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The Asturias

Dr Yasmin Khan reveals stories of passengers coming to Britain from Bombay in the late 40s following Independence, including Anglo-Indians, Sikh and Polish families.

Dr Yasmin Khan explores an extraordinary collection of ships' passenger lists to trace the changing story of migration from the Indian subcontinent to Britain over three key decades.

Yasmin returns to the passenger lists held at the National Archives to unearth the stories of those travelling on another ship, the Asturias, in the late 1940s. As this was one of the first ships to sail from Bombay following independence and Partition in 1947, Yasmin is keen to discover the role these seismic events played in the passengers' decision to travel to Britain, and to find out how their lives unfolded once they got here. Yasmin's search takes her from the factories of Ellesmere Port, to exploring the privileged lifestyle enjoyed by some Anglo-Indians in Delhi before independence. Yasmin meets Sikh entrepreneurs in Leeds and uncovers the story of Britain's forgotten displaced persons camps where new migrants from the subcontinent were housed alongside the victims of the Blitz.

Yasmin meets Anne Tilley, who was three years old when she boarded the Asturias with her family. As an Anglo-Indian family, those who could trace a European descendant through the male line, the Scotts had led a privileged life in Delhi. But the events of 1947 led many Anglo-Indians to question their future and thousands travelled to Britain in the decade following independence. Yasmin discovers how the Scotts' initial optimism was short-lived as the realities of life in Britain, a country they had always viewed through rose-tinted spectacles, began to hit home.

Yasmin traces the story of the Arathoons, working-class Anglo-Indians who served in the army during both world wars and found themselves facing an uncertain future as the British army began to demobilise. They boarded the Asturias to begin a new life in Ellesmere Port, and like the Scotts, discovered that life in Britain would not always be easy - facing discrimination and sometimes violence from those they worked alongside.

Tehal Singh's son and grandson tell the extraordinary story of the pioneering Sikh pedlars in Britain and the reception they got from the British as they went knocking from door to door across the country. And the Rubchevska sisters reveal the real reason why hundreds of Polish families were on the Asturias and the incredible journey that had led them to their refugee camp in India. Emotional stories of loss, bravery and resilience that give a new insight into the forgotten Anglo-Indian community and the aftershocks of independence and Partition that led so many passengers to come to start new lives in Britain.

59 minutes

Music Played

  • Nitin Sawhney

    Migration

  • Remo Fernandes

    Ek Ho Gaye Hum Aur Tum

  • Asian Dub Foundation

    Warring Dhol

  • Ravi Shankar, Madras, Partha Sarathy, T. Srinivasan

    Sadhanipa

  • Nitin Sawhney

    Ranjha

  • Anna Meredith

    Blackfriars

    Performer: Oliver Coates. Performer: Anna Meredith.
  • Talvin Singh

    Butterfly

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Yasmin Khan
Production Company Wall to Wall West
On-line editing Alexis Moffatt
Director Satiyesh Manoharajah
Series Producer Helen Nixon
Executive Producer Emily Shields
Editor Lawrence Huck
Editor Stuart Davies
Editor William Ennals

Broadcasts

The Big British Asian Summer

The Big British Asian Summer

A season of programmes across the 91热爆 exploring what it means to be British and Asian.