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Pledging allegiance to the Queen

Posted: Tuesday, January 15, 2008 9:49 AM
Filed Under:

I became a British citizen last week. During the official ceremony in the town hall of Camden Council, one of London’s 32 councils, sat several dozen people, the sorts I see every day in my adopted home.

Some women were dressed in headscarves and long skirts, others tight jeans and leather jackets.  One man wore an expensive-looking pinstripe suit, while another trudged in with a knitted cap and a long t-shirt. Nobody really stood out, except maybe the young woman with electric blue dreadlocks and thigh-high moon boots.

The CD player balancing precariously on a chair in the corner lent the event an unfinished feeling, a surprise in a country that practically invented pageantry.

Nevertheless, after we listened to a welcome speech, pledged our loyalty and stood for ‘God Save the Queen,’ the woman to my right held up her new nationality certificate.

Brinley Bruton/ msnbc.com
Brinley Bruton takes her official photograph with the Mayor of Camden after becoming a British citizen.

"I’m going to hold onto this and I’m not going to let go," she said, smiling broadly.

Most of us ‘queued’ (that’s the term for lined-up here) for an official photograph alongside a portrait of the queen and the real life Mayor of Camden, who wore a lace collar and a fur-trimmed red cloak.

Outside the hall after the event, another woman hugged an older companion, her long pink veil trembling, whether from laughter or tears I couldn’t tell. 

Effort to assimilate
Versions of this event, which the government initiated in 2004 and describes as "rather like a wedding," occur throughout the country. The initiative is part of a struggle to integrate Britain’s growing population of immigrants – about 160,000 were naturalized in 2006, representing a fourfold increase over ten years. 

Britain is trying to assimilate a population that is growing more and more diverse. Like the United States, people are literally dying to get into this country, and whether the small island’s economy and society can support the influx is constantly debated.  Just to give you an idea, more than 100 languages are spoken in Camden’s schools alone. 

So at first I didn’t question the need to go through a slightly forced ceremony – having been born an American, the idea that a country would formally welcome and guide its newest citizens made sense.  It should be as simple as embracing certain traditions, abiding by the laws and declaring yourself British, right?

Not necessarily.

Becoming ‘British’?
Many come here to escape poverty and oppression. Others come because they have hit professional glass ceilings at home.  Some surely come here for love. But what I’ve learned is that actually becoming ‘British’ may not factor that high on many people’s lists. 

Take my reasons (I’m keeping my American passport), which are a combination of practicality and emotion.  I have come to love the country that I moved to extremely reluctantly six years ago because of what I perceive to be its citizens’ almost kneejerk tendency to question authority, tolerate eccentricity, and remain loyal to friends.

At the same time, I recognize the practicality of having a passport that allows me to work throughout much of Europe, and return here after long absences. I have also noted Britain’s excellent consular services while working in difficult countries.

‘Becoming British,’ whatever that is, isn’t among the reasons I’ve done this.  

And I now know that many long-standing citizens aren’t too sure that I or any of the newcomers will ever actually be British. In fact, I’ve walked into a storm over what it means to be British, and whether these ceremonies, which many believe are modeled on similar ones in the United States, are in fact downright un-patriotic.

‘Not a flag-waving nation’
"One point of being British is that you don’t really talk about it," said a good, and very British friend.

That’s putting it politely. 

"If I were to go to one of these events I would probably kill myself laughing," says Alan Sked, another Briton and an expert in international history at the London School of Economics.

The ceremonies, and citizenship tests that precede them, he says, are part of a "propaganda drive by the government that has made possible the breakup of Great Britain."

They are an attempt to paper over the country’s ongoing identity crisis, he says.  This crisis was brought on by the current Labour government, which has ceded control to both the European Union, and helped set up regional parliaments and assemblies in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, Sked adds.

So the citizenship ceremony "is not a traditionally British thing, it is an invention, artificial – this is just not a flag-waving nation. From a traditional point of view, these people would be simply assimilated," Sked says.

One new citizen I met at my ceremony agreed with Sked’s last comment at least.

"Identity does not develop overnight," says an Egyptian academic who has been in the country for over a decade.  "A 20-minute ceremony doesn’t change a single reasonable person’s life."

The reasons this man gives for becoming British are practical – mainly, he is tired of the grilling he withstands every time he travels.  He says that visas are very hard to get with an Egyptian passport, and when he returns home he is treated like "a criminal."  This has gotten much worse since the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

Who he is, and how he identifies himself, will not change at all, he says, adding: "The question that needs to be answered is, what does it mean to be British?"         

