Kee Khobor Stories

 

Kee Khobor will feature blogs, poems, vlogs and podcasts. The reflections will be shared publicly throughout the year, with our official launch on 26th March 2021.

The various identities of the Bengali community in the UK will be explored and celebrated. We will facilitate an open exchange of ideas and give voice to views, some of which may otherwise not be heard.

The project will leave a legacy that provides stewardship for future generations to not only have pride in their identity but to own it and derive strength from it, and give younger people who may be struggling the confidence and opportunity to belong to something wider.

The reflections will provide an opportunity to look ahead to the future development of the community and not only stay relevant as a community within a changing society but be inspirational to the development of wider British society.

A Conversation
Sari, Gender Equality, Female Empowerment Rifat Wahhab Sari, Gender Equality, Female Empowerment Rifat Wahhab

A Conversation

There is another factor which comforts me. A large part of British society has always had profound admiration and respect for the Jamdani sari, indeed for any sari. If I am invited to an English gathering, I often choose to wear a Jamdani. It opens conversations because English people get to know that, a long time ago, we were supplying and dressing English women with muslin which came from now Bangladesh.

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I wasn’t born in the UK, but I certainly feel more at home in the UK than anywhere else.

I wasn’t born in the UK, but I certainly feel more at home in the UK than anywhere else.

Growing up as a British Bengali Muslim girl in an inner-city area of London was tough. Most girls like me struggled with identity due to conflicting eastern and western cultural expectations. It was difficult to fit in during the primary years of my life as I couldn’t speak English. My family lived huddled in a room in a flat above a shop and I spent the first few months of my life in the UK staring out of a window, watching the world go by.

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Living in a World of Difference - I love looking at life through my kaleidoscope of neurodiversity

Living in a World of Difference - I love looking at life through my kaleidoscope of neurodiversity

I will never stop being neurodivergent, it is for life. But I actually love looking at the world through my eyes

It is a rainbow coloured kaleidoscope. It keeps me active, gives me purpose and I feel I am changing the world every time I have a new idea

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