‘The Girl from Fergana’: A compelling narrative of the cross-cultural existence of different peoples
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As the world witnesses the war and conflicts in the name of unkind stringencies of national borders and ethno-religious identities, a professor of literature, Jonathan Gil Harris, reimagines the past of cultural confluence in his gripping memoir about his mother, The Girl from Fergana: Secrets of My Mother’s Chinese Tea Chest. Acknowledging personal loss and historical trauma, the memoir brings together two different stories – one about the travails of a Jewish girl, Stella, and another about the cosmopolitan past of the Silk Road. However, Harris brilliantly coalesces these two stories into a compelling narrative that bolsters the idea of the cross-cultural existence of different peoples. And thus, the memoir appears as a beacon light in these dark times of wars fought on the pretext of religio-cultural clashes.
An ancient past and a tense present
Fleshing out the inner world of the book, a sepia-tinted image of the “tea chest” on the cover page alongside a lucid subtitle, Secrets of My Mother’s Tea Chest reflects the profound importance of this “piece of furniture” for the author. For Harris, his mother’s Chinese tea chest, which was shipped to her in Palestine by his uncle Joe, smouldered “an inchoate longing” for a long time to know what was hidden inside it. Turning out...