Posted on 14 September 2011. Tags: Birmingham, Jamani, Jamma, Panorama, Trinidad, UK, culture, lbands, pan, steelpans, tobago, trini

The Birmingham school of Pan founded and Managed byJamma gives the youngsters a chance to do a lot of team work, also gives the parents in the community a chance to get involved, playing pan, percussion instruments, making food & Costumes for the band. bringing the True culture of the Steelbands ofTrinidad and Tobago to ...
Posted in Black History, Education, Environment, Music
Posted on 06 August 2011. Tags: Digital, Events, Migrants, blunkett, manzoor, winder

E-Migration: Migrants in the Digital Age
RSA on 25th October at 6.30 pm
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 27 July 2011. Tags: African American, Black Hair, Hair, Juliette Samuel, NAHA, biracial, butters, hair oil, natural hair care

Black Hair Care – Caring for Biracial Hair
By Juliette Samuel
Biracial Hair Care Tips
Every day, our world gets smaller. Not in the sense that the Earth is shrinking in size, but in terms of cultural and racial borders. Because we are able to travel more, we are exposed to many other cultures…and the opportunity to fall ...
Posted in Beauty & Fashion, Black Britain, Caribbean, Community, Education, Health, Lifestyle, Men, Women
Posted on 27 July 2011. Tags: Aquitted, Courts, Covent Garden, Jeffery Morat, Murat, Murder, Old Bailey, William Bosham, black constable, negro, thomas Latham

When searching the Records for The evidence of Early Black settlers in Britain. Evidence is to be found everywhere. It just needs searching out. the Old Bailey Website is an excellent source of records for evidence of Black people, living in Britain before the 20th Century.
Here are some examples.
Black people in the Old Bailey
William Bosham ...
Posted in Black Britain, Black History, Black History Month, Education, Europe, Law and Order, Men
Posted on 05 July 2011.

Call for Papers
Writing Slavery after Beloved
Literature, Historiography, Criticism
International Symposium
Université de Nantes – France
March 16-17, 2012
Can Toni Morrison’s Beloved (1987) be considered as a watershed in the contemporary representations of slavery and the slave trade, not only in the literary field, but also in historiography and Cultural Studies? This Symposium will attempt to assess whether this major ...
Posted in Black History, Black Writing, Colonialism, Community, Education, Europe, Slavery, Students
Posted on 04 July 2011. Tags: Black Doctors, Black Nurses, Black People in Health Care, Doctor, Hospitals, Nurse

1861: Anderson Ruffin Abbott (7 April 1837 – 29 December 1913) was the first Black Canadian to become a physician after being granted a medical licence from the medical board of Upper Canada in 1861.
1862: Washington, D.C.: Freedmen's Hospital is established & is the only Federally-funded health care facility for Negroes in the nation. 1864: ...
Posted in African American, Black Britain, Black History, Black History Month, Caribbean, Community, Education, Europe, Health, Men, Military, Racism, Science, Students, The Americas, War, 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
Posted on 27 June 2011. Tags: Black Hair, Hair styles in school, School admissions, St Gregory's Catholic Science College, black hairstyles for men, cornrows, court case, school uniform policy

Recently An Afro-Caribbean teenager has won a ruling that St Gregory's Catholic Science College in Kenton, Harrow, north London was applying a cornrows ban in a way which amounted to "unjustified" indirect racial discrimination.
The Schools decision to ban hairstyles it says have become associated with gang culture has resulted in the boy being excluded from school, in September ...
Posted in Black Britain, Black History, Caribbean, Community, Education, Europe, Law and Order, Men, News, Politics, Racism, Students
Posted on 24 June 2011. Tags: Colonialism, Julius Silver, Politics, Robert J.C. Young, Rumina Sethi, postcolonialism, third world

A strong argument for returning the focus of postcolonial studies to its roots as a tool for political activism among people of the third world.
The Politics of Postcolonialism: Empire, Nation and Resistance
Rumina Sethi
Released July 4th 2011
PB / £ 17.99 / 9780745323633 / 215mm x 135mm / 192 pp
Rumina Sethi challenges postcolonial critics to put their ...
Posted in Africa, Books, Caribbean, Colonialism, Community, Education, Europe, Men, Military, Politics, Racism, Students, The Americas, Women
Posted on 22 June 2011. Tags: Blue Plaque, Camden, George Padmore, Pan african

