Are People Getting The Trojan Horse Affair All Wrong?
Damocles, the Sicilian courtier of legend, wouldn’t have made it to the top of the world of podcasting. With great audience — and great acclaim — comes great scrutiny. And the biggest podcasts in the world are born into the cultural landscape with a sword hanging above their head, held only by a single horse hair (or the podcast equivalent — perhaps a hair from Joe Rogan’s lush mane).
Perhaps the biggest new podcast launch of this year so far has been The Trojan Horse Affair, a collaboration between British journalist Hamza Syed and S-Town host Brian Reed. The show looks at a curious and, frankly, disastrous incident in British inter-faith relations, when a hoax letter sparked an inquisition into the Muslim leadership of a series of Birmingham schools. Anyhow, if you want to know more about the content of the podcast, you should try listening to it.
You should try listening to it particularly because a few people involved in the debate over the show — which has raged from pretty much the moment it was launched — seem like they might not have. The show takes an unusually unequivocal line, positioning itself as crusading journalism of the type we don’t tend to see in a genre of podcast documentary that could loosely be termed ‘true crime’. Syed leads the charge: he is clear in his belief that the letter was a hoax and that its…