Mishal Husain's Broken Threads begins with the actual frayed threads of a sari from her grandparents' wedding. A cousin uses its brocade border on a shawl, and gives it to Husain as a wedding present. Beyond this, though, the book contains surprisingly few object histories, for a family memoir in an age of Instagrammable nostalgia. It quickly becomes clear that Husain, a well-known BBC journalist, wasn't just looking for a place to inscribe her own memories. She had access to her grandparents' memories: "I had the books written by one grandparent (Shahid), an unpublished memoir left by another (Mumtaz), some audio tapes recording my grandmother Tahirah, and a 97-year-old sibling of Mary's to talk to," Husain says in an email interview. The book's structure stemmed from this: Chapters 1-4 are devoted, in succession, to her grandparents Mary, Mumtaz, Shahid and Tahirah.
But the real achievement of Broken Threads lies in contextualising each grandparent's individual trajectory. "I realised early on that I needed to begin a few decades before, going back into the 19th century and the period before and after 1857," says Husain. "I turned it into history as well as memoir because I didn't feel I could understand these individuals without understanding their times."
This story is from the 4th November, 2024 edition of India Today.
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This story is from the 4th November, 2024 edition of India Today.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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