“Dyslexia Taught Me How to See.” — How Hamza Yassin Turned Struggle Into a Life Among Britain’s Wildest Wonders.
“The World Never Came From Books.” — How Hamza Yassin Turned Dyslexia Into His Greatest Gift
When Hamza Yassin speaks about wildlife, something remarkable happens. His face softens, his eyes widen — as if every animal he has ever filmed is still moving just behind them.
The Strictly Come Dancing champion and BBC presenter has never been more honest about the path that carried him from a childhood in Sudan to a quiet life among the most elusive creatures of the British countryside — and why the very thing that once made school feel impossible ended up shaping his destiny.
Now settled deep in the Scottish Highlands, Hamza still describes the UK with childlike wonder. He was only eight when he arrived, imagining a grey, distant land. What stunned him instead was the drama of real seasons.
“Near the equator, the year barely changes,” he says.
“Here, the land is alive — always shifting, always telling a new story.”
That living landscape stole his heart.
Raised by legends, guided by curiosity
Hamza never dreamed of celebrity. He dreamed of following the giants who came before him — Sir David Attenborough, Steve Irwin, Jane Goodall, Dian Fossey. But it was the late Sir Peter Scott, founder of the WWF, who showed him that storytelling could protect the wild as powerfully as any campaign.
Finding freedom far from the world
Today, Hamza lives miles from the nearest city, where a morning glance out of the window might reveal a stag crossing frost-covered fields or an eagle circling the hills.
For many, it would feel lonely. For Hamza, it is home.
Here, neighbours rely on each other. No one is invisible. Help is offered without being asked.
“I never knew I needed this kind of life,” he admits.
“Dyslexia taught me how to see”
At school, words refused to behave. Sentences slipped away. Learning felt like pushing uphill through fog.
But dyslexia didn’t break him — it reshaped him.
“I learned to search for patterns,” Hamza explains.
“Not just on a page, but in the world around me.”
Today, that instinct defines his work. A bird pauses mid-flight. The wind shifts. A shadow falls where it shouldn’t.
While others see stillness, Hamza sees a story about to erupt — and his camera is ready before the moment unfolds.
The wonder is closer than you think
In his latest book, Homeward Bound: The Joy of Nature and My Life Outdoors, Hamza gently challenges us to stop dreaming of far-off safaris — and start noticing what waits beyond our own front doors.
He recalls the silence of lockdown, the sudden birdsong, the skies we had forgotten to look at.
Wonder, he says, was never far away.
It was always right here.
And for the boy who once struggled to read but learned instead to observe, that truth changed everything.