PULSE POINTS:
❓What Happened: The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) broadcasted a live Eid service from a mosque on British terrestrial TV for the first time.
👥 Who’s Involved: The BBC host Jason Mohammad, Firecracker Scotland, Amplify Consulting, Daisy Scalchi, and Aaqil Ahmed.
📍 Where & When: Bradford Central Mosque, during the morning of Eid.
💬 Key Quote: Daisy Scalchi stated, “This feels like it is absolutely the right moment to be doing something loudly and proudly, celebrating this key moment in the calendar.”
⚠️ Impact: This marks a historic broadcast, as Islam continues to gain cultural dominance despite widespread anti-mass migration protests, sometimes aimed against mosques, last year.
IN FULL:
The BBC, funded by a compulsory television license, has made history by airing a live Eid service from a mosque on British terrestrial television for the first time. The program, Eid Live, was broadcast from Bradford Central Mosque. The city’s demographics have been transformed by Islamic immigration in recent decades.
The broadcast was part of the BBC’s ongoing Faith and Hope season, designed to promote “inclusive” programming. As part of the celebration, an additional show, Celebrity Eid, will bring together prominent Muslim figures and non-Muslims later in the day.
Daisy Scalchi, responsible for religious content commissioning at the BBC, expressed surprise that such a broadcast had not occurred earlier. The initiative is part of a broader BBC effort to enhance religious output, and Scalchi highlighted collaborations with departments like BBC Children’s and BBC Sounds to enrich their religious programming. Firecracker Scotland, in collaboration with Amplify Consulting, is producing the Eid content.
Bradford is currently being celebrated as the UK City of Culture—a controversial decision, with Bradford having been a hotbed for so-called “grooming gangs,” comprised primarily of Muslim men who drug, rape, and pimp mostly white working-class girls.