Date: Tuesday 28 June
Venue: 22 Cranleigh Street, Camden, london NW11BD
Time: 1.00pm
Tube: Mornington Crescent, Euston
GEORGE PADMORE COMMEMORATIVE PLAQUE
One of the most influential political thinkers of the 20th century is to be commemorated this summer with a heritage plaque in North London . Cranleigh Street in Camden will be the site of the capital’s latest blue plaque, ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Black History, Blackpresence Supports, Community, Education, Events
Posted on 21 June 2011. Tags: CULTURE & COMMUNICATION IN HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE, Conference, communication, culture, language

CULTURE & COMMUNICATION IN HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE
1st July 2011 / London
This one day conference will consider a number of issues which require consideration in order to be able to communicate effectively across cultures. Styles of communication can vary in several ways. Examples include the extent to which communication is implicit versus explicit, the extent ...
Posted in Black Britain, Community, Education, Events, Health
Posted on 21 June 2011. Tags: Angela Davis, Jailhouse lawyers, Mumia Abu Jamal, Prisoners

From death row in Pennsylvania, launch of a new book in the UK
cc
JAILHOUSE LAWYERS
PRISONERS DEFENDING PRISONERS v THE USA
By Mumia Abu-Jamal
Foreword by Angela Y. Davis,
Introduction by Selma James
Published by Crossroads Books
Price: £11.99 Free to Prisoners.
(See order form below.)
Donations welcome
to help cover costs.
Launch events in Manchester, Liverpool and London
Thursday 30 ...
Posted in African American, Black History, Books, Education, Entertainment, Men, Women
Posted on 20 June 2011. Tags: Academics, Black Professors, Brunell, Goulbourne, Leeds University, London, London Metropolitan, Nottingham, Osler, Racism, Universities

The Guardians Education Correspondent, Jessica Shepherd wrote at the end of May:
Call from leading black academics that an urgent culture change is needed at UK universities as figures reveal just 50 black British professors out of more than 14,000, and the number has barely changed in eight years, according to data from the Higher Education ...
Posted in Black Britain, Black History, Caribbean, Education, Europe, Job Vacancies, Men, News, Racism, Women
Posted on 31 May 2011. Tags: African American, Alaska, Icebreaker, Irish American, Michael Augustine Healy, Siberian Reindeer, USRC Bear, mixed race

Michael Healy -- Cabin-Boy who sailed on the American East Indian Clipper Jumna in England in 1854. He quickly became an expert Seaman, and rose to the Rank of Officer on Merchant vessels.
He became the first African-American to Command a ship of the United States Government.
Michael Augustine Healy (September 22, 1839 – August 30, 1904), ...
Posted in African American, Black History, Education, Men, Military, Racism, Slavery, The Americas
Posted on 05 May 2011. Tags: Black Musicians, Bournemouth Symphony, Composor, Croydon Conservatory Orchestra, Crystal Palace School of Music and Art, Rochester Choral Society, Samuel Coleridge Taylor, black composer, hiawathas Feast

Samuel Coleridge Taylor, not to be mistaken with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, was, at the turn of the last Century one of Britain's most outstanding Composers. Samuel Coleridge Taylor, not to be mistaken with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the writer, is today almost completely forgotten. However, he was, at the turn of the Century one of Britain's ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Black History, Black History Month, Education, Entertainment, Men, Music
Posted on 04 May 2011. Tags: Books, Slavery, Thames & Hudson, Walvin

When I was asked to review "The Slave Trade" By James Walvin, It was with some trepidation because I had read many books on the Slave Trade during my time as a student and expected some weighty and wordy tome. That would have to be waded through and then deciphered before I could even begin to think of writing ...
Posted in Black Britain, Black History, Black History Month, Books, Caribbean, Education, Europe, Men, Slavery, Students, The Americas, Women
Posted on 28 April 2011. Tags: Cleao Laine, Dankworth, Jazz, Music, Singers, Vocal, musical

