Celebrating Black History Month | News

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Celebrating Black History Month

Natalie, please tell us about yourself and why you chose to work at MST?  

I chose to work at MST as it was a new and exciting project a trial to find out if MST  could be adapted to work in the UK . Cathy James, myself and other colleagues like Nick Benefield  and Helen Jones all helped to set up 10 MST teams across the country - it was  a very exciting time !  

What does black history month mean to you?  

It is a time when people find out more about the h istory of  b lack people and this year , the history of strong black women.  As a second generation of Windrush, I am especially  interested in the time when people came from all over the Caribbean to England on the Windrush boat to help build up the workforce in the UK after the war .  

What more could be done to celebrate black history?  

I think we could do more to educate people about b lack h istory in s chool s , colleges, universities and in the workplace.   

Is there a black woman from history who particularly inspires you?  

Maya Angelou and her poem “Still I Rise”  

Other strong black women who have inspired me include:  

Mary Seacole – Nurse & Entrepreneur.  

Rosa Parks – Activist.  

Shirley Bassey – Jazz Singer.  

Tessa Sanderson – Javelin Thrower.  

What about a black woman from today?  

Michelle Obama, who is  seen  as a strong, educated black women , and here in the UK , Doreen Lawrence *  whose determination is outstanding . I worked in the D ep artment  of  H ealth  wh ere  the Inquiry was taking place and the alleged perpetrators who had killed Stephen La w rence attended . T his affected me and a lot of my colleagues at the time, the arrogance and the entitlement they felt, even lashing out at bystanders was shocking at the time, but I feel we have come a long way since then.  

* Doreen Delceita  Lawrence, Baroness Lawrence of Clarendon, OBE is a British Jamaican campaigner and the mother of Stephen Lawrence, a black British teenager who was murdered in a racist attack in South -E ast London in 1993. She promoted reforms of the police service and founded the Stephen Lawrence Charitable Trust.