POLISH, COMING TO THE UK – AN AUTHOR’S EXPERIENCE

Anna Ryland

I interviewed journalist and author Anna Ryland, whose novel, A Second Chance, describes three Polish-born characters arriving in Britain. Anna says: “I came to Britain for a short working holiday in the early 1980s. Once martial law was introduced in Poland and its borders were closed, I was unable to go back. So I had to decide what to do next.”

Leslie: That must have been difficult. How did you cope?

Anna: I worked as a waitress and that was fine for a while but I had to start making long term plans for my life. My English was of a decent standard and I applied for a grant from a fund which supported Polish students who found themselves in a similar situation. With their help, I was able to begin studying in Britain. I intended to go into journalism when I returned to Poland and decided to study International Politics at the University of Wales in Aberystwyth, one of the oldest International Politics faculties in the country. My degree consisted of mostly literary subjects and required many written assignments, which I found quite demanding. The real challenge was the first year exams. Each of the six exams were essay-based and I had to write four essays in three hours. Cramming my knowledge of the subject into such a short period of time while expressing myself in a foreign language was difficult. To pass them I had to work twice as hard as my English colleagues.

I had a wonderful tutor, professor John Baylis, who was my guardian angel in Aberystwyth. He not only supported me academically (I think I was the only Eastern European student at Aberystwyth University at the time) but he helped me secure summer employment, which was crucial in my situation.

Leslie: In terms of the social context, what went into the writing of A Second Chance?

Anna: I felt that I had to tell the story of the immigrants of my generation, which was very different to that of the present Polish immigrants to the UK. Since Poland’s entry into the European Union in May 2004, Poles coming to Britain can undertake legal employment in this country. Before 2004, the situation and attitudes differed greatly. ‘Informal’ economic immigrants had very few rights in the UK, making them very vulnerable to exploitation.

I think that despite all the advances in communications, an average Westerner still does not know or fully understand Eastern Europe. For many English people, a Pole is a burly plumber or an electrician who works hard during the day and drinks in the evenings. Polish women are attractive cleaners and coffee shop attendants. They don’t know how many young Polish women already work in the City of London, in the NHS and in accountancy firms.

I think that the stories described in my book may acquire a different dimension in lieu of Brexit and its implications for overseas workers. Time will tell whether history will repeat itself and whether the experiences of my generation are shared by future generation of immigrants.

Leslie: In your novel three Polish immigrants come to London in 1997 and share a house in Greenford. What are your three characters like, what happens to them, and what did you adapt from life in creating them?

Anna: The three main characters represent very different attitudes, to life in general and to their status as immigrants. They are: Maja, an overqualified assistant librarian; Adam, a hard-working, hard-drinking carpenter and Kuba, a London cabbie who has shelved his promising physiotherapy career. They all have different reasons for leaving Poland.

They experience the best and the worst of a society in which they are trying to find acceptance. As they struggle to find and keep work in London, they are forced to confront social prejudices and their own demons.

Maja Zalewska, a 25 year old assistant librarian is a language graduate, who flees the provincial town of Grodek for a working ‘holiday’ in London. Being able to support herself is the number one priority for her. She has to be able to finance a language course which gives her the right to remain in the UK for six months, but finding a job proves more difficult than she expected.

Kuba Barański, who drives a cab in London, knew the capital from the pages of his favourite English classics. His job and its long hours are tolerable as an in-between stop gap while Kuba, who left his physiotherapy job in Opole, decides what to do next. His happy nature and empathetic attitude win him not only custom but also the friendship of his customers.

Coming to London, Adam Bugaj, a 45 year old carpenter, has one goal: to earn enough money to finance the loan he has taken to open his own business, a hardware store in Kościelisko, in the Tatra Mountains. He is desperate to escape the controlling influence of his father-in-law, the wealthiest farmer in Kościelisko, who has never forgiven him for getting his daughter pregnant.

