Posted on 07 February 2012. Tags: Black Canadian, Black Pioneer, Black Ranchers, Calgary, Canada, Cowboys, John Ware, John Ware Ridge, Mount Ware, Ware Creek

John Ware (c. 1845 – 12 September 1905) was an African-American and later Black Canadian cowboy, best remembered for his ability to ride and train horses and for bringing the first cattle to southern Alberta in 1882, helping to create that province's important ranching industry.
Ware was born into Slavery in South Carolina. After the American ...
Posted in Africa, African American, Black History, Black History Month, Colonialism, Men, Slavery, Sports, The Americas
Posted on 28 December 2011. Tags: Wallace Fard Muhammad

Wallace Fard Muhammad was a Minister and founder of the Nation of Islam. He established the Nation of Islam's first Mosque in Detroit, Michigan in 1930, and ministered his distinctive religion there for three years, before mysteriously disappearing in June 1934.
{ The Al-Rashid Mosque in Edmonton Alberta, Canada was expected to be the first Mosque ...
Posted in Africa, African American, Black Britain, Black History, Colonialism, Europe, Middle East, Politics, Racism, Slavery, The Americas
Posted on 15 December 2011. Tags: Leeds, Literary Prize, SI Leeds, diversity, ethnic writing, writers

SI Leeds Literary Prize is a new award for unpublished fiction by Black and Asian women resident in the UK aged 18 years and over. The prize has been created and is being run by Soroptimist International of Leeds, in partnership with two well established and highly regarded literary organisations, the Ilkley Literature Festival and independent publishers Peepal Tree Press. ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Black History, Black Writing, Books, Caribbean, Community, Education, Poetry
Posted on 14 December 2011. Tags: D DAY, Forgotten war, Imperial War Museum, Malaya, VE day, asian soldiers, billy strachan, black airmen, black soldiers, bomber command, lancaster bombers, war commonwealth

Wed, May 3 1995 - Guardian
In the early years of the war Britain made frequent requests for help from its colonies. One man to respond was Billy Strachan. Like most Jamaicans at the time he regarded Britain as his homeland, and enlisting it seemed a natural option. "I went to the British Army camp in ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Black History, Black History Month, Caribbean, Colonialism, Education, Europe, Men, Military, Racism, War, Women
Posted on 13 December 2011. Tags: Black Footballers in Britain, Black Mayors, Black Politicians, Doug Brown, Garth Crooks, Ghana, Lads n Dads, Roy Brown, Stoke City

Doug & Roy Brown's father, Eugene and his brother John came to England from the Ghana, West Africa, they were students. They decided to join the British Army when WW1 boke out. Â John was killed and Eugene badly injured but after the war he got married and had two sons. Â Eugene later died of his ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Black History, Community, Education, Football, Men, Military, Politics, War
Posted on 14 November 2011. Tags: Black, Futures, Judge, Law, Legal, Students, University

****LEGAL FUTURES 2011 - BURSARIES AVAILABLE!!!*****
The LEGAL FUTURES 2011, the national law careers conference for ethnic minority students, will take place on Saturday 19 November at City University.
Confirmed speakers include:
Joshua Rozenberg Journalist, Broadcaster & Legal Commentator
Urvasi Naidoo Solicitor and Chief Executive, International Federation of Netball Associations
Tim Ward QC Barrister, Monckton Chambers
Michelle Egbosimba Solicitor, Ashurst LLP
Debra ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Community, Education, Politics
Posted on 26 October 2011. Tags: African British, Black Britain, Black British, Black British History Education Event, Black History

Dear Friends,
I hope you will be interested in an event that is taking place in two weeks time, on Tuesday 8th November at the Institute of Education in the University of London.
The general picture of Black British history in our schools and universities is still very bleak. There are only two universities where we know ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Black History, Black History Month, Caribbean, Colonialism, Community, Education, Europe, Slavery
Posted on 24 October 2011. Tags: Black History, Caribbean, Jobs, national portrait gallery

The National Portrait Gallery houses a unique collection of all forms of portraiture of the people who have made or who are currently contributing to British history and culture. With more than 1.8 million visitors each year, the Gallery is one of the country’s most important and popular galleries.
Â
Faith, Slavery and Identity Programme Internship
Fixed-term for 6 ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Black History, Caribbean, Job Vacancies
Posted on 24 October 2011. Tags: Africans in Britain, Black Britain, Black British, Nigerian Lifestyle Awards, Nigerians in Britain