Cleo Lain was one of Britains Biggest names in Jazz. She was part of the hugely successful British band led by the acclaimed John Dankworth.
Cleo Laine had modest beginnings as a singer in English dance halls, She has gone on to achieve international fame by continually expanding her talents in a career which spans some ...
Posted in Black Britain, Black History, Caribbean, Education, Entertainment, Music, Women
Posted on 27 April 2011. Tags: Coltan, Congo, cell phones

The Continent of Africa is the Birthplace of all Humanity.
{ The place where Lightning occurs most often is near the small village of Kifuka in the mountains of Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, where the elevation is around 975 metres (3,200 ft). The tiny Town of Kifuka in the Democratic Republic of the ...
Posted in Africa, Black History, Education, Finance, Lifestyle
Posted on 27 April 2011. Tags: Beethoven, Bridgetower, Sonata, Violin, african prince, bridgetown, polgreen, polish

The talented African violin prodigy George Polgreen Bridgetower was born in Biala, Poland on February 29, 1780.
His father, John fredeerick Bridgetower, The "African Prince" was married to a German woman who is named in English documents as Mary Ann Bridgetown. They had two sons, who both became fine musicians. The younger brother, Fredrick, was a ...
Posted in Africa, Arts, Black Britain, Black History, Education, Entertainment, Europe, Men, Music
Posted on 18 April 2011. Tags: Canada, Fox News, Quebec, Racism

August 9, 2010 - It's like the damn Planet of the Apes. Nothing Makes Sense, said Fox News Glenn Beck in a recent rant against President Obama and the America he has created. It was one of the angriest and most thinly veiled racist rants in recent history but simply a continuation of his ...
Posted in African American, Black Blog Posts, Black History, Education, Media, The Americas
Posted on 14 April 2011. Tags: Conservative, David Cameron, David Lammy, Education, Oxford University

The Prime Minister , David Cameron this week criticised Oxford University for only admitting One black student in 2010, a figure Oxford University dispute,
Mr Cameron was answering questions from members of the public at a "PM Direct" event in Harrogate in North Yorkshire.
"I saw figures the other day that showed that only one black person ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Caribbean, Community, Education, News, Politics
Posted on 30 March 2011. Tags: NHS, TB, Tuberculosis, blood, coughing, disease, germs, nightsweats, symptoms, tiredness, weight loss

HPA North West and partners launch TB Awareness-Raising Campaign
As the resurgence of tuberculosis that began in the 1980s continues at local and national levels, the Health Protection Agency (HPA) North West, NHS North West, the charity TB Alert and the region’s Primary Care Trusts are launching a campaign to raise awareness of the disease.
The campaign ...
Posted in Black Britain, Community, Education, Health, Lifestyle, Men, News, Women
Posted on 28 March 2011. Tags: African food, East African Food, Food, recipe, recipes, soup, sweet pea

2 cups chopped onion
2 tsp minced garlic
1 tsp grated fresh peeled ginger
1 tsp salt
1/4 tsp cayenne pepper
1 tbsp homemade garam masala, which we happened to have on hand, OR
1/2 tsp ground black pepper
1 tsp ground coriander seeds
1 tsp ground cumin seeds
1/4 tsp ground cardamom
1/8 tsp ground cloves
1/4 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp turmeric
2 tomatoes, chopped
1 sweet potato, ...
Posted in Africa, Black History, Community, Education, Food, Health
Posted on 24 March 2011. Tags: Black History, British History, Civil Rights, Civil Rights movement in Britain, Martin Luther King, No blacks, Paul Stephenson, US Civil Rights movement, no dogs, no irish

History classes in the National Curriculum will often gloss over slavery, idolize the efforts of William Wilberforce and study the methods of Martin Luther King’s struggle for civil rights. For many young Black people in Britain, one would argue that it is very easy for them to recall the names of US Civil Rights icons, better ...
Posted in African American, Black Britain, Black History, Community, Education, Europe, Politics, Racism, Students, The Americas
Posted on 24 March 2011. Tags: Black people in villages, Midsomer, ethnic minorities

Brian True-May, the Co-writer of the hit T.V series "Midsomer Murders" has recently defended the fact that the show has an all white cast. Describing the show as " A Last bastion of Englishness" before stating that he felt it should stay that way.
Personally I think he's talking tripe. Having grown up in ...
Posted in Arts, Community, Education, Entertainment, Environment, Media, Racism