Media captionNadiya Hussain: “I feel like there’s a dignity in silence”

The Great British Bake Off winner Nadiya Hussain has said racial abuse is part of her life – and has been “for years”.

She exposed she has received abuse after “massive things happen” in the news, from 11 September 2001 onwards.

“I’ve had things hurled at me and[ been] pushed and jostle, ” she said.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Desert Island Discs, she told: “I feel like that’s just become a part of my life now. I expect it. Perfectly I expect it.”

Nadiya, 31, continued: “I expect to be shoved or pushed or verbally abused because that happens. It’s been happening for years.”

Asked by host Kirsty Young how she reacted, she said she did not retaliate.

‘Be the better person’

“I feel like there’s a dignity in silence, and I think if I retaliate to negativity with negativity, then we’ve evened out, ” she said.

“And I don’t need to even that out because if somebody’s being negative, I need to be the better person.

“Because I’ve got young children, the one thing I don’t want my kids to do is have a negative posture to living in the UK because, yes, there are those negative people, but they are the minority.”

She added: “I love being British and I love living here and this is my home and it always will be.

“Regardless of all the other things that define me, this is my home. And I want my kids to be proud of that, and I don’t want my kids to grow up with a chip on their shoulder.

“So I live as positively as I can and all those things that do happen to me, hey, it happens but it happens to other people too and we deal with it.”

Fifteen million people watched Nadiya triumph on the BBC One baking reveal last October, and by January she had been named by Debrett’s as one of the 500 more influential people in the UK.

Image caption Nadiya was overcome with emotion as she was announced the Bake Off win

“I was somewhat shocked by that but felt truly, really proud, ” she told of her inclusion on the Debrett’s list.

“I’ve spent most of my adult existence trying to raise good children and simply being a good role model for them, and it’s suddenly become so much more than that.

“I feel like if I continue to be a good role model for my children, that’s what’s really important because I feel like that will resonate with everyone.”

Luxury item

Nadiya said she was aware of the impact her Bake Off appearance and victory had on some viewers.

At the end of the contest’s finale, she proclaimed: “I’m never going to put bounds on myself ever again. I’m never going to say I can’t do it. I’m never going to say ‘maybe’. I’m never going to say ‘I don’t believe I can’. I can and I will.”

Speaking on Desert Island Discs, she reflected: “I recollect watching that final back and looking around and everyone around me was blubbering – their own families, everyone that was watching it with me, they were all crying.

“I know when I told those words why I said them. And I remember the following day I went out and I met a lady – and I’ll never forget it.

“So for me I’d realised what had happened at that point, and ever since going off Bake Off, everybody seems to talk about that last bit, and how they felt the same feelings or in some way related to those words.”

Her Desert Island Discs options ranged from Janet Jackson and Luther Vandross’s The Best Things In Life Are Free to Pachelbel’s Canon In D Major. Her chosen luxury item was Marmite.

Desert Island Discs featuring Nadiya Hussain is on BBC Radio 4 at 11:15 BST and will then be available online .

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