‘They didn’t dwell on it – they felt so many had suffered more’: Mishal Husain on her family history and the partition of India

‘They didn’t dwell on it – they felt so many had suffered more’: Mishal Husain on her family history and the partition of India

In her new book, written around 3am starts for Radio 4’s Today, the BBC presenter turns her gaze from the daily grind of British politics to a key moment in her own backstory – her grandparents’ lucky escape

If you have ever listened to Mishal Husain on BBC Radio 4’s Today and wondered at her preternatural early morning calm – a serenity, I would say, that is born of utmost preparedness as well as of her essential character – then all I can tell you is that outside the studio she’s no different. Our meeting takes place the morning after the night before, when Rishi Sunak so rudely informed the nation there was to be a July election, and almost until the moment she opens her front door, I’m half expecting her to cancel: only a few hours ago, after all, she was quizzing a damp Chris Mason in Downing Street, the announcement having coincided with her regular shift as a presenter of the BBC’s News at Ten. But if I’m the last person she feels like talking to, you’d never know. Here she is in her bare feet, all smiles, welcoming me like a friend. She has even baked biscuits for the occasion: small, delightfully short biscuits that taste lightly of cumin.

Made to a traditional Pakistani recipe, they are a hospitable nod to Broken Threads, the book she has written about her family and the partition of India, the great tapestry of which she somehow stitched together even as she did her job at the BBC. On this account alone, it feels slightly miraculous. The 3am starts for Today. The unrelenting pressure of the news cycle. How on earth did she do it?

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