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Key points

The front cover of a book with the title Windrush Child by Benjamin Zephaniah. The image shows a boy in a smart suit standing next to his mum, who is wearing a red dress, white jacket and hat. Behind them is a large ship.
  • Windrush Child was written by Benjamin Zephaniah and tells the story of a 10-year-old boy called Leonard.

  • In 1958, Leonard travels with his mother from Jamaica to England to join his father. The novel follows Leonard as he struggles to adapt to life in Britain.

  • Although Windrush Child is a fictional story, Benjamin Zephaniah was inspired by historical events when he wrote Windrush Child. He also drew on his own experience of growing up in Britain in the 1960s.

The front cover of a book with the title Windrush Child by Benjamin Zephaniah. The image shows a boy in a smart suit standing next to his mum, who is wearing a red dress, white jacket and hat. Behind them is a large ship.
A black and white photograph of the Empire Windrush arriving in Britain on 21st June 1948. The decks are filled with people waving.
Image caption,
The Empire Windrush

Did you know?

'Windrush child' refers to any child who was born in the Caribbean and came to Britain between 1948 and 1971.

In 1948, Caribbean families were invited to move to Britain by the British government to help with rebuilding the country after World War Two.

These families arrived on ships. One of the first ships to arrive was called the Empire Windrush.

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Plot

 A timeline showing the 12 key moments from Windrush Child by Benjamin Zephaniah. The first image shows a woman holding a baby. In the background are palm trees and mountains. The second image shows a large ship 鈥 The Empire Windrush. The third image shows the silhouettes of Leonard and his mother dismounting from a ship called the Arosa Star. The fourth image shows Leonard and his mum. Leonard鈥檚 mum is wearing a red dress with a white jacket and hat. Leonard is wearing a smart suit and has a blue blanket wrapped around his shoulders. The fifth image shows Leonard standing with his parents. There are dark clouds above their heads. The sixth image shows Leonard standing in messy painting overalls. There are tins of paint at his feet. The seventh image shows the front cover of a newspaper. It shows a bus and a headline reading 鈥榃as Jamaican bus driver drunk?鈥 The eighth image shows two gold rings on a red cushion, surrounded by flowers. The ninth image shows an aeroplane taking off. It has red, yellow and green stripes on the tail. The tenth image shows a baby wearing a pink, spotty onesie and sucking a dummy. The eleventh image shows Leonard as an old man with grey hair. He is on a mobile phone, looking concerned. The twelfth image shows a passport with 鈥榠llegal鈥 stamped in red across it.

Windrush Child follows the life story of Leonard, from his childhood in Maroon Town, Jamaica, to his old age in Manchester, England.

When Leonard was a baby, his father left Jamaica and went to work in Britain. He travelled on a boat called the Empire Windrush. One day, Leonard鈥檚 mother announces that they are leaving Jamaica to join him.

Leonard and his mother sail to Southampton on a ship called the Arosa Star. Leonard鈥檚 mother has a passport but Leonard doesn鈥檛 need one because he is so young. During the journey, Leonard makes a friend called Winston.

They travel to Manchester. Leonard misses his Grandma and struggles to make friends. The children at school laugh at him and call him racist names. One day, he is violently assaulted by a group of boys in a attack.

Leonard grows up, finds a job, gets married and has a daughter called Grace. Despite the verbal and physical racism he encounters, Britain becomes his home.

When he is 71 years old, he decides to take Grace to visit Jamaica. He applies for a British passport for the first time. At the passport office, he is arrested. He has been denied citizenship by the British Government, despite the fact he has lived in Britain for over 60 years.

The novel ends with Leonard hoping that he will be released. He is being helped with his legal case by Winston, who grew up to be a human rights lawyer.

Activity

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Characters

Leonard in a smart suit standing next to his mother, who is wearing a red dress, white jacket and hat

Leonard

Leonard is the of the story. The novel follows his life from childhood to adulthood.

Even though he is an honest and hard-working man, he is arrested at the end of the story for not having the documents to prove he is British.

Leonard in a smart suit standing next to his mother, who is wearing a red dress, white jacket and hat

Rita

Rita is Leonard鈥檚 mother. She works hard to fit into life in Britain but she also encourages Leonard to stand up for himself and to never give up.

She is proud and strong. For example, when she discovers that her husband was unfaithful, she moves out until he understands how much he hurt her.

Morris

Morris is Leonard鈥檚 father. Optimistic and determined, he travels to Britain to create a better life for his family. Whilst living alone in Manchester, he is unfaithful to his wife and spends time with an unmarried woman.

He works as a bus driver and dies of a heart attack while he is working.

Grandma

Grandma is Leonard鈥檚 beloved grandmother who helps to bring him up in Jamaica.

She inspires Leonard to speak up for himself and to 鈥渞oar like a lion鈥. She also passes on their family history so that Leonard knows to be proud of his Jamaican roots.

Other characters

Other important characters in Windrush Child are Winston, Marie Logan and Grace.

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Themes

Themes are the main ideas that appear repeatedly in a novel. Some of the important themes in Windrush Child are:

  • Racism
  • Injustice
  • History

Racism

Leonard and his parents standing under a dark storm cloud

After their arrival in Britain, Leonard and his family experience many verbal and physical incidents. For example:

  • There are shops that refuse to serve them because they are Black.
  • The children at Leonard鈥檚 school laugh at his voice and what he looks like.
  • Leonard is violently assaulted by a group of boys in a racist attack in the park.
  • His father is violently attacked by racist men.
  • Leonard is attacked again when he is older by a group of white men, including a former school friend.

