The Hamilton Spectator

The Boat People shines a light on life of refugees

AUTHOR TALKS

- SUE CARTER Sue Carter is the editor of Quill and Quire. Metro

In October 2009, a rusted-out ship called the Ocean Lady landed in Vancouver, smuggling a group of Sri Lankan Tamils who were fleeing their home country’s violent civil war. Starving and exhausted, the asylum-seekers believed they had found freedom in Canada — only to be arrested by armed border guards and the RCMP.

A year later, history repeated when a second group of 492 Sri Lankans aboard the ship MV Sun Sea were detained in suspicion of their ties to the Tamil Tigers, a militant organizati­on banned in Canada as a violent terrorist group.

While Sun Sea’s arrival made internatio­nal news, few details were shared about the refugees’ identities because of a court-ordered publicatio­n ban. And so in 2013, when Sharon Bala, a Sri Lankan-Canadian writer living in St. John’s, began researchin­g for The Boat People — her debut novel inspired by the real-world events — she was forced to play detective by piecing together snippets of their background­s while imprisoned.

“The boat was a bit of a black box. I looked for everything I could find,” Bala says. “At the time, I really wished I could get my hands on the transcript, but now I’m glad I didn’t. I think it forced me to use my imaginatio­n. If I had too many realworld details, it would have hindered me.”

Bala — who became a buzzedabou­t author after taking home the prestigiou­s Writers’ Trust/McClelland & Stewart Journey Prize last year — planned to set more of “The Boat People” in the past, inspired by her own family’s stories from Sri Lanka.

But upon receiving feedback from early readers and later her editors at Penguin Random House (whose marketing department selected her for their One World, One Book campaign), Bala realized that at the book’s heart is Mahindan, a young man who is imprisoned off a ship and subsequent­ly separated from his 6-year-old son.

His lawyer, Priya, a second-generation Sri Lankan-Canadian, is brought on to the case unwillingl­y, reluctant to sacrifice her real career aspiration­s. Then there’s Grace, a skeptical Japanese-Canadian adjudicato­r who will ultimately determine Mahindan’s fate.

“I wanted to not just look at individual­s, but at the whole system,” Bala says. “The only way to do that is to do it from multiple perspectiv­es: the person on trial, their lawyer who understand­s the system and the person who has to make the decision. I like the idea of multiple perspectiv­es because I like playing with this idea of what is truth, and what really happened.”

In 2013, as Bala was early into her manuscript, another refugee crisis began dominating headlines. The Syrian war had entered its second year, and reports of migrants dying in boats on the Mediterran­ean Sea horrified the world. Bala stayed focused on her novel, but also found parallels between what was happening in the refugee camps.

In both cases, she observed a sense of indomitabl­e hope, which imbues The Boat People despite its heavy subject.

 ??  ?? The Boat People, by Sharon Bala, McClelland and Stewart, 416 pages, $24.95.
The Boat People, by Sharon Bala, McClelland and Stewart, 416 pages, $24.95.
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