Tag: Misc

  • Poetry | Immigrant

    immigrant

     

    I am
    Immigrant
    Fresh off the plane
    A top my mother’s lap in Major’s England
    Roots set down in North London estates
    Promised better than the dustbowl of a Pacific Island upbringing
    Better among suburban middle class
    Blazing through Blair’s education system
    A model minority, paying taxes 
    Oh, she is just like us

    I am not like you
    I am an immigrant
    Forever reaping the benefits of passing
    Barely passing
    Yet somehow, always passing

    A foothold in my heritage
    Uncertain to speak out
    Am I coloured? Or does my light skin betray the confusion I feel?
    Please don’t be fooled by my clipped Queen’s English
    My 20 year strong citizenship is a comfort to you?
    I have a taste for taste for tea and Sunday roast dinners and can eat rice everyday
    It’s ok

    She can stay

    Have I betrayed my fellow immigrant?
    As they precariously sway on boats in Calais
    They are ‘they’
    But again, she can stay
    I am here to work
    To earn for Queen and country
    I know no other country as well as the UK
    Nationalist
    Loyalist
    Loyal to my country
    Be proud of your roots, they say

    They other me from them
    But I am one of them
    I am an immigrant
    I say

    *I wrote this piece way before the results on Thursday’s referendum, but thought it would be a good idea and good timing to post it today in the wake of the Brexit.

    What shakes me most after everything that’s happened more than the economic fallout, more than political unrest, more than the dumb memes and jokes, is the racist and bigoted rhetoric being used against immigrants and people of colour. Trade agreements may take two years, getting a new PM in place may take till October, people are saying ‘Oh it’s all over now, let’s stop banging on about it, but the hatred is here now and it’s louder than ever. It’s being shouted in the streets, written out on placards and whispered behind the backs of hardworking citizens – some of whom have actually been living, working, and paying into this country for decades. People who have come to this country to seek better in what they thought was a tolerant nation already feel unwelcome and are questioning their place in a country they thought they thought they were safe and accepted in. I know. I’ve seen it. I’ve witnessed it first hand.

    You may say this campaign was not targeted at me, to not take it personally.

    Well, to that I say. I am British, but I am also an immigrant. And a damn well proud one at that.

    And if you strike one of us, it’s a blow for us all.

    If you are a UK resident can I urge you sign petitions for a second referendum, to keep lobbying your MPs, march on and keeping fighting intolerance and anti-immigration rhetoric. We can make Britain great again if we stand together against hate.

    Ria

  • Shouting Back | Blogging About Diversity

    DiversityHeader

    I haven’t said much on diversity since I posted about it back in February. I’ve wrestled with some blog post ideas, tried being active on social media, but ultimately I think I scared myself away from the topic, let other people of colour take the stage again.

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  • IWD 2016 | 3 Easy Ways To #PledgeForParity

    Last year the World Economic Forum dished out the glum news that it could take until 2133 for the world to close the global gender gap and progress to close it is slowing down year on year. Naturally this glacial pace of change is worrying not only for ourselves, already in the working world, but for future generations who may never see equality in their lifetime. (more…)