By: Andrej Sekulović
A young life has been extinguished in England due to the deadly combination of mass migration and political correctness. This time, the victim was 18‑year‑old Henry Nowak.
He left this world on December 3rd last year, but the news of his death has only now reached the public. Not only because of his tragic fate, or because he was stabbed by the dark hand of a foreigner. But because Nowak might still be alive if we lived in a world where modern “racism” had no power. That Word caused his death. The lie of a foreigner, a lie that could have brought ruin upon the police officers if it had not been a lie.
Nowak was killed by 23‑year‑old Indian national Vickrum Digwa. He stabbed him with a kirpan, a ceremonial knife that Sikhs are allowed to carry publicly under religious‑freedom legislation. When the police arrived, Digwa claimed that the young man had attacked him and hurled racist insults. It was later proven that he had lied. Despite this, instead of helping Nowak, the police handcuffed him – and he bled to death on the cold pavement. Even though he begged for help and told the officers he had been stabbed, they did not believe him. One officer allegedly even replied: “No, mate, that is not true.” Before he died, Nowak said: “I cannot breathe.”
Anyone who remembers the chaos sparked years ago by the murder of George Floyd in the United States will recall that Floyd uttered the same sentence before his death. But because he was a Black man with a criminal record, those words brought everyone to their knees, from street rioters to heads of state. When it comes to a white student of Polish origin, however, all that remains is deafening silence. Nowak was the wrong skin colour. The wrong skin colour for the police to believe him, and the wrong skin colour for his fate to provoke widespread public outrage.
