I Like To Close My Eyes...
I Like To Close My Eyes...
I Like To Close My Eyes...
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Akwaaba Writing Group
my face. It’s my last breakfast with her for I don't know how
long. This is my great day. The worst and the best day.
I was wearing grey jeans, a white dress with the Big Ben on it, a
black jacket and a white scarf. I remember my trainers because
they were my nephew’s trainers. They didn’t fit him anymore so
he gave them to me.
We got in the car. Looking out the window of the car. It was like
Tunisia was saying goodbye to me, saying hopefully we will see
you soon, Hadil
No one can feel the pain of staying away from your mom, only
those who try it.
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she really tried. Her friend, a posh woman from Kampala came
to visit her. She saw me almost dying and she brought me to
Kampala.
Warda: When they got the visa and called me, I was out of my
mind. I was shouting and shouting and jumping. I fainted with
happiness. I had never imagined this happiness. When my
children were born, when my daughter got her university
degree, those were all happy moments. But this moment cannot
be explained. All my body went white, and numb. I could not
breathe and I fainted.
The girls who lived with me could not understand and kept
asking me: are you ok? They had never seen me overacting as I
am always calm. I was by myself then, I had nobody with me, so
I was always quiet. That day I was like a monkey: nobody knew
what was going on. I felt like a newborn.
Hadil: I went inside the airport and put our luggage in and
stayed with my sister and her daughter. It was still too early to
go inside into the waiting area, through this door when I pass
through, lots of things are gonna change.
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support our mummy and never forget where you belong and
don't forget that we love you.
How I'll never forget that, that will stay in my mind. Especially
that my family loves me, that's something you cannot forget.
Now I'm in the plane. Sitting in the last place in the airplane, my
brother on my right hand side. Sitting in a red and grey chair.
The plane moves but it is still on the ground. But now not
anymore: I'm in the sky like a bird, watching from the window
how much my country is beautiful.
I was at the airport from twelve o’clock, although they were only
arriving at five. I was standing in front of the metal barriers at
the gate, to get first position. Inside me, I did not believe it. I
thought - they might stop them at customs. I was shaking with
fear. And then….it was like in the movies. I saw all the
passengers from Tunis Air. I even met somebody I knew. I
asked them if everybody had landed. Can you imagine?
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After an hour everybody had arrived and they were not there
yet! I thought the Home Office must have denied them entry
because of my visa situation.
When I saw them, I was just mad. I crawled under the fence to
meet them. I wish somebody had been there with a camera,
because … their faces and my face … it is like I had them for the
first time. It was like giving birth for the first time.
The escalator surprised me. I had never seen one before and I
did not know how to get on. It took me an hour of admiring the
white people jumping on it without fear. Today I am happy that
the escalator is no longer a problem for me.
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Akwaaba Writing Group
Olu: The happiest moment has fear attached to it. When the
council gave me the house, I was homeless. I was happy. And
when they gave me money I was happy. But there was fear
attached to it. The fear attached to it was this. Is there a limited
time? Are they going to evict me. Because the first council
evicted me. So I was scared. I said to myself, Oh, they gave me a
house, they gave the children money. But it is for a limited time.
Maybe one month, like the other council did. Will they come
again and say, You will have to leave? They gave me cash
because there was a problem with the accounting sector.
He was a young guy with a black scarf on his head done like a
turban but flat. He had glasses and a moustache. He looks
trendy, this cool guy. He explained about the heating.
Then he handed me the keys.
After he left I went around and looked again. The walls smelled
of new paint. The washing machine—new. The fridge—new. It’s
on the ground floor and quiet, part of a house. There’s a
garden! I went in the garden. I thought: Hn, this is a nice place
for children to play.
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There’s this big tree and at the back of the garden is a canal.
Sometimes you see the swan.
•
Olu: The lady I was staying with—she ordered some food for
her own child. Cerelac. It’s Nestle who make that food. When
the food arrived it was for the wrong age. It was food for a six-
month-old baby. But she’d ordered 6 kilos of it.
The lady was so upset. She was going to send it back. I didn’t say
anything, I was silent. But I was praying my heart to God.
Then she said, You can have the food then! I told her that when
I have the money I’d pay her back, but she said it was OK. If
you could see inside me! Inside me I was like, Oh! I still
remember that thing.
Ola: The animal is a cat. The name of the cat is Whiskey. The
owner of Whiskey is Carol Harris, my friend. Whiskey was white
in colour. Whiskey grew up in Carol’s house. Whiskey ate
Carol’s leftover food. She liked to hang around Carol’s visitors. I
am petrified of, and allergic to, cats and dogs. So Carol always
locked Whiskey away whenever I visited. Carol always looked
after me whenever I visited. Unfortunately Whiskey passed away
three years before Carol. May her soul rest in perfect peace.
Amen.
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I told myself: OK. And I told him my story. I relaxed a bit, and
he gave me the different options.
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Going back home was out of the question. And I was not having
a girlfriend at the moment, so the option to get somebody
pregnant on the street was out.
I left the office a bit happy, but still I was thinking: is this the
right thing?
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Akwaaba Writing Group
Lola: When I first moved in, the flat was empty. I slept on the
floor with my children. At night it was very cold, my daughter
was feverish with the cold. I had to take her in my arms and sit
with my back at the wall until daybreak.
She wanted to know if I was the person who had been there
before. I said I just moved in.
Big Mommy loves Jollof Rice. She teaches me how to cook it. It’s
got rice, pepper, curry, thyme, butter, Maggi cube or Maggi
chicken. She makes it tender, so it smells like lily flower, bright
orange!
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I asked them what they wanted to eat. One wanted pizza, the
others wanted chicken and chips. So I bought both pizza and
chicken and chips to take away.
I put the food on the table. It was a new table. The agency had
put it there. We took the plates. The pizza was cut into four
pieces, and we are four.
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Akwaaba Writing Group
The midwife said: Don’t worry, you’ll be fine. You just had a
baby, it’s normal to have pain. You’ll be OK.
So I came home. I was going to cook the red bream and rice. I
went to the toilet and Oh My God. Instead of the pee the blood
was just coming out. It was rushing! Rushing! Rushing out! Oh
My God.
When Big Mommy call the ambulance, they say: where’s the
blood? How much blood? When did the blood come? What
colour is the blood?
Big Mommy say, She is dying! If she die, I’m going to SUE
YOU!
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blood on the floor. She took my children to her flat. She locked
the door.
Juliana: The day I cried a lot was the second day when the
stitches were trying to heal. I moved my leg and the pain was so
much. The nurse told me I need to walk around. I tried. I
picked up courage and moved. I moved three steps. Then the
pain came! And I shouted for my mother. MAMA, OH, and I
cried.
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