boo the taking of the knee, and at that same match, someone was caught doing monkey chants to rio ferdinandk that's really depressing and we've got a lot of work still to do. and in terms of your personal story, the honesty with which you've talked about your unease at being disconnected as a successful sort ofjournalist in the metropolitan elite in london, disconnected from your punjabi—born parents and from yourfamily in india, has that been resolved within you or do you feel that sense of disconnection still? no. i feel like the two parts of my identity are now more connected because i know about the history. i know that the sikhs took the side of the british at the 1857 mutiny. i know that 83,000 sikhs died fighting for this country in two world wars. i know we took advantage of opportunities to migrate across empire, so i feel like british imperial history is also my history and i feel more connected than ever before. and you're very close to two nieces, who again appear in that documentary, and they're forging lives in this, you know, london and uk of 2021. do you think their experien