The Other Half of You by Michael Mohammed Ahmad
Michael Mohammed Ahmad is a force. His appearance on the ABC’s Q&A in 2018 is burnt into my brain. Never before had I witnessed such a scorching critique of racism in Australia on TV. While host Tony Jones teed-up Ahmad with questions about Peter Dutton, it was Jones himself and guests John Marsden and Trent Dalton whom Ahmad took to task – with the help of Maxine Beneba Clarke – dismantling their complacency on issues of race one swift blow at a time. Jones had labelled Ahmad’s Miles Franklin shortlisted novel The Lebs ‘confronting.’ Ahmad agreed and proceeded to confront some more, and I cheered him along, astounded that someone like me seized their moment on live TV to cut so directly to the heart of the Australian soul.
The process of truth-telling in Australia hardly consists of easy jabs at bogeymen like Dutton – it is broader, deeper. In the genteel milieu of letters we must also confront our complicity and complacency. And so I wonder how readers will receive The Other Half of You, the third book in Ahmad’s loosely linked autobiographical coming-of-age trilogy focusing on Bani Adam, a young Lebanese-Australian Muslim man now in his early twentiesin Western Sydney. Bani is like ‘us’, in that he reads. He also studied Arts at uni and is a dedicated amateur boxer. But he is also caught between the traditional expectations of his family and community, namely marriage to someone within his tribe, and the aspirations of someone with a tertiary education and a desire to write.
You could argue that The Other Half of You is not as confronting as The Lebs. Written as a letter to his son – in short to explain how I came to be with your mother, an Anglo Australian – it is an uncompromising look into the struggles of migrant Australia, and glows with the tenderness and introspection granted by this formal epistolary device. It isa fundamentally generous book that deserves to be read carefully. Ahmad’s is a crucial voice.