EPISODE · Jul 25, 2025 · 49 MIN
Religion Media Festival: Community relations and the media’s role
from Religion Media Centre Podcast · host Yakub Qureshi, Warren Elf, Gary Newby, Manjit Kaur, Adeela Shafi, Leo Devine
When Labour swept to power in July 2024, it promised to work with faith leaders in a programme of national renewal. Soon after, summer riots across Britain, after the murder of three girls in Southport, revealed a breakdown in social cohesion and tested community relations. One year on, a panel at the Religion Media Festival discussed what had happened since, and how community was being rebuilt and maintained across Britain.Editors spoke of how they had reported on communities coming together to clean up town centres, and their efforts to rebuild trust and tackle fake media. Faith leaders wanted to see what practical measures journalists had to rebuild trust, to report on faith group initiatives locally and to encourage young people in plans for the future. The faith minister’s adviser, Lord Russell Rook, said there was much work to be done to unlock the power of faith in local communities. No one group could do this alone; what was needed was an "ecosystem" of organisations.Leo Devine chaired this panel with guests:Gary Newby, news editor at ITV News CentralYakub Qureshi, democracy editor at Reach plcManjit Kaur, co-chair Coventry and Warwickshire SACREsRabbi Warren Elf, MBE, co-chair of Faith Network for ManchesterProfessor Adeela Shafi, founder of the Bristol Muslim Strategic Leadership Group and commissioner for race equality in BristolThe Religion Media Festival, held at Methodist Central Hall, London, on Monday 9 June 2025, was organised by the Religion Media Centre. We are a charity which aims to help journalists report religion by providing daily news bulletins, background briefings, factsheets and opportunities to network.LinksWebsite: https://religionmediacentre.org.uk/X: https://x.com/RelMedCentreLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/religion-media-centre/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCthZf6RVTqJki6oTQTB6qmwContact [email protected](+44) 0203 970 0709
What this episode covers
When Labour swept to power in July 2024, it promised to work with faith leaders in a programme of national renewal. Soon after, summer riots across Britain, after the murder of three girls in Southport, revealed a breakdown in social cohesion and tested community relations. One year on, a panel at the Religion Media Festival discussed what had happened since, and how community was being rebuilt and maintained across Britain.
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Religion Media Festival: Community relations and the media’s role
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