Friday, 22 February 2013

Britain's Black Debt

On Wednesday evening (20/02/2013), The London Metropolitan Archives/Friends of The Huntley's hosted the first Huntley Symposium.
The guest speaker on the evening was Professor Sir Hilary Beckles and the subject matter was reparations. This is the issue which Professor Beckles latest book "Britain's Black Debt" tackles.
As most members of the African Caribbean communities will realise, this is a very contentious issue for us. It is one of those discussions which finds families polarised on either side of the argument. It is the kind of issue which seems irreconcilable. On either side we have people for whom this is a clear cut situation, there are very few that hold the middle ground.
I support the view that Britain and all those nations, religions and other institutions which participated in the enslavement and dehumanisation of Afrikans at home and abroad, should make it their duty to begin to repair the damage their ancestors have done.
Professor Beckles highlighted a case; the Lascelles family from England (commoners) went to the WestIndies in the 17th century, to "make their fortunes." This they succeeded in doing, in fact they became one of the largest shippers and owners of enslaved Afrikans in Britain. This also made them he wealthiest commoner family in England. Their prize was first; acceptance into the aristocracy, with Edwin Lascelles taking the title Earl of Harewood and second; marriage into royalty.
In 1759 work was started on Harewood House, Leeds; the constructiion of which took 12 years.
By the beginning of the 18th century, this family had holdings in Jamaica, Barbados, Tobago and Grenada. In Barbados they ran the Bell Plantation which they eventually relinquished in 1975.
This is living proof that slavery is not something of the dim past, but a clear and present issue

What makes a Black man into a serial killer?


 
Colin Ferguson (born January 14, 1958) is a mass murderer who was convicted of murdering six people and injuring nineteen others on the Long Island Rail Road in Garden City, New York.
On December 7, 1993, as the train pulled into the Merillon Avenue Station, Ferguson pulled out his gun and started firing at passengers. He killed six and wounded nineteen before being stopped by three of the passengers: Kevin Blum, Mark McEntee and Mike O'Connor. Ferguson's trial was notable for a number of unusual developments, including his firing of his defense counsel and insisting on representing himself and questioning his own victims on the stand.
Ferguson was convicted on February 17, 1995, of murder for the deaths of the six passengers who died of their injuries. He was also convicted of attempted murder for wounding nineteen passengers. As of 2013, he is serving his sentence of 315 years and 8 months to life at the Upstate Correctional Facility in Franklin County, New York.[1] His earliest possible parole date is August 6, 2309.[2]

Colin Ferguson was born in Kingston, Jamaica

source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colin_Ferguson_(mass_murderer)
accessed on 22/02/2013 14:18  

This year Christopher Dorner became the second infamous "Mass Murderer" of Afrikan descent in the USA. It is worth pointing out that both men sited ongoing racism as a contributory factor in their mental ill-health, which led to them taking the lives of others. Neither tried to deny their crime if a crime it be. The intolerable pressure placed on Afrikans in the West makes it quite amazing that more of us haven't taken similar action. As Leonardo DeCaprio's character in Django Unchained stated, if white people had been treated as brutally by another group of people they would have killed them all at the very first opportunity. 
Our inbreed compassion has usually led to us internalising our pain and when it eventually surfaces we do harm to members of our own families.

Tribute to Augustus Pablo

InI had the pleasure of sitting in with veteran reggae vocalist, the reggae ambassador, Earl Sixteen. Also in the Omega Radio 104.1FM studio with InI were Jah Youth, Magishi Delroy Washington and Jah T. All of these brothers had come to pay tribute to a musical legend, none other than the great Horace (Augustus Pablo) Swaby.


From left to right:
rear: Ras Magishi; Jah Youth (Roots Ambassador); Jah T (Original Rockers)
front: Delroy Washington; Sista Benji; Earl Sixteen

For those who remember the early Rockers sound, this was indeed a musical treat.
Artists such as Hugh Mundell; Jacob Miller; Paul Blackman; Earl Zero;


Melkem Genna

In praise of the creator InI gathered in North London at The African Caribbean Centre. Reggae  People had brought together a high quality line up of Culturally aware performers. Jah Youth Sound, The Roots Ambassador featuring the uplifting vibes of Prince LivIjah, Lioness Fonts. Rudy Gad and a very special guest appearance from our cultural defender MackaB. Alongside, we had the pleasure of the year to year sound of sounds GemiMagic and Conscious FM's Queen of Roots Sister Joseph. The night can only be described as electrifying. As ever the word went out and great was the company of those that published it. Genna 2006 (2013) started in a blaze of glory.