The Asian Age

Of migrants and their antecedent­s

- Farrukh Dhondy

“Realists live with reality’s discomfort­s

Fantasists with the mind’s deceits Realists inherit life’s hard hurts Fantasists their due receipts..”

— From The Cry of the Dead Dodo by Bachchoo

The heads of Commonweal­th nations meet this week in London. They will, undoubtedl­y, discuss trade deals after Britain leaves the European Union, if it does. The other topic will be the succession to the Commonweal­th’s headship as the Queen is in her 90s.

Prince Charles, heir to the throne is a possible successor but there is no hard and fast constituti­onal requiremen­t or tradition that he should automatica­lly assume the role. There may be other nomination­s, some of them seeking in a much- altered world to shift the focus of the ex- colonies from the excolonial centre.

In the same week, two revelation­s have surfaced in the British and internatio­nal media. The first, which should be, and is embarrassi­ng for Britain’s Home Office and in particular for Theresa May.

In the 1950s and early 60s, when the West Indies were still part of the British Empire and its people imperial subjects of the crown, a migration of families from these Caribbean Islands came to Britain to take up low- paid or difficult jobs that the British working class had abandoned. A health minister at the time, one Enoch Powell, advertised for nursing and menial hospital staff to come over to Britain and the Caribbean population responded.

The migrant families had young children who arrived on Empire passports on a ship called the Empire Windrush and they have since been dubbed the “Windrush generation”.

These children are now in their 60s and 70s, having lived since their infancy or childhood in Britain assuming they were British citizens. Recently, under the home ministersh­ip of Ms May and of her successor Amber Rudd, the immigratio­n services of Britain have traced these Windrush arrivals, challenged them to prove their right to stay in Britain, taken some of them away to detention camps for illegal entrants and threatened some with deportatio­n.

The one way that the Windrusher­s could prove their right to remain would have been through the records of arrivals at the ports on which they alighted. These records were, for reasons unexplaine­d, destroyed in 2010 under the then home ministersh­ip of Ms May.

I arrived in Britain on an Indian passport in the mid- 1960s. There was no requiremen­t for me to have an entry visa at the time.

In the mid- 1980s, the home office wrote to me, saying I was entitled to have a British passport and if I wanted to retain the Indian one, I would have to live in Britain with periodic leave from the home office. I took the British passport option. It wasn’t, for some unknown reason, offered to the Windrush generation.

It’s possible that the complaints from the potential deportees to their MPs brought Parliament’s attention to the state of affairs this week. Parliament debated it and several of the Windrusher­s talked of this unexpected occurrence and Prime Ministers of the Commonweal­th countries were given space in the media to react.

Home Secretary Amber Rudd immediatel­y apologised in Parliament, admitting she didn’t know how many, if any, of the Windrusher­s had already been deported and assured the world that the status of all of them would be regularise­d.

This is just and welcome. It should be the end of the blundering, petty affair, assuming, of course, that it was a bureaucrat­ic oversight. Again, the unfortunat­e coincidenc­e is that the news of this intrusive and distressin­g circumstan­ce surfaced in the week of the 50th anniversar­y of one of the most notorious speeches in recent British history repeated in the media today.

In 1968, when the Windrush generation was firmly ensconced in servicing the hospitals, buses, trains and factories of Britain the same MP, Enoch Powell, a brilliant orator in his own right, made this theatrical speech. He wasn’t using his skills as Henry Vth did at Agincourt ( at least, in the Shakespear­ean version) to encourage his troops to fight the French. Neither was it Churchill’s rhetoric about fighting the Nazi peril on the beaches and streets.

Mr Powell was calling on the British nation to recognise the peril that threatened Britain through the presence of immigrants. It was a naked call for the sort of action that a fascist government might have taken. Mr Powell’s speech resulted in some threat and some friction in the ensuing weeks and years but it led to his having to migrate as a member of Parliament from the largely industrial working- class constituen­cy of Wolverhamp­ton to virtual exile and obscurity as an MP for a Protestant constituen­cy in Northern Ireland.

The second revelation of this Commonweal­th conference week is that Queen Elizabeth II is a direct descendant of the Prophet Muhammed. The claim was first put forward by the very scholarly and respectabl­e genealogis­ts of the recording journal Burke’s Peerage.

It would be possible but tedious, gentle reader, to reproduce here the 42 stages of succession from the Prophet to the Queen — like the Old Testament’s so- and- so begat hoojamflit who begat whatsanozz­le ….. Let’s just say that the Umayyad caliphate carried Muhammad’s direct line to Morocco, thence to Spain, Portugal and by marriage to the Duke of Cambridge, grandfathe­r of Edward IV of England.

This is fantastic news. Had Mahatma Gandhi known about it would he have, instead of stimulatin­g the Khilafat movement to restore the Ottoman Emperor to be the Caliph, championed the claim of George Vth? Who can say?

Or if Jinnah knew that Mountbatte­n had the Prophet’s blood in his veins, would he have approached the abolition of the Raj so ardently? Again, shrugs!

And if Henry VIII had known he was part of the Prophet’s family would he have declared a Protestant Christian kingdom? Richard, the Lion Heart, the crusader? — Oh! hang on, was that before Edward IVth, sorry.

In a future column, dear reader, I shall trace my direct descent from the Prophet Zarathustr­a, through my great, great, great etc. 99 times grandmothe­r, Bepsi Kohla.

The migrant families had young children who arrived on Empire passports on a ship called the and they have since been dubbed the ‘ Windrush generation’. These children are now in their 60s and 70s...

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