I was born and bred in the French Jura part of Switzerland. It seems that my mum's side of the family was Swiss through and through - but my dad's family where French Huguenots. At the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, when freedom of religion was abolished in France- Huguenots protestants had 2 choices, convert to Catholicism, which very few agreed to do, or flee. Many fleed to the UK - to this day there is still a Huguenot Church under CAnterbury Cathedral. They brought with them their highly skilled trades, horology, printing, furniture and jewellery making, etc. Many escaped to South Africa, tot he Cape - and started wine making there - sadly involved heavily in the slave trade too- and later becoming pillars of the Apartheid movement (Eugène Terreblanche being one of them [their long term leader]). The poorest just walked across to Eastern France and the poor regions of the upper Jura - again bringing their artisan trades with them. My father's family were among them.
Ironically enough - within a couple of generations they had converted to Catholicism - Switzerland was very involved in the Reformation (Calvin, Luther, etc) - but some regions remained staunchly Catholic, like the Jura. I suppose they felt that was the only way to succeed in life. When my parents got married there was all hell let loose, as mum came from a very bourgeois and wealthy Protestant family, divorced with one child- and father from artisan Catholic stock. The irony of it all.
My OH's family hails on the grand father's side from deepest Devon. An artist, he fell in love with Islamic art in Grenada, Toledo and Seville, later in North Africa and Cairo- and converted to Islam then moved to South Africa. Married an Indonesian woman. Father married a woman of Nowegian/Dutch/African mix - the result of the 'droit de cuissage' imposed by white farmers on their slaves. The family returned to the UK at the time of apartheid- and looking at any of them, you'd never ever guess the rich genetic/racial mix involved. My eldest has married a man from Northern Ireland, of Scottish origin, with a bit of Indian thrown in the mix during the raj.
So what's your story?
Robert Kenyon, Reform's candidate for Makerfield. Would you let him in your house?
despite the 3 races and 9 nationalities involved in the making of them. Nobody would ever look at them and say they are 'mixed race'.

