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Book on race bags award
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, JULY 15. A children's book which takes a long and hard
look at race relations in Britain through the eyes of a teenaged
Nigerian girl has won the prestigious Carnegie Medal, awarded by
the Library Association every year and regarded as the children
literature's equivalent of the Booker Prize.
Beverley Naidoo's ``The Other Side of Truth'' follows the lives
of two Nigerian children-brother and sister-who are smuggled into
Britain after their father, a journalist, flees persecution by
his country's dictatorial regime which bears a close resemblance
to General Abacha's dictatorship.
The story, narrated by the 12-year-old sister, centres round the
children's traumatic introduction to what it means to be a
refugee in modern Britain-their experience with immigration
authorities, the humiliating encounters with bureaucracy, and the
bullying they suffer at school. The book is based on extensive
research of what happens when an asylum seeker arrives in Britain
and is plunged into a world of ``hostility'' made worse by
``irresponsible'' political rhetoric.
``Images I saw while researching constantly took me back to South
Africa'', said Mrs Naidoo, a white South African who fled
apartheid in 1965 after spending eight weeks in solitary
confinement for her anti-racism campaign. She said the long
queues she saw outside the Immigration and Nationality Department
in Croydon brought back childhood memories of the Pass Office in
Johannesburg.
Mrs Naidoo, whose book beat competition from J.K.Rowling of the
Harry Potter fame, used the awards function at the British
Library here on Friday to attack the ``deeply racialised''
British society and asked politicians to stop using language
which might contribute to racial prejudice. ``There is a
tremendous amount of responsibility on the shoulders of
politicians to watch their words, because language is powerful.
They have a responsibility to think about what are the effects of
the words they are using-could they attribute to racist
attacks?'' she told a newspaper in what was seen as a reference
to the inflammatory remarks of some Tory leaders during the
recent election campaign.
The 58-year-old writer who is married to an Indian South African
sounded particularly disappointed with Labour's record on race,
though the party came to power promising to improve race
relations. ``Mr (Tony) Blair and New Labour you say you are about
social change. Well, I ask you to stop paying lip service'', she
said in a hard-hitting speech at the awards function. She
regretted that refugees were targets of attacks, pointing out
that ``yet across the ages, the talent of refugees and migrants
have enriched society.''
There was tremendous need in British society for literature that
would help young people to explore issues of race and gender, she
said. ``I hope this book will be a catalyst for young people to
explore with sensitivity and intelligence issues of asylum and
human rights'', she said.
Her first chidren's book ``Journey to Jo'burg'' was banned in
South Africa under the apartheid regime.
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