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Enoch Was Right: 'Rivers of Blood' 50 Years On Paperback – April 19, 2018
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length287 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateApril 19, 2018
- Dimensions6 x 0.72 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101980818827
- ISBN-13978-1980818823
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Product details
- Publisher : Independently published (April 19, 2018)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 287 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1980818827
- ISBN-13 : 978-1980818823
- Item Weight : 1.03 pounds
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.72 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,326,781 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #3,816 in Political Philosophy (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Raheem Kassam is the Editor in Chief of Breitbart London, as well as serving as a senior distinguished fellow at the Gatestone Institute, a fellow at the Middle East Forum, and a frequent contributor to television and radio shows across the United States and Europe.
You can follow Raheem on Facebook and Twitter.
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Raheem, if you wrote your story I would buy it.
If you'd like a sort of slim version of Kassam's book, find online John Derbyshire's classic article from May 2001, "The Island Race…Riots." While he only briefly mentions Powell himself, Derbyshire eloquently lays out the state of affairs that Powell was warning about.
So what's actually in Kassam's book? He examines in great detail the ideas that Powell dealt with in his "Rivers of Blood" speech (which didn't actually contain that phrase). He establishes how substantial and far-seeing Powell was -- the very opposite of the 'xenophobe, racist, blah-blah-blah' that Powell is typically smeared as.
Particularly interesting features:
- Kassam's observations of the state-of-life in Britain's immigration-blitzed cities, reinforcing (17 years on) what Derbyshire had to say.
- The chapter that's an interview of Nigel Farage, who can be considered a political heir of Powell.
- The section on Trevor Phillips (son of immigrants from British Guiana), past head of Britain's Equality and Human Rights Commission, who apparently agrees with much of what Powell said in the "Rivers of Blood" speech (and consistently thereafter) but nevertheless decries the speech because its notoriety made it impossible to talk in public about racial subjects. (But isn't this a statement about the fecklessness of political "leadership," not a legitimate charge against Powell?)
- Kassam's own back story. Son of Muslim Indian immigrants from East Africa.
I give the book 4 stars instead of 5 because it could have used polishing. There are lots of typos, and Appendix A has the peculiarity that the final line of each paragraph gets spread across the entire page width (i.e. it's both right **and** left justified!). Since the book is self-published (thus maybe print-on-demand), perhaps Kassam or a friend could go back through and clean it up.
It also could use a lot more on Kassam's own back story, because this must surely be interesting and pertinent to Kassam becoming an acolyte of Powell. How did a young Muslim man in increasingly-Islam-impacted England become an atheist and apparent great skeptic of Islam? But maybe that's grist for another book. (There's a Wikipedia entry on Kassam.)
Their plan is not to assimilate, but to rule.
Top reviews from other countries
Raheen Kassam is an interesting and well informed man. Indian by race and Muslim by culture he is obviously an integral part of the problem that Powell foresaw, but despite that the two men, along with Nigel Farage, were friends many years ago. Although he only occasionally mentions it, the racial prejudice that Mr Kassam has experienced in his life gives an additional dimension to his ability to write about a subject that affects everyone, not only in this country, but so many other western European nations as well.
So, it is interesting that a man such as Mr Kassam, himself of immigrant parents though not, I think, of an immigrant community, should be such a supporter of Enoch Powell. Surely this monster was the most racist man who ever walked on England’s green and pleasant land. But in fact, Kassam shows how Powell was more of a realist than a racist. In fact, if the number of immigrants was kept sufficiently low, the new arrivals would not provoke hostility from the indigenous population. It was more about numbers than race or skin colour.
Now we have the situation where those on the left of the political spectrum have this ideal vision of a world without borders where everyone can come and go as they please to create a multi-cultural society. And of course, everyone who doesn’t agree with them is automatically branded a racist, bigot, Nazi, fascist etc. The problem is, one of the more recently arrived groups, even though they are without doubt a minority culture, has no interest in being part of the multi-cultural society. And it appears none of us have the tools to deal with such a situation. If only Enoch was here to help us now.
For anyone attempting to understand Britain’s present racial problems, this book is a must.



