Dear Babs,
I hope this letter finds you well and inspired to continue your amazing writing and artistic journey. As I sit to write to you, I am looking down on my garden that's beginning to sprout green plants due to an unseasonable warm spell. But I fear that the plants pushing up unexpectedly will probably struggle if the inclement weather returns.
Since I saw you last I have been busy writing my novel about a kidnapped African woman who becomes a servant to a lady-in-waiting in a 15th Century English castle. I am reminded through the book's research of the layers that have occurred beneath the surface, the stories and moments that affect global-majority people negatively, and the profound impact black people's history still holds on them today. It's disheartening to witness the continued hurtful damage inflicted on black and global majority people, both historically and structurally, that shapes our present, and the constant (and tiring) work that it takes for things to change in the future. The onslaught of the colonial and imperialist project can be depressing, and at times, I have to seek antiracist systems, concepts, and working models to help me relieve some of its grinding psychological weight.
One concept that has been particularly useful to me in this regard is the concept of Creative Citizenship. Creative Citizenship, in its broadest terms, means the intentional use of creativity to debunk and reject all stale and outdated notions of citizenship—who it belongs to and who deserves it. It embodies a creativity that deconstructs or challenges accepted norms of citizenship within social media and other communities.
But in order to discuss Creative Citizenship more fully, I must first take you back to a story—a story from my life experience. Picture me as a quite chubby nine-year-old, opening up a cheese sandwich packaged in foil while driving with my Mum, who was a visiting district nurse. Sometimes, we travelled long distances to rural areas, and I always had my snacks, sandwiches, and boxes of apple juice.
As a visiting district nurse in 1970s Trinidad, she often had to visit very rural areas, where country people were highly suspicious of outsiders. Making connections and providing treatments was challenging. On these visits, my mother and I would drive to rural towns, greeted by locals at the edge of orange orchards. Amidst Valencian oranges, my mother would break the ice with jokes, creating a relaxed atmosphere. As she peeled oranges, exchanging laughter, time seemed unhurried. Walking slowly, my mother, in her khaki nurse's uniform, bonded with locals, sharing stories under the intermittent sun. We spent hours at their wooden house, eating, laughing, and exchanging information. My mother relaxed, feet up, eating and laughing while I played with the puppies.
About thirty minutes before we were about to leave, my mother would start dispensing medicine to those in need who emerged from the shadows of the bush. Wounds were dressed, stethoscopes listened to swollen bellies, and care was given. Reflecting on these experiences, I now understand the power of storytelling, creativity and conversation in building trust and facilitating healing.