
allegations that were being made. But as far as the claims themselves were concerned,
they were laughable. So I knew that there was something not right about what was going on here.
Tahir contacted the Birmingham City Council, where the letter was first sent.
He'd done training for them for years.
And I said, look, I work for you, and this letter apparently is going around,
claiming certain things, and I'm surprised that you haven't spoken to me to at least get my view on the matter,
at least ask me to explain, or if I know anything, or whatever, or something.
And the gentleman there, actually, from the city council, he said,
Mr. Alam, to be very honest with you, we don't think anything of the letter. We think it's a completely bogus
hoax letter. And we don't believe there is any truth in it. And therefore, we didn't take any
action. We didn't do anything with it. Did you feel reassured by that?
Not really, no, because then the letter began to be printed in the national media as well.
Someone leaked the letter to the Sunday Times of London.
And from there, it became a frenzy.
One story turned to two, turned to dozens.
In the Daily Mail, The Telegraph, The Spectator, Sky TV, many of them giving credence to the letter,
saying that extremists like Tahir
had allegedly been infiltrating UK schools for years.
Reporters camped outside Parkview.
They stalked Tahir down the street.
We tried to put these allegations to the academy's chair of governors,
but Tahir Alam...
Turned up at his house.
Hello?
Hello, Mr. Alam?
Mr. Alam?
Hello?
The government kicked into gear too. Investigators swarmed Parkview.
Ofsted, the school inspector, arrived for two surprise inspections.
And then we had the Education Funding Agency investigation, which was about 10 days, I think.
They were in there for 10 days. And soon as they left, we had the PWC,
PricewaterhouseCoopers, a big outside auditing firm, looking into the financial affairs of the
school. So then we had them for four or five weeks in the school as well. I said,
what are you looking for? I said, what are you looking for? You've been here three weeks.
You must have a family.
There was more.
The Secretary of State for Education called in England's former counterterror chief from Scotland Yard,
a man named Peter Clark, and the Birmingham City Council appointed its own special investigator.
And they scrutinized Parkview, along with 20-some-odd other schools in Muslim neighborhoods.
In the middle of the melee, some politicians and journalists were saying that the letter itself was likely a hoax.
There were some obvious factual inaccuracies.
Yet the government believed it still warranted this action.
Honestly, I don't think any authority explained this logic with much clarity at the time.
But my understanding of how the thinking went is that even if the letter itself wasn't an actual communique between two real-life
conspirators, it could still be pointing at a real problem. Even if it was fiction, the thinking went,
the letter could have been fabricated by someone who had legitimate concerns about Muslim extremists
scheming and wielding influence in schools. And maybe the letter was their creative way
of raising an alarm. So rather than look into who wrote the letter and why,
instead, the government put out general public calls for information about these schools.
And people started coming forward, mostly anonymously, with complaints. Again,
investigators found no evidence of radicalization, no evidence of violent extremism, and no plot.
What emerged instead was a kind of grab bag of
Islam-adjacent allegations. Many of the same things authorities had celebrated up to that point,
but apparently now we're seeing in a different light. Like, these educators weren't merely
allowing students to pray. They were pressuring them to pray. They weren't innocently recruiting
brown Muslim staff. They were hiring their buddies, who thought the same way as they did, and possibly discriminating against non-Muslim candidates in the process.
School governors, including Tahir, they weren't holding headteachers to a high standard.
They were pressuring them, harassing them, and exercising more power than a governor was supposed
to. Investigators also said they'd found instances of intolerance towards LGBTQ people and unequal treatment of women and girls.
They said Parkview had held assemblies
and invited speakers with anti-Western views,
and that Tahir and people aligned with him
allegedly subscribed to, quote,
an intolerant and politicized form of extreme social conservatism
that claims to represent and ultimately seeks to control all Muslims.
that claims to represent and ultimately seeks to control all Muslims.
All of this, as the then Secretary of State for Education put it,
as she presented the findings on the Trojan horse letter to Parliament,
meant that students...
Instead of enjoying a broadening and enriching experience in school,
young people are having their horizons narrowed and are being denied the opportunity to flourish in a modern multicultural Britain.
It is for this reason and with deep sense of injustice and sadness that today we are announcing our intention to resign our positions at Parkview Educational Trust and allow new members to assume responsibility.