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Comments

I'm appalled that one would trade US citizenship for matters of convenience, as Ms. Bruton implies she has done.
The colonization of the worlds languages is all comming back to you in spades, give them one language without the tower and god will honor your attempts to unify their soveriegn hearts.  Philippians 3:23
Thanks for a cool story.  Very interesting insight into an area that one would never get to hear details about.  I've travelled to England a few times for business but would have never thought about what it would be like to 'sign up' and become one of them.
For the thousands of UK citizens born in this apparently 'broken' Great Britain-- we Welsh, the Irish, and the Scottish-- being 'British' is, at the least, controversial, and sometimes flatly undesireable.  Yet we are born here and feel connected here, speak the language of our ancestors and feel a general sense of community.  Whether this emotional and political divide between 'Welsh' and 'British' and 'immigrant' and 'British' and so on is really some triumph of propaganda, I find doubtful-- it's the natural evolution of a thousand years of fractious history between a population that has always been made up of immigrants, invaders, conquerers, and resisters.
Having lived in Britain for a spell, I fully agree with your analysis of Britishness being hard to quantify. The people there are proud to be British...but only to a fault. Mainly when discussing soccer or most institutions that began there, the British will defend whatever it is just for arguments sake. In addition, Brits traveling abroad are probably identify more proudly British than when they're at home. Overall, the identity of being British is often stereotyped but ultimately difficult to put into words. You have to show live examples to express what it means to be British.
Ms. Bruton,

May we back in the USA assume that you were able to also claim British citizenship by virtue of your birthplace (UK or commonwealth) or that of your parents? Or did you renounce allegiance to the USA to become a Brit? If the latter, how can you retain your American passport?
I'm an American with a clear right to British citizenship because my mother is Scottish. Although raised in the States, I was raised on the glories of being entitled to such a citizenship. If I chose to assume my British citizenship I would do so because I was proud to be British and all that represents, not because it provided me with traveling conveniences, ease of paperwork or other trivial reasons. People died as citizens and may be called on to do so again. I want to make sure I'm willing to take that stand in the name of a country before I assume its mantle. The author mentioned somewhat cynically that the ceremony was akin to a marriage. How archaic??? No,its a decision that actually outlives many a marriage and will affect future generations as I am living proof.    
Good.  Stay there. Id much rather PLEDGE ALLEGIANCE TO THE QUEEN OF hearts.  You forget how many Americans died because the British thought They could rule the world. THOUGHT.  You are another Benedict Arnold and belong there.
What qualifications must be satisfied to become a British citizen?
Great!  Everyone needs to move there..  We need to give constant suggestions along with plane tickets to all the illegals here and have them move to England.  They LOVE illegals, they have great living standards,  what else would anyone want.  I am certainly going to start making suggestions to all the illegals I know...  GREAT BRITAIN IS REALLY GREAT "MOVE THERE".
US allows dual citizenship.  You can become a citizen of most other countries and remain a citizen of the US (retaining the passport) without any problem.  Very few countries actually require you to renounce your former citizenship anymore.

If a person is working in a foreign land for an extended period of time and needs to be able to travel locally, have access to health care, etc - obtaining citizenship in that country would probably be a good thing.   And you still are a US citizen, so going home again is no problem!

I am a British Citizen by birth but recently became an American Citizen by naturalization. I didn't become a US citizen for convenience but because this country is my home, the place I have lived for 25 years, the place my children were born and raised.

It used to mean something to be British but sadly political correctness had stopped the "Flag waving" for fear of offending someone. The true Brits have been forced to submit to the will of immigrants who have no more loyalty to the Country than Ms Bruton.
It's called dual citizenship ms.bruton - the writer traded no citizenship... and no need to be outraged.... how is the writer's choice actually hurting you to be so upset?! We're all world citizens
To Ra Noel:

