We are delighted to welcome Shelina Janmohamed, author and
commentator, to the blog to explore approaches for considering and discussing
the British Empire and the role this has played in global history and the
impact it has on children’s lives today.
This is a fascinating blog and a powerful story that impacts upon all of
us.
The British Empire was the biggest empire in
history. Ever. Bigger than the Roman Empire. Bigger than the Incas, Mayas,
Aztecs, Mughal, Ottoman, Malian, Mamluk… well, you get the picture. It was
REALLY BIG. Bigger than any other country, empire, kingdom, sultanate or
dynasty. Ever.
The British Empire affected everything. Not only
did it affect everything then, it still affects so many of our lives in big and
small ways today.
Yet, while we teach our children about the Romans,
Greeks, Egyptians and other empires, the biggest, wealthiest, most powerful and
most influential empire in the history of ever – the British Empire is not even
currently officially on the school curriculum, and we don’t have the resources
to talk about it with nuance and complexity. In fact, when I started writing it
in 2020 there were barely any children’s books at all about the British
Empire! I wanted to change that.
That’s because the British Empire didn't just
affect countries over there. It affected everything about the islands we live
on today, including our four nations. It affected everything and still does,
from the language we speak, to the food we eat, to the buildings that surround
us, to the people who live here, to the prosperity we enjoy, to who gets to
have power, wealth and influence, to how we shape our future.
Growing up I wasn’t taught anything about the
British Empire. A big fat zero. So, I’ve written the book I wish I’d had as a
kid to help children make sense of the world and find their own stories in it
whatever their background. Kids don’t need culture wars, they need
conversations.
My aim has been to stand in children’s shoes to
see the world as it matters to them – everything from the heated debates around
then, to climate change, technology, migration, social and racial equality,
global relationships and big businesses. And I’ve told it through the stories
of children like them, so they can hear the voices of kids through the ages and
around the world. I’ve told the stories of children during the British Empire
like the home children, the kids who took part in the anti-slavery sugar
boycotts and the brave ones of the Industrial Revolution whose testimony
changed labour laws; and more. So kids can see how their stories matter.
And while it’s of course a deeply serious subject,
I’ve worked hard to make it approachable, engaging, packed with facts and
puzzles, aiming to bring it to life, and make it interactive with quizzes and
posing questions for them to solve. But most of all, I’ve centred them: a book
written from scratch for children so children can make sense of the world.
Which is why Story of Now has the strapline “This
is not a history book, this is the story of now”. And it’s also why the
language and direction are about how to apply topics that cover everything from
corporations, consumerism, technology, women’s rights to climate change and
children’s protests and power.
As one child told me, it’s a book that isn’t just
about what happened, it’s a book that teaches you how to think!
What would you answer to these?
- If you had 7 million pounds to set up a company
what would it do?
This was the amount for the East India Company, and it shaped an entire empire!
- Should businesses have their own country, army
and currency?
- What can we learn from Francis Drake and his
imperialism to help us in the new frontiers in galactic and digital space?
- If you ran a branding agency, how would you
create Brand Britain?
- How can you talk to friends, family and elderly
relatives like grandparents to find out your own Empire story?
- How British is the great British cuppa?
Here are some of the activities prompted by the book:
- How can you find your own story and map your
history
- Explore your local history and surroundings
- Shine a spotlight on specific geographic areas
- Discuss ways to exercise children's power and
process using examples from the British Empire
- Help children understand the experiences of
others, and how they connect with their own
In writing the book, I’ve tried to be mindful of
the challenges facing teachers, educators, schools, families, libraries and
librarians when it comes to a topic often described as ‘controversial’ or
‘complicated’ or even ‘woke’. That’s why I’ve taken the approach that
this about every child whatever their background, finding their own story.
Even adults struggle. When I talk to grown-ups it
amazes me that people will say something like, “well I’d never thought about
the British Empire because it’s nothing to do with me…”. And I ask, well where
are you from? Birmingham? Liverpool? Scotland? Bristol? the London docklands? I
want every child to see their story and how they are woven together, how they
connect. Because one of the greatest gifts a child can give themselves is
knowing their own story. This connectivity is key.
We are seeing a growing number of books that speak
specifically to a specific group of readers, and that’s important, highlighting
their particular experiences.
But sometimes we also need for those experiences
to be contextualised as one of many, to show variation as the norm, rather than
silos and buckets.
And perhaps most notably, we can sometimes run
into the problem that certain subjects are seen as for 'specific' or 'problem'
or 'underrepresented' groups, which leaves everyone else feeling like it's not
for them, not relevant or worse not their responsibility. It also underscores
the issue of 'norm' and abnorm. It can feel heavy if a book shines a spotlight
on you as a child in a group setting. Instead, I want every child to see their
story and how they are woven together, how they connect.
So, what do you do when one of the biggest topics
ever - and one which is constantly discussed and shaping our huge social
conversation - doesn't include children, and doesn't support families, schools
and libraries with materials? And one that feels pressing, urgent and important
but isn’t even on the school curriculum? That’s the dilemma I’ve set out to
solve, and I hope it helps fill this woeful gap. AND bring a new fresh
perspective to the wider debate.
So, if you need to give a book or a
recommendation, you know this is one that all kids will find themselves in -
what's not to love about stories of pirates, space travel, huge protests,
children's boycotts not to mention that at the beginning I even challenge
whether history even exists?!
Heck, why not even recommend it to adults and
parents. I think all of us could do with understanding the world a bit better!
Thank you to Shelinha Janmohamed for such a thought-provoking and impactful blog.