Not everyone Leonard meets throughout the story is racist, but it is a constant fear for Leonard and his family.

Leonard and his parents standing under a dark storm cloud

Injustice

The major injustice in the novel is Leonard鈥檚 arrest for not having the documents to prove he is a British citizen. Leonard travelled to Britain legally on his mother鈥檚 passport when he was a child. He was not aware that he would need his own separate documents to prove his British citizenship in later life.

Even though there is hope for Leonard, as he is supported by his lawyer friend Winston, Zephaniah does not close the story with a happy ending. He makes the point that injustice can happen to innocent people.

Zephaniah is reflecting on what has happened in real life to people from the Caribbean who became caught up in legal arguments about their British citizenship.

History

The first chapter begins:

I love history. I am history. We made history.

Through this statement, Zephaniah is making the point that history is made up of people, including children, the things they do and the experiences they live through.

Throughout his life, Leonard is affected by bigger historical events that he cannot control such as war, riots and changing governments, but this does not mean his life is unimportant. His life story has the power to help people understand what the Windrush generation lived through and reflect on the injustices they faced.

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Language

Writers choose words and phrases carefully when they write. Readers can look closely at texts to think about how and why the writer made these choices.

Accent

Over the course of the novel, Leonard鈥檚 language changes.

When he first arrives in Britain, he has a Jamaican . Zephaniah spells out words how they would sound when Leonard says them. For example:

That鈥檚 what it sey in school鈥hat鈥檚 what it sey in all de books.

Here 鈥渟ay鈥 becomes 鈥渟ey鈥 and 鈥渢he鈥 becomes 鈥渄e鈥.

Leonard鈥檚 accent fades as he makes Britain his home. At the end of the novel, he speaks using more standard English:

I want us to take Grace to Jamaica to see her Grandma [鈥 I want her to see the house where I was born.

Leonard鈥檚 mother, who eventually returns to Jamaica, never loses her Jamaican accent.

Three question marks

Did you know?

Zephaniah uses some strong, racist language in this novel. In a message to the reader at the beginning of the book, he explains:

鈥淚 would be cheating readers if I were to gloss over some of the language that is used by racists.鈥

He wants the reader to know that words have power and they can hurt, but they can also be used to fight back.

Three question marks
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Structure

Structure refers to how written text is organised 鈥 the way the story is ordered and shaped. Windrush Child is structured carefully to describe the events in both the present and the past.

A passport with 'illegal' stamped in red across it

The

Zephaniah starts the story with a voice talking in the . It is the voice of a man who is imprisoned in a windowless room but believes he is innocent. This sets the story up as a mystery.

Zephaniah builds suspense in the novel. He makes the reader wait until the final chapter to find out why Leonard has been imprisoned.

The prologue also sets the tone and themes of the novel: Leonard is fighting injustice. He is frightened, upset and yet he is still strong.

A passport with 'illegal' stamped in red across it

Main narrative

The main narrative is and written in the . It follows Leonard鈥檚 life from his birth in 1947 to his arrest in 2018 at the age of 71.

By following his life story, the reader understands why his imprisonment is so unfair.

The final chapter

The final chapter returns to the same time as the prologue and explains the mystery of the man in the cell.

The final pages switch to the present tense to encourage the reader to feel like they are sharing Leonard鈥檚 thoughts and feelings.

Three question marks

Did you know?

The story is left on a cliffhanger: will Leonard be freed or not?

Zephaniah is asking his readers to go beyond the ending of his story to find out more about real-life victims of the Windrush scandal and what can be done to help them.

Three question marks
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Context

The in which a novel was written can sometimes tell you more about its themes, message and meaning.

The National Windrush Monument created by Jamaican artist Basil Watson. It show three figures holding hands - a man in a hat, a woman and a child.
Image caption,
The National Windrush Monument created by Jamaican artist Basil Watson

The Windrush generation

Windrush Child is based on historical events, although Leonard and the other characters in the book are fictional.

In the book, Leonard鈥檚 father is a passenger on the Empire Windrush. This was a real ship which travelled to Britain from Jamaica in 1948. Many of the people on board had left their homes in the Caribbean having been encouraged to find work and a better life in Britain. They were all British by law so they were all free to stay. This group of people were the first of the Windrush generation. Many stayed and built lives and families in Britain.

The Immigration Act 1971 granted permanent leave to remain in Britain to those who migrated before 1971. This meant that those who were part of the Windrush generation remained legal migrants and could stay in Britain to live and work. However, no paperwork stating that they had the right to permanently remain in Britain was given to these individuals.

In 2017, the Windrush scandal revealed that many people who were part of the Windrush generation, like Leonard, had been wrongly arrested or forced to leave the country because they had no proof of their legal status.

By 2019, the British Prime Minister had apologised and promised to pay compensation to the 15,000 people affected.

You can learn more about the Windrush Generation on Bitesize KS3 History.

The National Windrush Monument created by Jamaican artist Basil Watson. It show three figures holding hands - a man in a hat, a woman and a child.
Image caption,
The National Windrush Monument created by Jamaican artist Basil Watson
A portrait photograph of Benjamin Zephaniah. He is wearing a blue shirt and looking upwards.
Image caption,
Benjamin Zephaniah

Benjamin Zephaniah

The author, Benjamin Zephaniah, was born in England to a Jamaican mother and father from Barbados. Many of the racist incidents in the novel come from his own experiences.

For example, in the novel a white woman is served ahead of Leonard鈥檚 mother in a shop, something that Zephaniah experienced himself.

A portrait photograph of Benjamin Zephaniah. He is wearing a blue shirt and looking upwards.
Image caption,
Benjamin Zephaniah
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