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Britain to get official slavery remembrance day

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Britain to get official slavery remembrance day DAY: Slavery to be remembered every August



Black campaign groups have welcomed news that Britain is to have an official National Slavery and Abolition Memorial Day.

The event will be marked on August 23 every year, and school children will be learning about slavery in schools from next September.

Campaign groups, along with trade unions and some officials in cities such as Liverpool and London, had fought for years to get an annual day to remember the horror of slavery. They also wanted school children to be taught about the atrocity, called the African holocaust by black campaigners.

Making the announcement last week, the Communities and Local Government office said: "A strong theme to come out this year (the 200th Anniversary of the Act to Abolish the Transatlantic Slave Trade) was the need to remember abolition in future years. In addition to the August date for national commemorations, the history and impact of the slave trade will become a compulsory element in schools from next September."

Kofi Klu, joint coordinator at Rendezvous of Victory, a grassroots organisation which had campaigned for both a memorial day and slavery as a compulsory school subject, told The Voice:

"It signals that the Government has been listening to the voices of the grass roots and have taken that into account. It augurs well for the future, although much has to be done."

August 23 is also the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization's (UNESCO) International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition, observed throughout the world.

A Communities and Local Government spokesperson told The Voice that the Government, which has so far refused to apologise for slavery despite the fact that Britain benefited from the atrocity, had not set aside a specific budget to mark the annual slavery memorial day.

Instead, he said groups looking to mark August 23 can apply to the Heritage Lottery Fund, the Big Lottery Fund, and Arts Council England for support.

Published: 17 December 2007
Issue: 1300

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