NIGERIAN ENTERTAINMENT & LIFESTYLE AWARDS
Attend the NEL Awards on 28 October 2011 and join the nominees, stars, dignitaries and special guests of honour such as Jeffery Daniel (Shalamar & Nigerian Idol), Timi Dakolo (winner of West African Idol), Yeka Onka (winner of Nigerian Idol) current and previous Beauty Queens (including Miss Nigeria) for a night ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Black History, Black History Month, Entertainment, Lifestyle
Posted on 21 October 2011. Tags: African Americans, Malcom X, by any means necessary, race, the nation of Islam

Malcolm X (May 19, 1925 – February 21, 1965), born Malcolm Little and also known as El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, was an African American Muslim Minister and Human Rights Activist. To his admirers he was a courageous advocate for the Rights of African Americans, a man who indicted White America in the harshest terms for its ...
Posted in Africa, African American, Black Britain, Black History, Community, Middle East, Racism, The Americas
Posted on 21 October 2011. Tags: Bob Marley, Duppy conquerer, Jamaica, Lee Perry, Peter Tosh, Small axe, reggae

Peter Tosh, born Winston Hubert McIntosh (19 October 1944 – 11 September 1987), was a Jamaican reggae musician who was a core member of the band The Wailers (1963–1974), and who afterward had a successful solo career as well as being a promoter of Rastafari.
Genres: Reggae, ska, rocksteady, R&B
Peter Tosh (also known as Stepping Razor) ...
Posted in Africa, African American, Caribbean, Entertainment, Music, Politics, Religion, Slavery, The Americas, Video
Posted on 20 October 2011.

The National Portrait Gallery houses a unique collection of all forms of portraiture of the people who have made or who are currently contributing to British history and culture. With more than 1.8 million visitors each year, the Gallery is one of the country’s most important and popular galleries.
Faith, Slavery and Identity Programme Internship
Fixed-term for ...
Posted in Africa, Caribbean, Slavery
Posted on 03 October 2011. Tags: African American, Black British, Black History, Cuffe, Native american, Sierra Leone, Whalers

(NEW BEDFORD, Mass.) — It took nearly two hundred years but New Bedford now has a lasting tribute to Captain Paul Cuffe in the form of a park, dedicated today in his honor at the southern foot of historic Johnny Cake Hill.
Paul Cuffe (1759-1817) was the free-born son of an African father and a Native ...
Posted in Africa, African American, Black Britain, Black History, Black History Month, Men, Racism, Slavery, The Americas
Posted on 29 September 2011. Tags: Emperor of Ethiopia, Haile Selassie

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ras_Tafari
Haile Selassie I (Ge'ez: , "Power of the Trinity") (23 July 1892 – 27 August 1975), born Tafari Makonnen, was Ethiopia's Regent from 1916 to 1930, and Emperor of Ethiopia from 1930 to 1974. The Heir to a Dynasty that traced its origins to the 13th Century, and from there, by Tradition, back to King ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Black History, Colonialism, Military, Racism, Religion, War
Posted on 24 September 2011. Tags: Apartheid, Pretoria, South Africa, War, terrorism

lsrael's ties with South Africa seem to be especially disturbing to many who follow Israel's international activities. Perhaps it is natural that Israel has been castigated more harshly for its arms sales to South Africa than for its sales to other countries: first, because there has been for a decade an arms embargo against South ...
Posted in Africa, African American, Black Britain, Black History, Colonialism, Education, Racism, Slavery
Posted on 23 September 2011. Tags: Idi Amin, Israel, Mosad, Uganda, War

Revealed: how Israel helped Amin to take power
By Richard Dowden
Sunday, 17 August 2003
When Radio Uganda announced at dawn on 25 January 1971 that Idi Amin was Uganda's new ruler, many people suspected that Britain had a hand in the coup. However, Foreign Office papers released last year point to a different conspirator: Israel.
When Radio Uganda ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Colonialism, Middle East, Military
Posted on 22 September 2011. Tags: Africa, East African, Islam, Pirates, Somalia, Warlords

