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Simon
Woolley - Director of Operation Black Vote a project
designed to get Black people to not only exercise their democratic
right to vote, but to get actively involved in the political
process. Woolley is a founder of OBV. He has helped guide the project from an idea into an influential national organisation.
He writes and comments for the national and Black press and media. He is a board member of the
String of Pearls Festival, Chair of the Black Londoners
Forum, member of the National Black Caucus and of the Black Jewish
Forum. OBV |
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| Trix
Worrel - Director, producer and writer. Worrel is the
famed film and television producer/director who created perhaps
the most successful Black British sitcom Desmond's.
The series starring the late Norman Beaton, Carmen
Monroe and Robbie Gee centred around a Peckham,
southeast London, barbershop. It was the longest running Black
British sitcom. |
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The
Empire Windrush brought the first wave of first generation of
migrant workers from the Caribbean to Britain in 1948.The ship was
built in Germany and originally named the Monte Rosa on its
launch in 1930. During world war two it was used as both a troop
and hospital ship. It was seized by British forces after the
German defeat, refitted and renamed Empire Windrush. The
journey for which it is renowned took place in 1948. Adverts in
Jamaica’s Gleaner newspaper offered cheap
transport for anybody wanting to work in the England. The war had
created a labour shortage and many low-paid positions were up for
grabs. The fare was a cut-price £28 and 10 shillings. When the
Windrush departed Kingston on May 24th, 1948, it had 300
passengers below deck and 192 above, from Jamaica and Trinidad. It
took a month to reach England, eventually docking at Tilbury in
Essex on June 22nd. Hundreds
of its passengers were temporarily housed in the Clapham South
deep air-raid shelter in south-west London. The shelter was less
than a mile from the nearest labour exchange on Coldharbour
Lane in Brixton and so naturally Brixton became the
spiritual home of modern Black Britain. The fate of the boat
however ended in tragedy. On a trip from Kure in Japan to
Southampton in 1954, a large explosion in the engine room just off
the Algerian coast completely burned out the ship. What was left
sank in the Mediterranean.
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SILCOTT, Winston - "Silcott has been tried for
murder three times, he's been convicted twice and acquitted once -
either he's very, very unlucky or he's as guilty as sin,"
said a policemen when asked about him.
Silcott was jailed for life in 1987 for the killing of policeman
Keith Blakelock during the 1985 Broadwater Farm riots - the
conviction was later overturned and he was cleared in November
1991. The guilty verdicts of Engin Raghip and Mark Braithwaite who
were charged alongside Silcott were also quashed.
Silcott had been jailed on the weight of an unsigned,
uncorroborated police statements taken in the absence of a
solicitor. Analysis showed that some pages of the document had
been replaced at a later stage. He was released in October 2003
having served 18 years for the murder of boxer Tony Smith.
Silcott lives in Tottenham, north London and has been involved in
various community and anti-crime schemes. He is believed to be
penning an autobiography |
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Jacqueline
Walker is a mother of three whose book Pilgrim
State tells the story of her mother Dorothy and her tragic
battle with mental health coupled with a determination to keep her
family together. Walker a PhD in black identity in literature says
the book pays homage to her mother: "This was a recognition
of my mother's parenting achievements that social services had not
acknowledged." |
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