Migration implies departure from native home, and also returning back.
Russell King, John Connell, and Paul White in the preface to their
edited collection Writing Across Worlds: Literature and Migration,
remark that “[f]or some groups, migration is not a mere interval between fixed points of departure and arrival, but a mode of being in the world – “migrancy””1.
The returning migrants bring back unique stories to share with their people, and
these stories of displacement reveal ambivalent experiences due to multiple
identities, rootlessness, cultural dilemmas, in-between condition, and loss of
native mooring.
Migrants leave their homes for upward mobility, personal venture, or due to
some unbearable situations at home which forces them to move out. The initial
migration started with the arrival of the colonial empires, that is, the whites who
crossed the oceans and invaded countries, bringing about an amalgamation or
mutation in the colonies. But this migration reversed when colonized people
started to move to colonial centers, the movement gaining momentum with the
end of World War II, as people from the middle and upper classes started seeking
higher education, and a new life. Even political exiles and war refugees added to
those numbers.
Despite getting cushioned into a comfortable life in the new nations and
carving new identities, there is a sentimental yearning in them, and they
cannot be their original selves. Their sense of nostalgia teaches them to
reflect reality with broken mirrors building meaning from scraps, dogmas,
childhood injuries, newspaper articles, media, etc., and to build a partial
view of the home which has been distanced by time and space.
The concept of ‘Home’ performs an important function in one’s life, and act
as a valuable means of giving one direction, a sense of place in the world.
It stands for shelter, stability, security, and comfort. Author Dorinne Kondo in
her article “The Narrative Production of ‘Home,’ Community, and Political
Identity in Asian American Theatre” remarks that home denotes a safe place
where a person does not have to give any explanations to the outside world, and
it denotes community. To be ‘at home’ is to inhabit a location where one is
welcome, and can be with people very much like oneself, thus connoting one’s
networks of family, kin, friends, colleagues and social space. |