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SI Leeds Literary Prize is a new award for unpublished fiction by Black and Asian women resident in the UK aged 18 years and over.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 29 April 2009. Tags: Adoption, Black, Blacks, British, Colonies, Death, England, Environment, Events, Literature, Markets, Nationalism, Racism, Tradition, Women, actors, comedy, nigeria, writers

Is death the start of the human journey or its end? Is mortality a transition from one sphere of our existence to another - the recurring cycle of life, death and rebirth? From Nobel Literature Laureate Wole Soyinka’s versatile prose emerges a mournful piece of theatre, which isn’t in fear of difficult themes of life ...
Posted in Arts, Black Britain, Black Writing, Blackpresence Supports, Community, Entertainment, Events
Posted on 28 March 2009. Tags: Black, Black Britain, Black Film, Black akers, Blacks, Britain, British, Caribbean, Caribbeans, Derby, Films, London, News, Opera, Police, TV, actors, film, stories, writers

Tuesday 11.30am March 31st & April 7th 2009 BBC Radio 4 and on BBC i-player for 7 days after broadcast
Programme 1: Less than 50 years ago a passionate bedroom kiss between a white man and a black woman in a popular television soap opera was the stuff of tabloid headlines. So risque that, in ...
Posted in Africa, Arts, Black Britain, Community, Education, Europe, Men, Music, Politics, Racism, Women
Posted on 18 March 2009. Tags: Literature, Poetry, Police, SUS laws, Stop and Search, black writers, raymondobe, short stories, writers, writing

Same old Same old
The Streets are always watching.
That night,as I lay on my bed listening to the dogs bark,
I began to wonder how much more I could take, and I began to get a terrible feeling inside my chest and a tightness at the back of my throat, and I jerked upright with my head spinning and stared into the ...
Posted in Africa, Arts, Black Britain, Black Writing, Blackpresence Supports, Books, Community, Education, Europe, Politics, Racism