Both Maja and Kuba are studying English in their spare time, not only to guarantee their legal status, but to be able to integrate themselves into English society. They are open to new cultural experiences. By contrast, Adam is totally focused on earning the money which he needs for a fresh start in Poland. Learning English is a waste of time in his opinion and a distraction from the purpose of his stay in London.

Danusia & Grzesio with babcia Wiktoria. Bialystok 1986. Her story will be the canvas for Anna’s second novel.

A Second Chance is my first book. It’s often the case that debut novels are largely autobiographical. New writers write ‘what they know’. I have been living in the Polish community in London for almost 30 years and my book is a record of what I heard and saw, supplemented by my own experiences.

Leslie: How do you vary your style for each character? How did you learn to write in three slightly different styles?

Anna: The three characters represent different perspectives on the same story – Polish immigration to London. They came from very diverse backgrounds and this shapes the way they see their host country and their place in it. Maja is a graduate and she thinks and expresses herself differently from Adam, who is a carpenter. I am sure I am not unique in adapting a strategy of getting into a character’s head and trying to perceive things from their point of view, using their language. This involved some research.

While helping with media relations for a couple of theatre groups, I interviewed many actors, and this is precisely what an actor does. They study the character, their background, language and mannerisms; trying to get under their skin to become that character on stage or in front of the camera.

Leslie: Who are the authors you admire – and why?

Anna: While still at school I read many literary classics. I particularly loved Gustave Flaubert, Balzac, Victor Hugo, Thomas Mann and Dickens. Among the modern writers whose work I greatly admire is Anne Patchett, American writer and author of works such as Bel Canto, State of Wonder and most recently Commonwealth. I love her clarity of writing, mastery of phrase and her ability to express complex feelings very simply. One of my great favourites is also Tracy Chevalier, the author of A girl with a pearl earring, Falling angels and The Last Runaway (about American Quakers). From her books, a reader learns so much about the world and lesser known historical events. Like in A girl with a pearl earring, she picks up a little ‘shard’ of history and weaves a story around it, giving it her own unique interpretation. I also love the crime books of PD James, not so much for her skilful plotting but for the psychological depth of her characters and stories.

Leslie: In writing your novel, were you taking a view on why people move to another country?

Anna: The reasons why people decide to leave home and their families and settle somewhere else, often in a culturally or socially alien place, have always intrigued me. To think that the majority of immigration has economic roots is an over-simplification. A Second Chance strongly argues against it. The stories of all three characters show that although the main reason why they came to Britain was economic, they all had much more deep-rooted motives for leaving Poland.

The book starts with a quotation from George Moore: ‘A man travels the world in search of what he needs and returns home to find it’. It very accurately describes an emigrant’s journey.

I have been asked may times why I wrote A Second Chance in English. I have been living in Britain for 30 years; I am married to an Englishman and have two bi-lingual sons. From my perspective, somewhere on the borders of two cultures, ‘sitting on the fence between the two’, I thought I have something unique to say to my English friends and future readers. I felt that by using English I can communicate with them directly. Writing in a different language from your own gives you a certain perspective, a distance on things which you have accepted and never questioned.

Danusia Anna Ryland

Leslie: Would you like to comment about your ‘two’ first names – Anna Ryland as author and Danusia Ryland on Facebook?

Anna: In my first job, where I was on the phone a lot, I had been asked by my boss if I had a simpler name than Danusia. From then onwards, I started using my second name Anna and the majority of my work colleagues had no idea that this wasn’t my ‘proper’ name. I am Danusia to my family and close friends and Anna to the rest of the world. The name Danusia had a very special significance for my parents. It was the name of my dad’s beloved sister who was killed during the Second World War. By giving it to me he wished to preserve her memory. We know her tragic history and I hope that my sons will pass it on to their children.

Next week, in HEARING VOICES AND MAKING ARTWORKS,  I interview artist Sharon Skipper about her experience as a highly creative individual facing mental health issues.

