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Paperback

A Group of One

$29.99
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Hey Tara, what’s your mother tongue?

Questions like this make fifteen-year-old Tara Mehta’s blood boil, especially when asked by a teacher who ought to know better. Yes, her parents were raised in India, but Tara has lived in Ottawa her whole life - she’s as Canadian as everybody else. There are much more important things than where her family came from. Jeff, for instance. He’s the new guy with the blue eyes and a brain that actually works.

But then she meets her grandmother for the first time. Dadiji fought with Gandhi in the Indian independence movement, and she’s horrified to learn that her grandchildren know almost nothing about her heritage. Tara resents her grandmother’s attitude until she learns how Dadiji came to join the fight for independence.

Shocked and angered by the history that she’s never been taught in school, Tara decides to tell Dadiji’s story to her class. In the wake of the violently mixed reactions that follow, Tara comes to realize that most people need to expand their definition of what it means to be a regular Canadian - including herself.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Fitzhenry & Whiteside
Country
United States
Date
25 February 2005
Pages
184
ISBN
9781550419252

Hey Tara, what’s your mother tongue?

Questions like this make fifteen-year-old Tara Mehta’s blood boil, especially when asked by a teacher who ought to know better. Yes, her parents were raised in India, but Tara has lived in Ottawa her whole life - she’s as Canadian as everybody else. There are much more important things than where her family came from. Jeff, for instance. He’s the new guy with the blue eyes and a brain that actually works.

But then she meets her grandmother for the first time. Dadiji fought with Gandhi in the Indian independence movement, and she’s horrified to learn that her grandchildren know almost nothing about her heritage. Tara resents her grandmother’s attitude until she learns how Dadiji came to join the fight for independence.

Shocked and angered by the history that she’s never been taught in school, Tara decides to tell Dadiji’s story to her class. In the wake of the violently mixed reactions that follow, Tara comes to realize that most people need to expand their definition of what it means to be a regular Canadian - including herself.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Fitzhenry & Whiteside
Country
United States
Date
25 February 2005
Pages
184
ISBN
9781550419252