A plausible etymology proposes that the term Somali is derived from the Arabic for "Wealthy" (dhawamaal), referring to Somali riches in Livestock. The history of Islam in the Horn of Africa is as old as the religion itself. The early persecuted Muslims fled to the Axumite port city of Zeila in present-day Somalia to seek ...
Posted in Africa, Black History, Colonialism, Middle East, War
Posted on 15 September 2011. Tags: African shaman, Credo Mutwa, Religion, South Africa

http://credomutwa.com/about/biography-07/
http://credomutwa.com/about/
Credo Mutwa:
Vusamazulu Credo Mutwa, born on 21 July 1921 in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa is a Zulu Sangoma (Traditional Healer) and High Sanusi. He is well known and respected for his work in nature conservation, and as an author of ground breaking books on African mythology and spiritual beliefs. Some of his work has led to ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Black History, Colonialism, Slavery
Posted on 15 September 2011. Tags: Africans, Libya, Libyans, Tawergha, War

Representative Jesse Jackson, Jr., reacting to reports in The Wall Street Journal has called for an investigation by the International Criminal Court into the reported killings of Black Libyans in the city of Tawergha.
Rep. Jackson also tells The Black Star News he will ask that U.S. assistance for reconstruction and transition to democracy in Libya be conditional. The Wall Street ...
Posted in Africa, Black History, Men, Middle East, Politics, Racism, Women
Posted on 15 September 2011. Tags: Apostasy, Islam, Khartoum, Sudan

129 People Charged with Apostasy in South Khartoum: Maximum Sentence is the Death Penalty
(14 September 2011) On 29 July 2011, 150 people were arrested by police in Hay Mayo, South Khartoum. All are members of the Hausa ethnic group and from Darfur. While 21 individuals (children and the elderly) were immediately released, 129 were subsequently ...
Posted in Africa, Community, Religion
Posted on 12 September 2011. Tags: Bondu, Niagra, Pierpont, black Loyalists, senegal, slave

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Pierpoint
Richard Pierpoint (Senegal 1744 - Canada 1838), also known as Black Dick and Captain Dick, was born about 1744 in Bondu, Senegal.
When he was about sixteen he was captured and sold as a Slave. He survived the crossing of the Atlantic and was sold in New York to a British Officer named Pierpoint. It was ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Black History, Military, The Americas, War
Posted on 06 August 2011. Tags: Digital, Events, Migrants, blunkett, manzoor, winder

E-Migration: Â Migrants in the Digital Age
RSA on 25th October at 6.30 pmÂ
Immigration used to involve packing an entire life into a suitcase and moving to a new country for good. Now, with modern communications and transport, it is far more fluid and dynamic. Modern migrants need not lose contact with their old homes; they can ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Black History, Community, Education, Europe, Events
Posted on 05 August 2011. Tags: African American Tennis stars, Arthur Ashe, Black Tennis Players

Arthur Robert Ashe, Jr. (July 10, 1943 – February 6, 1993) was a professional Tennis player, born and raised in Richmond, Virginia. During his career, he won three Grand Slam Titles, putting him among the best ever from the United States.
Ashe, an African American, is also remembered for his efforts to further Social Causes.
Tired of ...
Posted in Africa, African American, Black History, Sports, Tennis
Posted on 21 July 2011.

http://clutchmagonline.com/2011/06/is-hollywood-courting-slavery/
Is Hollywood Courting Slavery?
Thursday Jun 16, 2011 – by Black Voices
— Slave stories might become the new 'Black' in Hollywood.
Today, the Shadow And Act film blog revealed that Paris-based Other Angle Pictures picked up a French slavery comedy for international distribution. ‘Case Départ’ is scheduled for a July 6 release in France and with the ...
Posted in Africa, African American, Arts, Black History, Caribbean, Colonialism, Entertainment, Media, Racism, Slavery, The Americas, Women
Posted on 01 July 2011.

http://hubpages.com/hub/bloodlines
"Credo Mutwa, the Official Historian of the Zulu Nation, told me how so many Black African leaders that were placed in Power after the Colonial Masters gave the Continent 'independence', came from the Bloodlines of African Kings and Queens who claimed to descend from the same 'Gods' as their White counterparts." -David Icke, "Tales from ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Black History, Colonialism, Science, Slavery