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REUNION FOR LEICESTER PEOPLE AFFECTED BY THE EXODUS OF UGANDAN ASIANS

A unique reunion event is taking place in Leicester for people to reflect on the mass exodus of Ugandan Asians 50 years ago.

The event on Saturday, September 10, is an opportunity for affected individuals to remember and reflect on the significant historic event, and also to reunite with people they perhaps haven’t seen in 50 years.

Taking place at Leicester’s Winstantly House, it will showcase short reels of people from Leicester who have shared their stories and experiences of being forced out of Uganda fifty-years-ago. Over 60,000 Asians were given just 90 days to leave their homes on order of brutal military dictator Idi Amin. Over 12,000 settled in Leicester.

Picture: Pukaar News

As well as reflecting on the trauma of mass exodus, the event will also celebrate the success that Ugandan Asians have had in rebuilding their lives in the city.

On the evening, there will be an array of entertainment on offer, including African dancers and Indian singers. There will also be a three course meal with an East African twist.

The event has been organised by ITV News Reporter Rajiv Popat and Priti Raichura, whose parents came to the UK as a result of the mass exodus.

Priti told Pukaar News, that she is putting her passion into the not for profit event, in order to honour her late father, and all the other Ugandan Asians who had to rebuild their lives when they were thrown out of the country.

“We are doing this to applaud our own families and the hardship they went through, but also to celebrate how they have come out the other end,” she said.

“This event is for them to come together to reminisce and remember what it was like, but also for others who might just want to know more about Uganda.

“For me, putting this event together has been a passion project and I’m sure it’ll be emotional,” she added. “A night to remember for sure.”

Picture: Pukaar News

Over the past six months, Priti and Rajiv have been interviewing local people from Leicester about their experience of Uganda and recording them on film.

Poignant clips from these interviews will be played throughout the night. One of those interviewed was Priti’s own Mum. However, she regrets that she wasn’t able to capture her own father’s voice and story on camera, as he passed away 12 years ago.

“It was important to us to archive all these stories. I fear that if we leave it any later these stories will get lost,” revealed Ms Raichura.

“My own children ask me about my Dad and they are bamboozled when I tell them that in Uganda, at one point he had a gun to his head. They’re like “that doesn’t happen”. They can’t comprehend it,” she revealed emotionally. “But that was the reality and it’s important that we don’t forget that, and that we’re able to pass that on to future generations.

“I feel that I owe it not just to my Dad, but to all those older people that sacrificed their lives for all the second and third generation Ugandans. We owe it to them,” she added. “They worked really hard and I don’t want that history of what they went through to be lost.”

All proceeds from the event will go to charity to celebrate the achievements of Ugandan Asians since arriving into the UK.

Tickets and tables can be purchased in advance. Call Priti or Rajiv on 07866 727181 or 07973 461165 for more information, or visit the Facebook page: ‘Ugandan Exodus Movement of the People’.

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