After months of scrutiny in early July 2014, Tahir, looking tired and stressed,
stood at a lectern outside Parkview's gates and resigned.
Tahir told us he and the other Parkview governors only agreed to do that because the Department for Education promised that the head teacher
and other on-the-ground leadership at the school would be kept in place.
But as soon as school opened in September, all of those people were suspended.
All the leadership was basically sacked.
Ruthlessly, they went about destroying their careers, destroying their reputations, and
they did that systematically.
We had worked for 10, 15 years, really, to build this school.
They destroyed it within months.
The government renamed the school.
It's no longer Parkview.
It also notified nearly every teacher and governor you just heard from,
to hear included, that it was bringing proceedings to ban them from education
for the rest of their lives.
In the years since, student achievement has plummeted at the school,
formerly known as Parkview, from more than 70% passing
to, in recent years, from the low 40% to mid 50% range.
So that's the story Tahir told us,
that first meeting in his makeshift tutoring room.
That this letter, which was never
fully investigated, that described a plot called Operation Trojan Horse, which is never found to
have existed, inspired all of this. The ruining of careers and an educational movement, the
fear-mongering headlines against Muslims that continue to this day, the government instituting
policies that encourage us to spy more brazenly on each other.
We've been talking with De Gea for a couple of hours by this point.
What time is it? I know you need to leave at some point.
I don't want to... I mean, I'm... I have to go to Friday prayer now.
So one o'clock I'm there, really.
I understand it's a lot to talk, so if you wanted to...
There is a lot to... No, no, I don't get tired of talking these things, really.
I mean, you probably could tell.
Obviously, when I talk about that, you begin to relive it, isn't it?
And I have to say that it does sadden me, actually,
what has been lost for the children, for the community,
the irreparable damage that has been done
for absolutely no reason whatsoever.
So, anyway, can I get you guys some tea or something?
At that event I went to, where we all got redirected to the wedding hall,
one of the speakers, a columnist named Peter Oborn, put it well.
He said,
Operation Trojan Horse has become a social fact in Britain.
That even though within weeks of the Trojan Horse that are hitting the news,
people acknowledge it was probably a hoax,
that's never seemed to matter.
Whether Muslims in Birmingham were conspiring or not doesn't matter.
The intimation that there were has persevered.
To the extent that Prime Minister's former Chief of Staff was outraged
that some people in a community centre would dare to say otherwise.
But we don't need to settle for a social fact,
because there are actual facts.
Why, up to this point, has no one cared about who wrote this letter and where this letter came from?
Well, that's my question.
That's my question.
This is what I've been arguing.
This is why I went to the police to see what they could do.
This is what I wrote in my letter to the Birmingham City Council, that you need to get to the bottom of who wrote the letter.
This is what I wrote to the Department for Education as well.
You need to get to the bottom of the letter, who wrote the letter, because that will then unravel why the letter was written.
You see?
So this is what I have been arguing, but the Department for Education is not interested.
The police are not interested. The Birmingham City Council is not interested the police are not interested
the birmingham city council is not interested in answering that question why because they have used
this letter and on this hoax they have built so much policy do you think now they want to launch
an investigation into the letter to have it proven that it was written for completely different reasons.
Yeah?
How would that make them look like?
Bunch of monkeys.
As I've been saying,
if you could just find out who wrote that letter and why,
that's the only thing that might change Britain's understanding
of Operation Trojan Horse.
But whoever wrote the letter, they knew, you know, they knew me, I think.
And I like to think that I know them too.
Does that mean you think...
I have a strong hunch as to who wrote the letter.
You know, I strongly believe that I know who wrote the letter
And I strongly believe that I know the why the letter was written as well
So you think you know the who and the motive?
Yes
That's next on the Trojan Horse Affair
The case of the four resignations.
The Trojan Horse Affair is produced by Hamza Syed and me, along with Rebecca Lacks.
The show is edited by Sarah Koenig.
Additional editing by Ira Glass and by our contributing editor, Aisha Manazer-Siddiqi.
Fact-checking and research by Marika Cronley and Ben Phelan.
Original score by Thomas Meller, with additional music by Matt McGinley and Stephen Jackson.
Sound design, mixing, and music supervision by Stephen Jackson and Phil Domahowski at the Audio Non-Visual Company. Julie Snyder is our executive editor. Thank you. The Trojan Horse Affair is made by Serial Productions and The New York Times.