I never encountered a Somali character in books growing up – I had to change that | Ayaan Mohamud
When I wrote my first young person's novel, I wanted the next generation to feel seen and celebrated
As a teenager in the British Somali diaspora, there were several things I heard repeated in connection with my own culture. In no particular order, there was: drought, Black Hawk Down, high foreheads, piracy, famine, the peculiarity of banana and rice, terrorism, and the look at me, I am the Captain now" meme. Unsurprisingly, it didn't always feel cool" to be Somali.
When this feeling was coupled with the age-old question of who Somalis are, I found it hard to carve out my own sense of identity. Torn between the country's physical location on the Horn of Africa, our ethnic homogeneity, and Somalia's membership of the League of Arab States, it often felt as if I was being pulled in a million different directions. Was I Black, east African, Arab or simply ... Somali? And how did my identity as a Muslim fit on to these racialised lines?
Ayaan Mohamud is a British Somali author and medical student
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