糖心Vlog

The Migrant鈥檚 Tale: a pilgrimage for our times

颁丑补耻肠别谤鈥檚 Canterbury Tales is the model for a nine-day walk highlighting the stories of refugees

Published on
June 11, 2015
Last updated
September 27, 2015
The prioress woodcut, Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales

A University of Kent academic has brought together writers from the university and beyond for a series of stories about the plight of refugees to be read over the course of a nine-day walk modelled on The Canterbury Tales.

David Herd, head of Kent鈥檚 School of English, works with local refugee organisations and is also an established poet whose latest collection, All Just, focuses on issues affecting migrants and asylum seekers.

As a result, he was approached by the Gatwick Detainees Welfare Group with plans for 鈥渁 with refugees and detainees鈥 from Dover via Canterbury to Crawley, near Gatwick Airport, to coincide with Refugee Week, 15鈥21 June. The resulting Refugee Tales walk will follow the North Downs Way, a traditional pilgrimage route, although not the one used in 颁丑补耻肠别谤鈥檚 poem.

Professor Herd said that the group always wanted to use The Canterbury Tales as an inspiration, with the aim of creating 鈥渁 modern pilgrimage, where minds would be changed and views would be altered through the telling of stories鈥. The walk will also form 鈥渁 physical representation鈥 of the journeys undertaken by refugees and detainees.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Novelists paired with migrants

After each day鈥檚 section, events will be held in churches, barns and village halls, where two out of 16 modern tales (including a prologue) will be read aloud. Although each has been written by a professional writer, some are closely based on anonymised stories of individuals at different stages in the migrant experience including the Arriver鈥檚, Appellant鈥檚, Detainee鈥檚 and Deportee鈥檚 Tales. Others draw on the lives of the people who interact with refugees and asylum seekers, such as the Interpreter and the Lorry Driver.

To make all this happen, Professor Herd, as arts coordinator of the project, assembled writers, including Kent colleagues Abdulrazak Gurnah and Dragan Todorovic, and novelists such as Marina Lewycka and Iain Sinclair. Each has been paired, he said, with 鈥渢he person behind the tale and has spoken with them at length. Some have been extremely faithful to what they heard, others have exercised their imagination a bit more, but all have been driven by the truth of the situation.鈥

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

The walk, which has secured support from the Arts Council, is, as Professor Herd explained, about 鈥渓ooking at how arts can help in these circumstances鈥 and 鈥渞aising awareness, not money鈥. The central policy messages, he continued, are that 鈥渋ndefinite detention is inefficient, expensive and a terrible waste of human life鈥 鈥 and that 28 days should be established as the maximum permissible period. At the same time, those involved in the project are keen to 鈥渁ssert and celebrate the positive contributions of migrants to British society鈥 and to 鈥渃ommunicate and share the stories which go unspoken and unsaid, even in tribunals, about what migrants have fled from and what it is like being here. It is an opportunity for them to be heard fully.鈥

It is estimated that about 40 people, including former detainees and asylum seekers, will complete the whole walk, with about 60 taking part on any one day and even more attending the evening events, culminating in the one at the 500-seat Hawth Theatre in Crawley. As a further link to Chaucer and the pilgrimage theme, those reaching Canterbury on 14 June will receive a (non-religious) blessing in the cathedral.

matthew.reisz@tesglobal.com

POSTSCRIPT:

Article originally published as: The Migrant鈥檚 Tale: untold histories unfold in pilgrimage fit for our times (11 June 2015)

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT