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Rags : A memoir of home, migration, and African decolonization - Maria Isabel Vaz

Rags

A memoir of home, migration, and African decolonization

By: Maria Isabel Vaz, Snia Vaz Borges, Craig Gilmore (Preface by), Ruth Wilson Gilmore (Preface by)

Paperback | 18 June 2024

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A memoir of a mother and daughter's return to Cabo Verde reveals the legacies of national liberation, a story of memory and migration, and the psychic and physical landscape that colonialism has wrought.


When Sonia Vaz Borges accompanied her mother, Maria Isabel Vaz, home to Santiago Island, Cabo Verde, it was the first time she experienced the island where her mother and family were born, and where her mother left forty years earlier. As a historian, documentarian, and a Black Cabo Verdean young woman born in Portugal, she booked a trip to a native land she’s never been to in order to conduct research on the history of militant resistance to Portuguese colonialism, of the education initiatives of the African Party for the Independence of Guinea Bissau and Cabo Verde (PAIGC), and the lessons for freedom available for today.
           What she discovers are lifelong lessons as illuminating as anything her PhD revealed to her. The fragments of memories, episodes, and encounters in Cabo Verde that she assembled in this travel diary reveal an experience of "homegoing" that is rich with the legacies of national liberation, the story of a Black woman’s migration during the height of colonial oppression, of separation from family and nation, and memories of an island transformed since Independence, and the psychic and physical landscape that the legacy of colonial rule has wrought. As mother and daughter travel home together for the first time, they embark on a journey that takes them to new places in their relationship to each other, a return and a rediscovery of a place and people imagined and conjured through memory, where history and place blur and where stories are created and shared.
           Ragáaacute;s is a Cabo Verdean creole word for the space created between the waist and the knees when seated: the lap. Here, it is a place to find nurturing, a place to be embraced, protected, and cared for, a place for reconnection and return to the memories that others carry for you when migration means both leaving and being left behind.
Industry Reviews

"Ragáaacute;s, because the sea has no place to grab is the documentation of the ‘homecoming' of a mother and a daughter to Cabo Verde, and to the possibilities of themselves, the encounter with family members, who they had never met or had not seen for more than four decades. These two dimensions brought them to a (dis)comfort that made them realize that the vibrant silence of memories unveiled would actually trigger a sense of personal and historical growth and appeasement. It is a journey that anyone can identify with, as it sparks the universal feeling of the need to both embrace our roots and to nurture our own paths." -Carla Fernandes, journalist, host of Rádio Afrolis, and founder of Afrolis Cultural Association


Ragás is an amazing text that breaks the silence of thousands of lives whose mental and social life was disrupted, distorted by colonial violence and Portuguese hegemonic history. More importantly, it is a story of love and resistance, revivified tracks, a living bouquet of herstory, which escapes from the prison of biography and offers wonderful paths for our diaspora in Portugal and beyond to walk as we reorganize the foreclosures of memory by official narratives, and become protagonists once more.” —Flávio “LBC Soldjah” Zenun Almada, emcee/rapper, writer, and general coordinator of Associação Cultural Moinho da Juventude at Cova da Moura


“It is often said that ‘memory is the key to liberation,’ but what happens when memory is dormant, suppressed, misplaced, seemingly lost? How do we search for what has no form? Maria Isabel Vaz and Sóoacute;nia Vaz Borges’ Ragás, because the sea has no place to grab is a clear meditation on this process. A thesis on unpacking and mapping a living archive.” —James Pope, Associate Professor of Africana Studies, Winston-Salem State University and founding director of Educational Initiatives for Africa World Now Project


“I can think of no other work that provides such deep insight into the lived intimacies of the afterlives of national liberation struggles and their diasporas. Ragás, because the sea has no place to grab is to be savored in stillness, discussed in study groups with comrades, and taught in classrooms where militant education for home-grown anticolonial liberation remains on the syllabus.”—Jodi Melamed, author of Represent and Destroy: Rationalizing Violence in the New Racial Capitalism 


Ragás, because the sea has no place to grab provides a beautiful and deeply felt memoir of migration, diaspora, belonging, and returning home. Maria Isabel Vaz and Sónia Vaz Borges bring us along on the intimate journey they take together back to Cabo Verde, a homecoming after forty-two years as complex and emotional as one could imagine. This book provides rich personal insights into the paradoxes of memory and the legacies of colonial histories and traumas. It is a must read for those interested in learning more about the innermost and constant struggles that hinder individual and collective liberation across time and space in the African diaspora.” —Keisha-Khan Perry, Presidential Penn Compact Associate Professor of Africana Studies, University of Pennsylvania


“Situated at the precipice between history and memory, Ragás, because the sea has no place to grab brings the reader into everyday life in Cabo Verde. The worlds women build through community become tangible and visceral through the portal of mother-daughter travel. This book is an unforgettable journey.” —Robyn C. Spencer-Antoine, Associate Professor of History and African American Studies, Wayne State University


“This work is both a declarat

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