Personal tumult led Farah Damji to
rejoice in the multi-ethnicity of her children. The editor of
‘Indobrit’, Britain’s new magazine celebrating the sub
continent, on how it all came to be
There has been a lot of
reporting in the British press recently about a half-Asian woman who murdered
her husband’s lover in a fit of depression-induced rage. The judge said he
had no option but to sentence her for life. Now life for murder means 14 years,
so she will be at least 50, in the best possible scenario, when she is released.
What happens to her ‘nigger’ children? To the unfit father who
abandoned them and went on to have an affair? His lover told his wife that they
were going to have children and that the children from their coupling would not
be black, like hers.
I felt saddened and appalled by the incident.
It recalled old memories. The blond blue-eyed ghastly Ulsterman who stalked my
existence for nearly two years reared his ugly head once more. He was outwardly
respectable, sound, sensitive, so I embarked on an affair with a man I thought I
knew. Just an affair — he is not marriage material; his friends call him
the most engaged and engaging man in Northern Ireland. When we fell pregnant, he
had me threatened, followed, harassed by the police and heavies. Worst of all,
he shut me out completely. Now I have some very good friends who held onto me
and didn’t let me drown.
A circle of love embraced me. I took
up Buddhism and chanting for hours at a time to let go of the hate and the
darkness. I became undone. Friends were genuinely worried and I set upon a
course of self-destruction. I think I lost the desire to live in those dark days
of anger and pain. I was lost in my hate for this man. Nasty letters came
through his inept and insensitive solicitors. I naturally, retaliated, faxing
the chairman of the ‘global-going-local’ bank he worked at and
letting my hormonally-challenged state take hold of my better senses. Marina was
born almost two months early by emergency C-section and arrived in the bright
lights and panic of the operating theatre, a far cry from the water birth and
aromatherapy-scented labour I had discussed with my holistic consultant. She was
born way underweight and had to be put into an incubator, and yet she held on
and grew and managed to regulate her own body temperature within two days. We
went home on New Year’s Day 2002.
I had a bad bout of postnatal
depression and asked my mother to take Marina to Cape Town so I could start to
put the pieces of my life back together. Those three months were key in
redefining who I was and where we were going as a family — my two children
and I. I was prescribed sedatives and anti-depressants and finally, the fog of
lethargy and desperation started to lift.
A friend with more money
than sense asked me what I wanted to do. I muttered something about wanting to
start a magazine. He asked what it would cost and I let out some horribly
inflated figure, hoping he would be shocked and drop the subject. He wrote me a
cheque and the rest as they say, is history. In a lot of ways I think, that was
the turning point for me because suddenly, here was a goal, a project in sight
and something that needed to be accomplished fairly rapidly. Marina came back
and we soon bonded and I settled into life with a new happy baby.
Asian Accents
I determined she would know who she was and where
she came from, from my side. I wanted her and my son Imran, my two Indobrats, to
be proud of their heritage, to lay a claim to the vast and rich resources at
their calling. To India. But they are also irrevocably British. Both my children
have fair fair skin, Marina has blonde hair and green/brown eyes. Imran has some
of my features, but a porcelain complexion and chestnut-coloured eyes. When we
go through airports, immigration officials check our passports twice. My
children do not look like me. But we celebrate our ‘Indianness’ and
they can be true citizens of a multicultural world and appreciate their
ethnicity. Learn to love it, not try and hide it.
A friend told me
that I was lucky that my children were so fair. This, to a mother who plants
them outside in the garden at even the faintest hint of sunshine. My son spends
his long summer holidays with my parents in South Africa and comes back golden
and proud. “See, Mum, now I am brown like you,’’ he says. Oh,
you are so clever, you gave her an European name, another friend says;
she’ll fit in so well. Why did I choose the name Marina? I didn’t!
Her brother did. It’s the name of the mermaid on a TV programme he was
crazy about at the time.
‘Indobrit’ is a celebration of
all things Asian; anything that comes from the sub- continent, which has
cultural, political, aesthetic, economic value, should be part of their
vernacular. I want them to grow up knowing Ayurvedic cures for the coughs and
colds that plague them, to understand Vaastu and to know the stories of the
Hindu gods and the special significance of fasting in Islam. I hope the music of
the spheres that started in the place in which their great-grandfather was born
calls them.
Let them pluck exotic fruit, bursting with succulent
juices and eat it, to know and feel and live taste. I want them to look with
fresh eyes at the worlds around them, the way Marina’s birth gave me a
chance to shift my perspective and enter into a paradigm of change.
I wonder how I will tell her this story when she asks me who her
father was. I can give her a clear identity and pride in her ancestral roots.
But I also want to protect her from his gnarled emotions and the endless rivers
of shame that feed poison to all around him, killing joy and life. I know these
are not my decisions ultimately and I pray daily I have the character to face
the day with courage when the question comes.
Love happens. I have
an ongoing love-hate battle with my flowerbeds. I remember the realisation
coming to me that Marina’s father just wasn’t worth it, one
Hampshire Sunday afternoon. About a hundred people had told me that a thousand
times before; I just had to get there myself. I have finally let go of the hate.
I remember the moment I was relieved and emptied. Years of pain dissolved like
cobwebs and dust.
An old but new man entered my life and my space;
he made me laugh again, come out into the sun and to live fully again, with him,
basking in this thing called us, and life dances before us reflected in his
sea-green eyes. And we reclaim each other 22 years after the story started. On
the back of his BMW 1200 BX. Go figure!