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Picadilly Tamasha

Multicultural Britain is splashed with Indian colours. A sensitive lens feels its beating heart.

Kajal Nisha Patel used to work with a funeral firm. Her bosses asked her to dig in a little at Hindu cremation rites, which were supposed to be environmentally friendly. That was the start of her interest in Indian traditions. So she resigned and set out on a visit to Gujarat. It was a journey that was to change her life. 바카라I realised my heritage,바카라 Kajal, 34, tells Outlook. It was her first visit to India as an adult and she realised how different things were from what her parents had told her in Leicester about the Indian way. 바카라I realised how culturally unaware I was and started taking photographs of every moment. But those photographs are quite cliched.바카라

It wasn바카라t long before Kajal took up photography seriously. She worked with rag-pickers in Gujarat and started documenting their lives. But it 바카라was naive work. I am now embarrassed that I portrayed India like that.바카라 Back home in the UK, she first began with street photography, capturing all aspects of Indian immigrant lives, starting with the elderly. 바카라People born of my age in the UK have a derogatory view of India. They are always looking for a licence, an approval from the British. They don바카라t know what they are missing. I tell them go and see India and get a taste of it. And India is not Mumbai alone,바카라 she says.

Kajal is right now working on two projects to change that view. Light Seekers is a project where she is working with schoolchildren, connecting them between India and the UK, with photo stories on Indian art and literature before leading them on to the history of India. 바카라They are very receptive,바카라 she enthuses. Another project close to her heart is a photographic documentary on second- and third-generation Indians who have devoted their lives to various aspects of Indian culture바카라music, art or religion. 바카라I am lucky I found my passion. India is a whole lifetime of learning,바카라 she says.

Photographs by Kajal Nisha Patel; Text: Nabanita Sircar

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