MayMorning_1770

 

Black_History_Walks_Logo

Walks in  Elephant & Castle, St Pauls Bank Sunday 5th September

Add yourself to our mail list for advance notice of  events http://www.blackhistorywalks.co.uk/contact-us.html

Next Walk in the St Pauls/Bank area : 3pm Sunday 5th September

In 100 minutes your guide will take you through hundreds of years of the African presence, and contribution, to London’s way of life. Discover secret alleyways and enormous buildings all connected to Africa and the Caribbean in ways which the owners do not want you to know. Find out about black loyalists and African revolutionaries. Uncover the submerged links between racism, trade, religion, slavery and politics which are still evident in the very streets and buildings of the oldest part of London.

"Thank you very much for the grand tour of the oldest part of London. That was a tour of a lifetime and most enlightening.Yes, I realise more than ever before how  our ancestors and countries contributed to the wealth, growth and grandeur of the British Empire" Professor Norman Maphosa, Vice Chancellor, Solosi University, Bulawayo

£6.00 adults £3.00 children. Group bookings possible. Walks last approx 2 hours, mail to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. with number of places required. You will then receive confirmation and joining instructions

sowetorembrance-uprisingship warphoto

Next Walk in Trafalgar Square: to be announced

Millions of people walk through WC2 (Trafalgar/Leicester Square area) every day and have no idea of the centuries of African history under their feet. In 2 hours your guide will uncover the black presence and influence in the area. African Princes, Generals, Resistance Fighters, Civil Rights Leaders, Pilots, Nurses and Sailors all make an appearance. We  highlight the links between Africa, China, India and the Caribbean and explain how history was whitewashed and racism institutionalised. In 2007 there was a huge emphasis on the 200th anniversary of the British ‘abolition’ of the human trade in 1807, but  African freedom fighters in the Caribbean island of Haiti defeated the French, Spanish and British armies and had already declared their independence in 1804

'Just a few words from 'the Guild of Walkers' WE enjoyed ourselves immensely . What a tour! Having worked in the city for thirty years, walking in and around, passing  those landmarks, images, icons, churches, streets..this was one of the most beautiful walks I have ever had'. Glenda Trew, Guild of Walkers

£6.00 adults £3.00 children. Group bookings possible. Walks last approx 2 hours, mail to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. with number of places required. You will then receive confirmation and joining instructions

windrushmalcolm3fieldmarshall

Next Walk in Nottting Hill : to be announced

 There is much more to Notting Hill than Carnival but even that history is often mis-represented. Find out about pioneering African/Caribbean people who literally fought for equality and laid the foundation for modern multi-cultural London.  Why does Portobello road have that name? Where in London is there evidence of 3500 years of African civilisation ? How is  Kelso Cochrane connected to Stephen Lawrence? We cover Baron Baker, Jamaican Freedom Fighters, White Defence League, Sus law, Sou-Sou / Partner System, Michael X, Peter Rachman, Claudia Jones, anti-black riots of 1958, Mau Mau, Shebeens and invisible black history.

 £6.00 adults £3.00 children. Group bookings possible. Walks last approx 2 hours. Mail to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. with number of places required. You will then receive confirmation and joining instructions

African_German_soldier_1919_freikorpaskarifiskjubileesingers
Above. Black German Soldier 1919 Southern Africa : The Fisk Jubilee Singers performed and sold out in Elephant & Castle in 1873 and played for the Queen

Next Walk in Elephant & Castle area : 12pm Sunday 5th September

Special War to Windrush walks in Elephant and Castle can be arranged. This walk links the Imperial War Museum with the Cumin Museum. Both museums have excellent collections on the black presence in WW2 totally relevant to the national curriculum and adult education. The Cumin Museum also has ancient Egyptian items. This walk links the two venues and illustrates the black history of more than 200 years in the SE1 area. The war museum hosts a special exhibition on the African /Caribbean war effort until May 2010 www.iwm.org.uk

If you would like to attend contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 

 

 

 

  

 

 whie_experimenters_black_bodies

Medical Apartheid: European Experiments on African Bodies

Friday 10th September 8.00pm-10.30pm

A Blak Friday session hosted by Dr Lez Henry www.nubeyond.com  

Unit 9 Eurolink Business Centre Effra Road, London SW2 1BZ

Tube: Brixton. Admission : £8.00

Bring pen and pad
. This is a small venue (40 seats) be on time to get one 


A review of the scientific experiments and research performed on black
people to refine various  drugs and medical treatments for use with white people
This presentation will draw on Harriet Washington's book of the same name, various
documentation from World Wars 1/2, Aboriginal history,  Vietnam, US Prisons and Porton Down.

