Black History Month needs a wider focus | Letter

British colonial exploitation affected many countries, and the descendants of those who suffered should also have the opportunity to explore and criticise it, writes Peter Rowlands

Benjamin Zephaniah (Black people will not be respected until our history is respected, 12 October) says of Linda Bellos, who introduced the first Black History Month (BHM) in Britain in 1987, that “when she used the term ‘black’, it was political, and not a reference to skin colour”. That is, she meant what we would now call black, Asian and minority ethnic. However, BHM has largely focused on black African, Caribbean and American history, particularly this year with Black Lives Matter and the emphasis on slavery.

Yet surely Bellos was right. While the evil of slavery was inflicted, by those from Britain, exclusively on black Africans, the history of colonial exploitation by Britain is much bigger – in terms of its duration and scale, and of the wealth and populations involved – in the countries that came under the British Raj, than in Africa or elsewhere. That is not to minimise the effect of slavery. However, the descendants of those who suffered under the Raj are in effect denied the opportunity to explore and criticise this history that BHM provides for those of black African descent. The situation needs to be rectified.
Peter Rowlands
Swansea

Letters

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Britain’s despicable history of slavery needs teaching and commemorating | Letters
Letters: Guardian readers respond to Afua Hirsch’s call for a London memorial to the victims of slavery

Letters

24, Oct, 2019 @5:05 PM

Article image
Widen the remit of Black History Month | Letter
Letter: It is important that anti-racism campaigns are inclusive of all people of colour, writes Tara Mistry

Letters

20, Oct, 2020 @5:04 PM

Article image
The debt that Britain still owes for slavery | Letters
Letters: Mary Ruck on the forced labour endured by Kenyans during the 1950s state of emergency, Dr Charmian Goldwyn on today’s inequalities, Fawzi Ibrahim on the downside to reparations and James Heartfield on Lord Palmerston’s acknowledgment of Britain’s debt to Africa. Plus letters from Norman Miller and John Pelling

Letters

12, Jul, 2020 @4:21 PM

Article image
It’s vital to teach black British history in schools | Letter
Letters: Marika Sherwood on why this missing history must be put on the curriculum for students and teachers

Letters

13, Jan, 2020 @5:41 PM

Article image
Britain’s role in keeping the slave trade alive | Letters
Letters: Simon Kennedy, Paul Roper and Mona Williams respond to an article by Michael Taylor. Plus Gillian Corcoran on the slavery links of National Trust properties

Letters

23, Jun, 2020 @4:44 PM

Article image
British history should not be treated as a ‘soft play area’, says David Olusoga
Writer and broadcaster says teaching about the past must not be a way of making people feel good about themselves

Richard Adams Education editor

19, Jun, 2022 @5:22 PM

Article image
A rewrite of the history syllabus is long overdue | Letters
Letters: Calls for more inclusive teaching in schools have been ignored for years, writes Marika Sherwood, one of the founders of the Black and Asian Studies Association. Stewart Fergusson reminds us of Gove’s response to an expert review. Plus letters from Maria Goulding, Alan Jenkins and Belinda King

Letters

14, Jun, 2020 @5:30 PM

Article image
A word about institutional racism in Britain | Letter
Letter: Dr Steve Cushion on the thoughtless use of terms like ‘plantation’ by companies

Letters

30, Oct, 2022 @5:28 PM

Article image
We can’t ignore how slavery has shaped Britain | Letters
Letters: Readers respond to Olivette Otele’s article about how the culture war is impeding truthful reflection on the country’s difficult history

Letters

24, Aug, 2022 @3:58 PM

Article image
Removing the statue of Black Lives Matter activist Jen Reid was a mistake | Letters
Letters: Jon Bloomfield on claims that the statue is an appropriation, because the artist is white, Lyn Howard on what the empty plinth now says, while Clive Sykes has a suggestion

Letters

17, Jul, 2020 @3:59 PM