https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0013rz8

  • Salma Siddique

Press/Media: Relating to Research

Description

Most people in the public eye now have a presence online, and with that often comes criticism, abuse and sometimes hatred. Broadcaster and sports journalist Graham Spiers, and Dr Salma Siddique, Clinical Anthropologist and Psychotherapist from the University of St Andrews, join Tony Kearney to discuss the toll this abuse can take and how to build resilience in a negative online world.

To mark Holocaust Memorial Day, Henry Wuga, a Kinder Transport child, recalls what it was like to be on one of the trains leaving Nazi Germany and setting up a new life in Glasgow, where he's been ever since.

Ahead of new census results being released, Tony speaks to Dr Azim Ahmed from the Centre for the Study of Islam in the UK and Dr Salma Siddique about how life has changed over the generations for Britain's Muslim communities.

 

Period23 Jan 2022

Media contributions

1

Media contributions

  • TitleBBC Radio Scotland: Online Hate
    Degree of recognitionNational
    Media name/outletBBC Radio Scotland - Sunday Morning, with Tony Kearney
    Media typeRadio
    Country/TerritoryUnited Kingdom
    Date23/01/22
    DescriptionMost people in the public eye now have a presence online, and with that often comes criticism, abuse and sometimes hatred. Broadcaster and sports journalist Graham Spiers, and Dr Salma Siddique, Clinical Anthropologist and Psychotherapist from the University of St Andrews, join Tony Kearney to discuss the toll this abuse can take and how to build resilience in a negative online world.

    To mark Holocaust Memorial Day, Henry Wuga, a Kinder Transport child, recalls what it was like to be on one of the trains leaving Nazi Germany and setting up a new life in Glasgow, where he's been ever since.

    Ahead of new census results being released, Tony speaks to Dr Azim Ahmed from the Centre for the Study of Islam in the UK and Dr Salma Siddique about how life has changed over the generations for Britain's Muslim communities.

    From Captain Cook to Haile Selassie, writer Anna Della Subin explains why some mere mortals have been elevated to the status of a god; the subject of her new book, Accidental Gods - On Men Unwittingly Turned Divine.

    The remarkable testimony of Lily Ebert, who promised that if she survived Auschwitz she would tell the world her story as long as she lived, and she has most definitely kept that promise with the help of her great-grandson Dov Forman. And Rabbi Pete Tobias from the Glasgow Reform Synagogue reflects on Lily's story, as well as her crucial message of tolerance and kindness.

    And as Burns Day approaches Dr Alison Jack, from the University of Edinburgh's School of Divinity, and the University of Glasgow's Professor Gerry Carruthers, explore the Bard’s relationship with religion and specifically the Kirk.
    URLhttps://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0013rz8
    PersonsSalma Siddique