London commemorates the Windrush generation with statues

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London Honors the Caribbean Migrants of the Windrush Generation With Two New Public Monuments​


The monuments have been installed at Waterloo Station and outside Hackney Town Hall.

June 23, 2022

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The National Windrush Monument at Waterloo Station in London. Photo courtesy of the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities.



Two major public sculptures were unveiled yesterday in London to honor the Windrush Generation, the hundreds of thousands of West Indian migrants who moved to the U.K. in the decades after World War II.
A large bronze monument depicting new arrivals from the Caribbean standing on suitcases, by the Jamaican artist Basil Watson, was inaugurated at Waterloo Station. In the London borough of Hackney, Warm Shores, two standalone sculptures by Thomas J. Price, were installed outside the town hall.

The works were made public on Windrush Day, which was first introduced on June 22, 2018, to commemorate the Caribbean arrivals, including those on the Empire Windrush ship that docked in 1948. They made major contributions to the rebuilding of postwar Britain but also faced discrimination.
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The National Windrush Monument at Waterloo Station in London. Photo courtesy of the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities.
The official National Windrush Monument by Basil Watson is intended to convey the courage, commitment, and resilience of those who migrated to start new lives in the U.K. between 1948 and 1971, when the Immigration Act was introduced. The work was made possible through £1 million funding from the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities.
“My parents, along with a great many others, took the long arduous voyage from the Caribbean with very little or nothing other than their aspirations, their courage, and a promise of opportunity for advancement,” said Watson. “Despite many challenges, they spread their culture across Britain influencing many aspects of society.”
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Thomas J. Price in front of Warm Shores (2022) outside Hackney Town Hall. Photo: Damian Griffiths.
Thomas J. Price won the Hackney Windrush Art Commission in 2020 for his proposal to depict the Windrush Generation and their descendants. In May 2021, he invited Hackney residents with a personal connection to Windrush to be digitally photographed with a 3D-scanning device. The information gathered about clothing, features, and stature were all used in composite to inform the final two large-scale bronze sculptures of a man and a woman.
“It is important that my figures are not placed on plinths, to disrupt a sense of hierarchy that surrounds many public monuments,” said Price. “They exist amongst the public and daily life and are an extension of the people who inhabit these spaces.”
 

jj23

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I don't know what that policy is. But it's a good point.
Lot of descendants of windrush immigrants were being deported back to Caribbean countries even though they never lived there. Wicked shyt...



 

DaRealness

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I'm supposed to accept someone making me a sandwich after burning down my kitchen. They think we're fukking stupid. They should compensate the people and their families for the Windrush scandals for a start.
 

Amo Husserl

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I'm supposed to accept someone making me a sandwich after burning down my kitchen. They think we're fukking stupid. They should compensate the people and their families for the Windrush scandals for a start.
Why all of a sudden is all this money and commemoration considered in countries entrenched in racism?
A sudden change of heart, no.
They always come with an agenda. What is this one?
 
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Here is the thing, the people in the trenches fighting against injustice are still there. They were passed the baton by the previous generations of Caribbean activists, and they will groom the next generation of fighters.
Every few decades, masses of people join in the calls for justice that these people are out fighting everyday. Sometimes that energy creates momentum, but when the masses leave they will still be there fighting.
Commemorations will not deter, slow down, or derail them.

As an outsider, I see some significance in attempting to correct History. The imagery on monuments and currency reveal who and what a nation attaches value to.
 

jj23

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We also need to separate who did it. Was it the government? Or the mayor of London?

They have two very distinct views on the Windrush subject.


Edit. Government funding. Wicked people. Also remember this wasn't just Boris Johnson, this started under David Cameron when Theresa May was home secretary.

Utterly wicked.
 

DaRealness

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I'm thinking there's something underhanded going on, why all of a sudden is all this money and commemoration being considered in countries that are entrenched in racism? I can't think it's a sudden change of heart, they've always come with an agenda toward us. What's this one?

There's ALWAYS an agenda.

I can't care about shyt like this when you got black children being illegally strip searched and humiliated in schools just based on an accusation from a racist teacher, or black boys being roughed up and handled like grown men on the streets while minding their business. Deal with the REAL issues that actually affect us on a day to day then go and build some statue.

 

Amo Husserl

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There's ALWAYS an agenda.

I can't care about shyt like this when you got black children being illegally strip searched and humiliated in schools just based on an accusation from a racist teacher, or black boys being roughed up and handled like grown men on the streets while minding their business. Deal with the REAL issues that actually affect us on a day to day then go and build some statue.


.
 
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