Which part of 'I'm keeping my American passport' do you not understand? It is quite possible these days to have dual UK/US citizenship.
If one thinks or feels a ceremony makes one a true citizen then one is as foolish as those who pray to stones or an image on a stick and is as foolish as one who pours milk or burns incenses to their chosen gods. One must as in these religions chose to do certain things,perform a cermony, speak in certain ways abide by specific rules or laws. One must give up ones past and former self one nation of birth and join with that new home; just as one so loves their faith, so one must love their new country. It is odd that in our new times, people can not see that these ideals once though of as being part and parcel of the assimilation process are now rejected for we want to keep the old home and its identy and take on a new identity with the old placed in many cases first, many simply want the privelage of America and the west ,so to be called a this or that American instead of American is rejected. For feeling that an identifier is better than being the old is more important than the new lessons all..
l am an English woman who took American citizenship. This is my adoptive home.l love BBQs;the warm weather in CA; delivery; and the choice to have things my way in restaurants,the wide open Vistas, and grandeur of the landscape. l will never be an American,l hate Reeses peanut butter cups;isn't the World Series really the American Series? l miss the 10pm news from London, BBC America will have to do; and l still get my Tea imported after 17yrs.Embracing the great things about an adoptive Country doesn't make you a true native. As the British Consul said when l asked if l could still be British if l Naturalised " Madam you can take as many Nationalities as you like, and you will always be British".
Let's face it !! many that visit Britain would like to become one, whether they are from  the U.S or mid east or whatever. To become British,are the aspirations of so many people from all walks of life, the British politics are admired by so many other countries including the U.S, who have a bastard form of democracy, as we see today within the U.S run up for Presidentcy. Recently London was selected as the Capital city of the world, with its people who get along and the life that abounds the capital.
Ms Bruton surely is a mockery to the British, and the kind we do not want in the Commonwealth, I would have felt that she should have been proud to become British, or is it that she is eccentric, or possibly having children whilst there under the NHS.!!
Haven't some of you people ever heard of dual citizenship? You don't 'trade' citizenship, you assume two. If you are appalled or feel that citizenship requires allegiance to only one nation, you need to get out more - whether that be by travelling physically or oprning up your mind. And by the way -come back through US Immigration in the line for non-US Passports and see what a welcome you get as an 'alien' - Southern hospitality it ain't.
Having recently returned to the US after spending the better part of a decade in the UK, I understand what the author is talking about.  

I refused to apply for UK citizenship though I did qualify for it, mainly on general principle.  I found the UK to be far more xenophobic than the US, less accepting of foreigners, and much more eager to demand complete and immediate assimilation of its immigrants.  

I, as an educated native English-speaker, was constantly told that I "must" assimilate by engaging in such activities as drinking to excess and mocking the religious.  I know better; it is impossible to "become" British.  You have to be born that way.  The British demand the impossible of their immigrants; they require them to assimilate but will not budge an inch when it comes to accepting them.  
Reasons for an action of every individual are different. when you are hungry, homeless and probably uneducated, and your country is at war. which will you do first, find something to eat or go to war to defend your country?. while some people graduate from harvard, some others find it difficult to pay their tuition fee to attend just any university, this is beyond smartness or brilliance,  but affordability, exposure, immediate responsibility.......
ninety-nine percent of world immigrants will remain where they were or at least, return back, if why they immigrated were available.
people do things for different reasons, because of different situations, and every individual decisions and actions should be respected. an object that faces you directly is backing somebody else at same time, so the two of you are not seeing it from same position.
how come it is cynical for one to take another citizenship for the reason of marriage.   then it should be cynical for you to do business, take international employment or even compete in sport  with others in another country.
Linda only good till you reach age 21 I believe after that all bets are off, and if you take an american passport out I believe that also puts an end to your claim of citezenship.
My ancestors came to Connecticut, America from England in the 1600s to get away from the King and have a place to make their own. I don't think I would want to go back.  They have universal health care that doesn't work very well, can not own Firearms to protect themselves, can't hunt.  What can they do?  Oh yeah, get mugged or pick pocketed by roving gangs.  Then there is Scotland which has one of the highest crime rates in the world.  Only the Irish have come to their senses "over there".
 The UK allows dual citizenship, it is not necessary to
abandon or renounce any existing citizenship to qualify
for UK naturalization.
I predict more Americans will become British citizens simply for it's health care.
The truth is one cannot become British in the way that one can become American. The British popultation is not recently composed of disparate immigrant
groups coming together in one country. My family have been around since the Domesday Book was compiled. I am Anglo-Saxon through and through and I will remain so wherever I live. I cannot choose to change that essential fact. Foreigners can come and live in Britain, hopefully because they like the place and the people, but they will never be British, no matter how many ceremonies they attend.
To those of you who are confused: the U.S. permits dual citizenship -- there's no need to "renounce" your American citizenship. Perhaps if you'd travel more you'd realize it's no great shakes to have American citizenship; we're not exactly beloved around the world these days, and Britain has surpassed us in standard of living.
I'm a dual citizen of the U.S. and U.K. and have been since birth. I grew up back and forth between both countries, but eventually I decided to live mostly in the U.S. because they try to make it as difficult as they can to be a dual citizen and if I leave the U.S. to live in the U.K. I have to pay taxes to both countries.
I have to say, that regardless of all that, I am very proud to be both British and American, but I have seen first hand how many people do get citizenship strictly as a matter of convenience, and while I understand their reasons, I wonder how many would actually stand up and fight for their country if called upon.
I am all for letting hard working, decent people immigrate/emigrate, but I think the current system in both the U.S. and U.K. is highly flawed and doesn't really look for the right things in many of the people they allow in.
I also think the U.K. has taken on far more than it can handle much too fast in terms of how many people they allow in. Of course, once people get in, it's hard to round them up, and where do you take them if their home country won't take them back?

