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Exodus is not over : migrations from the ruptured homelands of Northeast India

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New Delhi; Speaking Tiger; 2016Description: 271 pISBN:
  • 9789386050953
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 331.5440954 HAK
Summary: Economic deprivation, insurgencies and deadly ethnic clashes have driven thousands of impoverished men and women from the North-eastern region of India to seek a better life in the towns and cities of mainland India and further abroad. Some find themselves working amidst the unimaginable opulence of five-star hotels, casinos and cruises. However, for many, their jobs in Delhi, Bengaluru, Goa and other metro poles make them targets of racism, sexual harassment and class exploitation. In response, communities of migrants discover ways of reproducing their cultures in alien soil, to act as oases in a hostile environment. And in doing so, they build bridges between communities?Nagas, Kukis, Meitei?which have been at war with each other back in the Northeast. The Exodus Is Not Over features first-generation migrant workers from Northeast India, especially Manipur?a young schoolgirl who comes to Delhi and works long hours in a series of restaurants; her brother, whose ambitions to be a professional singer remain unfulfilled while he tries to earn his livelihood; an ambitious waiter now proudly in charge of his own restaurant in Goa and many more. They tell their own stories of resilience in the face of exploitation and discrimination for the first time in such intimate and harrowing detail. Nandita Haksar?s detailed understanding of the histories of the Northeast and deep respect for the people she writes about lends these narratives an added depth.
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Economic deprivation, insurgencies and deadly ethnic clashes have driven thousands of impoverished men and women from the North-eastern region of India to seek a better life in the towns and cities of mainland India and further abroad. Some find themselves working amidst the unimaginable opulence of five-star hotels, casinos and cruises. However, for many, their jobs in Delhi, Bengaluru, Goa and other metro poles make them targets of racism, sexual harassment and class exploitation. In response, communities of migrants discover ways of reproducing their cultures in alien soil, to act as oases in a hostile environment. And in doing so, they build bridges between communities?Nagas, Kukis, Meitei?which have been at war with each other back in the Northeast. The Exodus Is Not Over features first-generation migrant workers from Northeast India, especially Manipur?a young schoolgirl who comes to Delhi and works long hours in a series of restaurants; her brother, whose ambitions to be a professional singer remain unfulfilled while he tries to earn his livelihood; an ambitious waiter now proudly in charge of his own restaurant in Goa and many more. They tell their own stories of resilience in the face of exploitation and discrimination for the first time in such intimate and harrowing detail. Nandita Haksar?s detailed understanding of the histories of the Northeast and deep respect for the people she writes about lends these narratives an added depth.

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