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My name is not Harry : a memoir

Siddiqui, Haroon. (Author).

Veteran Toronto Star editor Haroon Siddiqui, brown and Muslim, has spent a life on the media front lines, covering conflicts both global and local. Siddiqui's journey took him from a divided India to a welcoming Canada -- until the cataclysm of 9/11 hardened attitudes to Muslims around the world. His personal story weaves through growing Islamophobia in both India and North America. Siddiqui's experiences in the corridors of power in newsrooms and warzones are threaded with insights about historic changes in the last seventy years in India and Canada. His native and adopted lands serve as metaphors for what can go wrong and what can be made right.

Book  - 2023
305.6 Siddi
1 copy / 0 on hold

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Victoria Available
  • ISBN: 9781459748903 (pbk.)
  • Physical Description 452 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm

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Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index.

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Syndetic Solutions - Excerpt for ISBN Number 9781459748903
My Name Is Not Harry : A Memoir
My Name Is Not Harry : A Memoir
by Siddiqui, Haroon
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Excerpt

My Name Is Not Harry : A Memoir

1 Expo 67 Landing in Montreal days before the closing of Expo 67, I was asked by the immigration officer the rote question: What are you bringing into Canada? Not much. Clothes, books, and $150 -- or was it $200?-- the maximum foreign exchange allowed out of India in those days. That, however, wasn't the whole truth, now that I think about it five decades later. I was also bringing my cross-cultural Indian genes and my family DNA. Both were to prove decisive in Canada, especially after 9/11 when I was turned overnight from a columnist who happened to be Muslim into a Muslim columnist whose only job was to apologize for my faith and condemn fellow Muslims. Being an Uncle Tom wasn't part of the family ethos -- several ancestors had stood up to the sultans of their day. My second column after 9/11, "It's the U.S. Foreign Policy, Stupid," evinced much abuse, as would dozens of others in the following months and years, including the ones opposing the war on Iraq under false pretences and the endless war on terror. I was labelled an apologist for terrorism, Saddam Hussein, and the Third World. Any terrorist incident anywhere and I'd be asked: "What do you have to say about this?" I was deemed personally responsible. Dinner invitations dried up. Those who used to woo me because of my position stopped calling. Acquaintances avoided eye contact. There was social media bullying. Poison oozed out of the nearly 40,000 emails and other responses to my columns, even as a majority of respondents by far remained quintessentially Canadian -- polite, fair, open-minded, and committed to the idea that Canada became a light unto nations not by imitating the United States or Europe but by setting its own high standards. Having never faced outright racism in Canada, this hatred seemed un-Canadian. Perhaps it wasn't. Japanese Canadians, like Japanese Americans, were interned during the Second World War. Post-9/11, Canadian and American Muslims were similarly burdened with collective guilt and made to feel psychologically interned. With Islamophobia being the new anti-Semitism, old anti-Jewish tropes have been applied to Muslims: Islam is incompatible with secularism, just as Judaism was said to be; Muslims can't be trusted, just as Jews couldn't be; Muslims harbour dual loyalty, just as Jews did and ostensibly still do; Muslims wield too much influence, as did the Jews and still do; and sharia is seditious, just as Jewish religious law was alleged to be. Sure enough, polls confirmed that religious antipathy toward Jews ran not that far behind hostility toward Muslims, especially in Quebec. For columnists, criticism and excoriation come with the turf. We develop thick hides. Still, the post-9/11 hysteria was potent, combining religious bigotry with racism. Internet bullying was in its infancy, and I was accorded the dubious distinction of being among its early victims. Yet I didn't lose sleep over it. What sustained me was not some grand ideology or a heroic act of courage but simply the "baggage from back home," an ethos of rolling with the punches and a reflexive recoiling from the American imperial proclivity of pulverizing weaker nations and the Western habit of abandoning minorities exactly when they most need protection. Those instincts helped make me a more useful Canadian, as they also did during such reporting stints as the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the Islamic Revolution in Iran. So there's something to be said about immigrants who are well anchored and arrive brimming with self-confidence,a sense of self-worth, and a view of the world different than that of the native-born. They resist admonitions to "do in Rome as the Romans do." They follow the law, of course, our common holy parchment. Anything beyond that is subjective, often a tool to lord over newcomers. Immigrants are delighted to come, having chosen this land. But they don't necessarily feel "grateful" for being given immigration -- a contract of mutual benefit. They feel little or no need to apologize for their racial, religious, cultural, ethnic, and linguistic identity in deference to majoritarian mores. They don't pretend to develop amnesia the moment they arrive in Canada. Nor do they want to reinvent themselves, as did those who escaped the Iron Curtain and other hellholes and did very much want to forget what they left behind. We, on the other hand, want to retain as much of our pasts as possible. In my case, a strong sense of self-identity born of an indulgent upbringing of unconditional love, and as an inheritor of thousands of years of Indian civilization as well as 1,500 years of Islamic religious, cultural, and literary heritage, I didn't feel inferior to anyone. I could go anywhere, knock on any door, walk into any room, meet anybody. My past was my pride and part of my present and my future. Yet this valuable commodity counts for little on the point system by which Canada chooses immigrants based on education, skills, and proficiency in English or French. Nor is it properly acknowledged in the narratives of those who tell tales of having come with $5 in their pockets and made themselves billionaires by their own brilliance. * * * I hadn't heard of Toronto until I got to college where an eclectic English lecturer had us read a book published by the University of Toronto Press in 1945 -- Some Tasks for Education by Sir Richard Livingstone. How and why he chose that book, we had no idea. Canada wouldn't loom large for me until a few years later when I worked at the Press Trust of India, the national news agency in Bombay (since renamed Mumbai). To break the monotony of the midnight copy-editing shift, the chief editor, a crusty yet kind old man, agreed to let a colleague and me get some reporting assignments. There were diplomatic and trade events galore that the agency didn't bother to cover, but we could and did file a few paragraphs. That appealed particularly to my old classmate and roommate, Syed Sajjad Hyder, who was always looking for a free drink. We'd turn up at various consulates, no matter their insignificance or geopolitical affiliation. India was a non-aligned nation and so were we. It was for one such get-together at the plush Taj Hotel at India Gate by the Arabian Sea that Roland Michener, the Canadian high commissioner, flew in from Delhi. That proved to be a fateful encounter. In the chitter-chatter of the reception, he said, "Young men like you should go to Canada." With youthful irreverence, I responded, "Why would anyone want to go to Canada. It's so cold there, isn't it?" Not long after that I had to quit my job and go home to Hyderabad when my father, abba in Urdu, had a heart attack. As the older son, I was soon looking after Abba, his business, and the family. * * * Excerpted from My Name Is Not Harry: A Memoir by Haroon Siddiqui All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.