Article Friendly article publishing script homepage.
Translate Page To German Tranlate Page To Spanish Translate Page To French Translate Page To Italian Translate Page To Japanese Translate Page To Korean Translate Page To Portuguese Translate Page To Chinese
  Number Times Read : 90      
Categories

Addiction
Advice
Aging
Arts
Arts & Entertainment
Automotive
Business
Business Management
Cancer Survival
Career
Cars and Trucks
Celebrities
Cheating
Coding Sites
Communications
Computers
Computers and Technology
Cooking
Culture
Culture and Society
Death
Disease & Illness
Environment
Etiquette
Family Concerns
Fashion
Finance
Finances
Food & Beverage
Food and Drinks
Gambling & Casinos
Health & Fitness
Hobbies
Home & Family
Home Management
Inspirational
Internet Business
Jobs
Legal
Medical Business
Medicines and Remedies
Motorcyles
Opinions
Pets
Pets & Animals
Politics
Product Reviews
Recreation
Recreation & Sports
Reference & Education
Relationships
Religion
Self Help
Self Improvement
Society
Travel & Leisure
Vehicles
Wellness, Fitness and Di
Womens Interest
Womens Issues
World Affairs
Writing & Speaking
 

Stats
Total Articles: 138627
Total Authors: 7362
Total Downloads: 1826835


Newest Member
Sethi Lathwal

Ebay Store's

Burberry Perfume

Burberry Scarf

Burberry Handbags

Web Camera

Portable Generator

Hunting Gear

Kayak Store

Tennis Store

 


   

Magic Carpet: Was There Ever A Part Of Your Identity You Had To Hide?



[Valid RSS feed]  Category Rss Feed - http://www.niche-articledirectory.com/rss.php?rss=403
By : Mitali Perkins    29 or more times read
Submitted 2008-02-28 14:14:27
I had a magic carpet once. It used to soar to a world of monsoon storms, princesses with black braids, ferocious dragons, and talking birds.

Ek deen chilo akta choto rajkumar, my father would begin, and the rich, round sounds of the Bangla language took me from our cramped New York City apartment to a marble palace in ancient India.

Americans made fun of my father s lilting accent and the strange grammatical twists his sentences took in English. What do they know? I thought, perching happily beside him.

In Bangla, he added his own creative flourishes to classic tales by Rabindranath Tagore or Sukumar Roy. He embellished folktales told by generations of ancestors, making me chuckle or catch my breath. Tell another story, Dad, I d beg.

But then I learned to read. Greedy for stories, I devoured books in the children s section of the library. In those days, it was easy to conclude that any tale worth publishing originated in the so called West, was written in English, and featured North American or European characters.

Slowly, insidiously, I began to judge my heritage through colonial eyes. I asked my mother not to wear a sari, her traditional dress, when she visited me at school.

I avoided the sun so that the chocolate hue of my skin couldn t darken. The nuances and cadences of my father s Bangla began to grate on my ears. Not THAT story again, Dad, I d say. I m reading right now.

My father didn t give up easily. He tried teaching me to read Bangla, but I wasn t interested. Soon, I no longer came to sit beside him, and he stopped telling stories altogether.

As an adult, I ve struggled to learn to read Bangla. I repudiate any definition of beauty linked to a certain skin color. I ve even lived in Bangladesh to immerse myself in the culture. These efforts help, but they can t restore what I ve lost. Once a child relinquishes her magic carpet, she and her descendants lose it forever.

My children, for example, understand only a word or two in Bangla. Their grandfather half heartedly attempts to spin a tale for them in English, and they listen politely.

Is it okay to go play? they ask, as soon as he s done. I sigh and nod, and they escape, their American accents sounding foreign inside my father s house.

Tell another story, Dad, I ask, pen in hand, and he obliges. My father s tales still have the power to carry me to a faraway world. The Bangla words weave the same colorful patterns in my imagination.

My pen, however, like his own halting translation, is unable to soar with them. It scavenges in English for as evocative a phrase, as apt a metaphor, and falls short. I can understand enough Bangla to travel with my father but am not fluent enough to take English speakers along on the journey.

My decision to leave mother tongue and culture behind might have been inevitable during the adolescent passage of rebellion and self discovery. But I wonder if things could have turned out differently.

What if I d stumbled across a translation of Tagore or Roy in the library, for example? Here s a story Dad told me! I imagine myself thinking, leafing through the pages. It doesn t sound the same in English. Maybe I should try reading it in Bangla.

Or, what if a teacher had handed me a book about a girl who ate curry with her fingers, like me? Except that this girl was in a hurry to grow up so she could wrap and tuck six yards of silk around herself, just like her mother did.

Wear the blue sari to the parent teacher meeting, Ma, I might have urged.

Chocolate colored children today have access to more stories than I did. A few tales originating in their languages have been translated, illustrated and published. Characters who look and dress and eat like them fill the pages of some award winning books. But it s not enough. Many continue to give up proficiency in their mother tongues and cultures.

Here s a story from YOUR world, I want to tell them. See how valuable you are? Here s a book in YOUR language. See how precious it is?

If we are convincing enough, a few of them might transport us someday to amazing destinations through the power of a well woven tale.
Author Resource:- Mitali Perkins, http://www.mitaliperkins.com, is the author of two political novels for teens called First Daughter: Extreme American Makeover and First Daughter: White House Rules (Dutton). To learn more about the novels, visit http://www.firstdaughterbooks.com.
Google
Article From Niche Article Directory

HTML Ready Article. Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard.




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual
New Members
select
Sign up
select
learn more
Affiliate Sign in
Affiliate Sign In
 
Nav Menu
Home
Login
Submit Articles
Submission Guidelines
Top Articles
Link Directory
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
RSS Feeds

Actions
Print This Article
Add To Favorites

 
Sponsors

Purchase this software

 

Powered By: Article Friendly| Resources