It will cover:

*Radioactive People: North Africa and the Pacific
*Birth and Crowd Control: The South African Solution, Project Coast
*National Security Memorandum 200
*Vic Mackie and Congressional Inquiries
*The 'War on Drugs', Haiti and Jamaica

*The Mau Mau, Kenya and the Brixton Riots
 

for more info contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. 

 

 

 

 

 

LES_16_DE_BASSE_POINTE 

Les 16 de  Basse Pointe plus Q & A

Saturday  18 September 2pm -5.00pm

BFI SouthBank

Belvedere Road SE1

Tube: Waterloo.

Tickets £5.00 0207 928 3232

www.bfi.org.uk www.blackhistorywalks.co.uk

THE 16 OF BASSE-POINTE /
LES 16 DE BASSE-POINTE

On September 6, 1948 a Béké (White colon in Martinique) was killed at Basse-Pointe, Martinique. Accused of this murder, sixteen sugar cane cutters were arrested and send to prison in Bordeaux, France. Three years later, these men were put to trial by the French Judiciary System. Through interviews with those accused still living today, with some of their lawyers—many of whom were members of the French Communist Party— and with other members of Martinique society touched by these events, the film exposes the political and cultural realities on the island at the time and describes what turned out to be the first public indictment against French colonialism.  By Camille Mauduech, 109min, Martinique, Documentary in French and Creole with English subtitles

plus

FULL MOON AT VOLGA BEACH /
PLEINE LUNE À VOLGA PLAGE

Ambroise and Lise leave behind their little country house in the middle of the night and head for the city. Day-to-day life unfolds, never changing. However on the long boulevard leading to the Floralies market in Fort-de-France, some unexpected encounters indicate that the world is still turning. By Camille Mauduech, Martinique, 2004, 15mins, drama in French with English subtitlesome Back Africa

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

green-lantern

Wednesday 26th October 2.00-4.00pm

 2 hour edited version of the 3.5 hour original arranged especially with The Beethoven Centre plus Nubian Spirit !

Venue: Beethoven Centre.

Tube:  Queens Park.

Admission sponsored by Beethoven Centre: Free 

www.blackhistorywalks.co.uk   

Many  artists are making up for the severe lack of positive images of black people in animated films and comics. This animation festival for 6-60 year olds, will feature a variety of African-themed cartoons which tell tales of; Magical Nigerian women warriors, Anansi the West African Folk Hero, The story of Ogun, and more 

Spirit_of_the_Pharaoh_thumb

 

 
blackwomencancer

Breast Cancer and Women of African descent. Plus Q &A with Sister Abi

Friday 24 September  8.00pm to 10.30pm 

A Blak Friday session hosted by Dr Lez Henry, www.nubeyond.com

Unit 24 Eurolink Business Centre Effra Road, London SW2 1BZ 

Tube: Brixton Admission: £8.00

Bring pen and pad
. This is a small venue (40 seats) be on time to get one 

This presentation by Sister Abi aims to empower women with information to help defeat breast cancer. It will cover:

* The reality of risk rates for black women; how white women skew the risk indicators
* 5 steps you can take to reduce your risk , 
* How not breast feeding can increase your risk
* What food and lifestyles increase liability
* The signs that ensure early detection.
* How such information is made difficult to access (there has only ever been one study on how cancer affects black women in  the UK)

Sister Abi holds a first degree in Medical Bio-chemistry, a masters in Clinical bio-chemistry and is pursuing another masters in Public Health. She is currently Programme Manager for an infomatics project for a major cancer charity. She has been featured on Colourful Radio and will be in the next edition of the New African Woman magazine for her cancer prevention work.