For me, being British or American means I would serve, fight or die for my country, and am honored to do so.
You do NOT have to give up your US citizenship to gain a British citizenship.  It is possible to have dual-citizenship.
How are gasoline prices in Britain?
"One point of being British is that you don’t really talk about it," I couldn't agree more. Check out what we chose for a national moto: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article2917745.ece

Welcome to Britain. Camden? Oh dear...
Ok everyone!  Please note that in the last 10 years, US law has changed to allow for dual citizenship.  US nationals can now take on a second citizenship without having to "renounce" their allegiance to the US; although a person can choose to do so and in such case cannot be granted US citizenship again.

Like Ms. Bruton, I have spent a considerable time living in Europe for work and understand the practical difficulties of traveling in and out of the Schengen agreement countries (these are the countries that no longer have borders between them) and having to stand in line with hundreds of other travelers waiting for a customs official to just look at my passport, notice it is from the US and wave me through.  I have considered taking dual citizenship in a European country for the sakes of easier travel and work.

That does not, for one second, diminish my pride in being an American nor my allegiance to its Constitution or its peoples.
I agree with Miss Bruton completely in that a ceremony cannot change who you are or where you are from. Our Nationality is a part of what makes us who we are, and should not be given up lightly. I have done the reverse; I moved from Britain to USA, and I have no intention of becoming a US citizen, simply because that's not who I was born as. I am and will always be British, even though it makes travel outside the USA more difficult, my birthright is a huge part of my heritage and roots that I would never want to relinquish for the sake of convenience.
Good riddance if that is how you feel about citizenship to any country.  Being a citizen is more than just convenience.
As a British Citizen living in America for the past 10 years and contemplating doing the opposite the writer has done (i.e. become a US Citizen), it was quite nice to read this report.

Trading Citizenship is NOT what is being discussed, the advantages of holding dual citizenship are certainly worthwhile, but since Sept. 11th it has becme much more difficult to actually assume dual citizenship within the US. I want to retain by British Passport and Citihip - I am proud to be English, but this is now my home and more than likely will be living here to the end of my days.

I just wish it would be easier to maintain my British status and also become a US Citizen......
Why so many xenophobic Americans?  America love it or leave it mentality is just so ignorant.  Why drive a Japanese car when you can drive the GM lemons...at least you can put the American flag on your bumper stickers and admire them everytime your car breaks down!  Have you people no idea of what dual citizenship is?  Better go back to school and educate yourself so you erase some of your bigotry and ignorance.
It is all very well singing the praises of 'Britishness' and having pride in being British,  But as an Englishman I doubt very much whether the ousider understands how much keeping the UK united is costing the English and Welsh tax payer!
Scotland has been a financial burden on the rest of the UK for some considerable time now and Scots are shown preferential treatment by our unelected, (and uneducated) Prime minister.
Would Americans accept a poorly educated socialist Mexican who can barely speak English as President?  I very much doubt it. But that is what England and the English has to suffer with Gordon Brown!
The 'special relationship' between the UK nd US has already shown sings of straining under Brown.  That is because the truth is, the special relationship is between ENGLAND and the US.  Not the UK as a whole.  And Brown, as a Scot will ruin it at all costs.
Sickened in NC said it all. That Egyptian fellow should have had a British passport long ago, and renounced his Egyption citizenship.  I was born a dual national (USA-Canada), I hold ONE passport. I believe citizenship of convenience is sorry, citizenship should be of the heart.
Delmar Fairchild, Kindly speak with knowledge not with hysterical ignorance, not with facts taken from the 'National Enquirer' medias. The health care system in Britain works quite as I found out when they looked after my mother recently. Uncontrolled ownership firearms is hardly the sign of a civilised society. 'Roving gangs' are in the deluded minds of the ignorant and Scotlands crime rate is a damn sight better than some of the trigger-pumping communities which I've travelled through in the Mid West of the US. At least in Britain 'trick-or-treat' kids don't get blown away at Halloween by some macho gon-toting retard which did happen in the Mid West.
Oh Delmar, one more thing , I'm no bleeding-heart liberal just an individual who detests lies and inaccuracies.
I am a Brit who emigrated to Canada in 1976. I moved because I met & married a Canadian girl who couldn't accept the Brit way of life.  Since then I have stayed in Canada to be near my kids as they grew up, and because I love the freedom & way of life in Canada.  I never gave up my Brit citzenship or obtained my Canadian citzenship, although I will one day.  My oldest in her 30s, is currently going after her US Green Card, and as we recently found out can still get her Brit passport if she wants to, even though she wasn't born there.  Her intention is to eventually have her Canadian citzenship, with her US and Brit Citzenships.  The main reasons for having all three are for freedom of travel and work.  I don't blame her at all in this day and age of world travel, movement and work, the more who do this the better the world will be.  I pity those xenophobes who never travel and yet always put down other races and religions without any actual knowledge of them except through biased media.  My congratulations to anybody with dual or tri citzenship for whatever reason.
I am  US citizen by choice and as part of that process renounced allegiance to all other governments.  And, yes, I pledged to protect the Constitution of the US etc, something that apparently LouNYC did not. For those who taken on dual citizenship as a matter of convenience, will you be willing to put your life on the line  for both countries?
It doesn't  matter what the gas prices are in England, since most people don't own cars!!  But, it's probably because the gas is so much higher there.  The standard of living surpassed us?  Maybe residents of NYC - but, even then I'm puzzled?  In WHAT way?  have you looked at their teeth lately?  
It's nice to see people express their opinion's. I did lean toward the insight displayed by "creepshow",...his name says it all!

