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Talismans of migration

Editorial

Nine writers who are migrants or descendants of migrants share the secrets of their treasured objects of migration and their talismanic properties.

by Colin Grant

11th March 2026
Photo: Howard Grey
Something that helped the soon-to-be migrants on their journeys and for the first daunting moments of their arrival – in what seemed for many like a perennial fog – were parting words of comfort, gifts and treasured objects.

It takes enormous courage and faith in your destiny to up sticks and travel thousands of miles to begin a new life in a foreign land. I am the child of such pioneering migrants: in 1959, my parents set out from Jamaica to Britain. They rarely spoke of the emotional cost of the rupture with their pasts and what might have been lost. But what do pioneers leave behind when they migrate to a new country, and what do they carry with them physically and emotionally wherever they land?

This is the premise of What We Leave We Carry – an oral history of migration to Britain over the last six decades, composed of transcribed extracts from a WritersMosaic podcast of the same name, which is to be published in June 2026. I commissioned several WritersMosaic writers who, like me, travelled Britain and listened to stories of migration – foundational tales of arrival, of love and of loss.

Everyone we spoke with recalled the heightened emotions of their departure, leaving behind relatives and friends whom they might never see again. Something that helped the soon-to-be migrants on their journeys and for the first daunting moments of their arrival – in what seemed for many like a perennial fog – were parting words of comfort, gifts and treasured objects. These talismans of migration provided succour and stirred remembrance, even today.

One of my favourite stories in What We Leave We Carry is told by Mira Erdevički from Slovenia. She carried a present from her grandmother, who raised her – a little wooden stamp used to mark a Slavski kolač: a traditional bread. Mira’s grandmother had taken vicarious pleasure in her granddaughter’s adventures, and still, every year, on St. John’s Day, Mira brings out the wooden stamp and presses it into the dough of her homemade bread, commemorating her beloved grandmother.

There are many such tales among the nine writers in this collection too. All are migrants or the descendants of migrants and they share the secrets of those objects of migration and their talismanic properties.

© Colin Grant

Colin Grant

Colin Grant

Colin Grant is Director of WritersMosaic and the author of six non-fiction books.

Talismans of migration

The List

The List

Snežana Ċurčić

The last ritual

The last ritual

Eric Ngalle Charles

A sick note

A sick note

Suzanne Harrington

Haunting melodies

Haunting melodies

Maggie Harris

Kafan

Kafan

Ishy Din

Rolling luggage

Rolling luggage

Amanda Vilanova

Summer Wear

Summer Wear

Colin Grant

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What we leave we carry, The series that tells the true-life stories of migration to the UK.

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