
Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar has warned the current generation will have failed if his future grandchildren experience racism.
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Mr Sarwar said tackling hate and prejudice âmust be a fight for all of usâ, as he used his first party conference speech as leader to describe how he went to bed crying when his son first experienced racism.
The son of Mohammad Sarwar â the UKâs first Muslim and Scotlandâs first ethnic minority MP â Mr Sarwar said politics must change or the next generation âwill grow up in a more hate-filled and more divided world than we grew up inâ.
Declaring that âsilence is no longer an optionâ, Mr Sarwar said: âWe canât leave the fight against any form of prejudice to any individual community.â
Recounting a story of how his son âdiscovered racismâ when children would not pass to him while playing football âbecause he was the only P*** in the teamâ, Mr Sarwar said fighting hate and prejudice must be everyoneâs mission.
The Scottish Labour leader said: âWhen Adam is my age, and if he has a son or a daughter, and if they tell him that same story, this generation â our generation â will have failed.
âIâm not willing to let that happen, we cannot let that happen â not to any child in Scotland.
âThis is a fight for all of us.
âWe, the Labour Party, founded on the principle of equality, must be at the forefront of the battle for a more equal, a more diverse, a more tolerant, a more respectful and a more hopeful future for Scotland.

âSilence is no longer an option.â
Mr Sarwar also told delegates that his first political memory was an envelope delivered to his family home from a far-right group with a photo of his mother âwith two guns pointed to her head with the words in cut-out letters that read âbang, bang, thatâs all it takesâ.â
He added: âThat was because my father had the audacity to aspire to be Britainâs first Muslim MP and Scotlandâs first ethnic minority MP.
âI remember growing up, people would follow our family car, make prank phone calls, and one time they even fired a rock through the front window, hitting my dad on the head.
âI will never forget my mumâs words, which still drive me to this day: âWe canât give up. We canât walk away. Thatâs what they want. We canât let them win.â
âSo I didnât give up and I wonât walk away.â

The Glasgow MSP also reiterated his call for misogyny to become a stand-alone offence and criticised the Scottish Government for the âfundamental flawâ in hate crime legislation.
He said: âAs we mark International Womenâs Day, letâs not wait a day longer, letâs make misogyny a hate crime in Scotland now.
âBut thereâs a more fundamental issue here. Every single day, there are women across our country who have to think twice when they walk down certain streets, who have to look over their shoulder on a night out, and have to double check the charge on their phone.
âTo those that think the answer is to ask women to change their behaviour, Iâm sorry, frankly youâre wrong.
âIt is men who need to change their behaviour.â