People can die defending a country without ever being a citizen of that country.

The sad fact is, in recent times, had aome American citizens been carrying a British passport, they would not have been singled out for summary execution.

All the patriotic fervour displayed means little or nothing. If people find that holding dual U.K./U.S.A. citizenship, speeds the process of travelling,....go for it! It has been my privilege to "rescue" American citizens during some hardtimes in Africa. The fact that I had a British passport was the "get us home free" card. There are always pros and cons,.....use whatever is best for one's self.
ok...we get the point about dual citizen ship, move on.  The old adage goes "you don't like how the country is being run then go somewhere else!"...this is exactly what this woman did and we have idiots giving her a hard time.  These are the same people voting for candidates that cry on camera, or get into race baiting arguements, or cry about freedom of government yet keep people from being wiretapped and searched on the drop of a dime.

Wake up america...the more this country declines in it's ability to make educated choices, the more you will see people flocking to other countries for a better way.

I had family die in battle for this country, and we all served...hopefully everyone will wake up and stop choosing teams and start being freely independent people
Good..........Now She can PAY TAXES in BOTH COUNTRIES!  Hope the IRS is paying attention!
I went the other way, born and raised in the UK, moved to the US and became a citizen.  At that time, 1973, the US did not recognize dual citizenship.  If they do now it's news to me.  Proud to be american.
To Margaret, Southfield, MI

I am a British Citizen who has lived in the US for almost 30 years. Proportinately speaking, there are as many people owning cars in the UK as in the US. The cars there are just more reliable and efficient. The standard of living has indeed surpassd what we have here, as evidenced by the amount of disposable income many Brits have over the majority in the US.

So far as teeth go. My sister and I saw our dentist much more frequently for regular check-ups when we were kids than many children in the US do today, and oral hygiene was maintained as we became adults. We were not the exception, we were the rule. From when I came to the US, until the present I have seen more instances of bad teeth than I ever saw growing up in the UK, especially in the northern states. The very worst was someone I worked with who had come to NC from MI.
"use whatever is best for one's self."....Now that is the epitome for selfishness and shameless betrayal.  This is coming from a Brit who lives in FL. I had the privilege of rescuing many Brits and Europeans from West Africa when their own diplomatic staffs told them to go to the AmEmbassy because their own govts couldn't help them.  God Bless America!
The universal health care system in Britan and Canada works just fine thanks, It is the US government that has lied to you about it's flaws so they don't have to give it to you. It's the same story with gun control they would have you believe that Canadian citizens don't have guns, believe whatever you want !!!
NOT British CITIZEN, British Subject. THERE IS A DIFFERENCE.
A tale of two brothers. Long ago and far away.  The oldest of the two was born in England. The family moved to the United States. The younger of the two was born in the United States. The older one, applied for American citizenship to apply for work in a defence plant, during the second world war. He had to renounce his British citizenship. The younger, because his father ( and mother) remained  British subjects, he, although he didn’t know it was born with dual nationality. He has maintained two valid passports all his life.  From what I understand, it is true, that if a British citizen applies for American citizenship, he or she  must renounce British citizenship. Correct me if I'm wrong.


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