'Hairdresser yelled at me and said I should go back to my country'
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Hana went to a Qawra hairdresser to get her hair done but instead got sent back to her country. As she sat in the chair for an appointment set the week before, her hair wet waiting for a blow-dry, a woman walked in and told the hairdresser she needed to be sl'Hairdresser yelled at me and said I should go back to my country'
Hana went to a Qawra hairdresser to get her hair done but instead got sent back to her country. As she sat in the chair for an appointment set the week before, her hair wet waiting for a blow-dry, a woman walked in and told the hairdresser she needed to be slotted in quickly as she had a wedding that evening. The hairdresser told Hana that the woman had an appointment before her but arrived late as she was stuck in traffic. “I told them that I had understood what had been discussed and repeated every word to them back in English. At that point, the hairdresser started yelling at me, using vulgar language. “Two other women looked down when I corrected the hairdresser and one of them advised me to leave. The hairdresser continued yelling at me and said that I am African and that I should go back to my country.” Hana’s is one of 12 accounts in a new publication by Aditus Foundation called Our Island II. Funded by the President’s Award for Creativity (Arts Council Malta), it is Aditus’s second publication to document refugees’ Malta experiences. Both books are available from the Aditus office against a small donation. While Our Island featured personal stories from people... Read more