ABOUT LESLIE TATE’S BOOKS:

  1. Love’s Register tells the story of romantic love and climate change over four UK generations. Beginning with ‘climate children’ Joe, Mia and Cass and ending with Hereiti’s night sea journey across Oceania, the book’s voices take us through family conflicts in the 1920s, the pressures of the ‘free-love 60s’, open relationships in the feminist 80s/90s and a contemporary late-life love affair. Love’s Register is a family saga and a modern psychological novel that explores the way we live now.
    • A signed copy of Love’s Register is available in pounds sterling here.
    • The paperback in other currencies is available here.                                                 
    • Ebook for Kindle in £s here and in $s here.                                                           
    • For other ebook reading devices here (all currencies). 
  2. Heaven’s Rage is a memoir that explores addiction, cross-dressing, bullying and the hidden sides of families, discovering at their core the transformative power of words to rewire the brain and reconnect with life. “A Robin Red breast in a Cage / Puts all Heaven in a Rage” – William Blake. You can read more about/buy Heaven’s Rage here.
  3. The Dream Speaks Back, written by Sue Hampton, Cy Henty and Leslie Tate, is a joint autobiography exploring imagination and the adult search for the inner child. The book looks at gender difference, growing up in unusual families and mental health issues. It’s also a very funny portrait of working in the arts, full of crazy characters, their ups and downs, and their stories. You can buy a signed copy of The Dream Speaks Back here

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7 responses

  1. A lovely interview. I think Anna is quite right when she says that economics is only one of the reasons people seek to immigrate. We are facing this right now as we watch our beautiful country collapse around us due to corruption and greed. I found her point about her name interesting as well. Most people I know don’t know that Robbie isn’t my full name. Great article and a lovely sounding book.

    1. Robbie,
      On the front page of my book I put the following quote by Irish writer George Moore: “A man travels the world in search of what he needs and returns home to find it.” I think it accurately conveys the reason (at least some of them) why people choose to emigrate. It’s a fascinating and very complex question to which there is rarely a satisfactory answer. I heard once Kate Melua, when asked whether she feels Georgian or English, say: ‘I am English in Georgia and Georgian in England’. I think this is a pretty good description of the emigrant’s state of mind – who is never fully integrated, especially emotionally and spiritually.

  2. Such an interesting interview. Anna’s experiences and thoughts about her novel bring to mind one of my former students in particular, Ryszard, who came to Montreal in the late ’70s, leaving his wife and young son behind for 7 years before finally being able to bring them over permanently. He never did master English, and French was near impenetrable for him, and yet, he had made a life for his family and was a happy man. He has the heart of a lion, I think.

    But I can’t help wondering how much more different the experiences and struggles of immigrants from “visible” minority groups were and still are…

    In the present climate, both here in North America and of course in post-Brexit Great Britain, my unease grows…

    1. Michelle,
      I have seen many ‘Richards’ in London struggling despite all odds to give their families a better future and improved financial status. Some of their stories don’t end well as the families split up – the husbands and wives ending with different partners, and children becoming the ultimate victims of such situation.
      However, I also know people who have happily managed the status of overseas workers for years, supporting families at home. I believe that it could be done, that’s why Adam’s story in ‘A Second Chance’ has a happy ending.

  3. That sounds a really interesting novel; migration of all kinds fascinates me. Our parents took us to Australia which was not ‘real migration’ with a common language and constant supply of British TV and radio programmes; but it was the first time we met Italian, Greek and Polish folk. Returning to England I married someone half Ukrainian. We lived in Ealing for a while which has a long established post war Polish community – I wonder if the various waves of migration link up at all. I also wonder if Anna plans to translate her novel into Polish.

  4. Janet,
    With regard to reasons of emigration, please see above my answer to Robbie.
    I know well the Polish community in Ealing since both my sons have attended Tadeusz Kosciuszko’s Polish Saturday school in Ealing where I worked on a voluntary basis for some 17 years. As you can imagine, the school, founded in 1950, have served many generations of Polish emigrants who arrived in the UK at different stages of European history, bringing with them their very diverse emotional baggage and needs.
    I hope that one day a Polish publisher will be interested in translating the book.

  5. A very interesting interview Anna and so good to hear about your life, study and work. Good Luck with the books.

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