James Kariuki

Counsellor and Head of Politics, Economics and Communication Group

Part of UK in USA

28th August 2013 USA

Dr King’s British Legacy

Today I will have the honour of representing the UK government on the fiftieth anniversary of Dr Martin Luther King Jr’s historic “I have a dream” speech at the Lincoln Memorial.

I’ve represented my country at many big events in my 20-year diplomatic career, from G8 and UN Summits to the State of the Union address.  But to join President Obama, other Presidents, King family members and civil rights leaders in commemorating the March on Washington promises to be an extraordinary experience.

Especially for a black British diplomat born of English and Kenyan parents.

As I rode the bus to work today, I also reflected on a lesser known anniversary in the international struggle for civil rights and racial equality.  Fifty years ago today saw the end of the bus boycott in Bristol, England, which overturned the local bus company’s ban on black employees.

It is no coincidence. The Bristol boycott was inspired by actions in Montgomery, Alabama, and set the stage for Britain’s own landmark civil rights legislation, the Race Relations Act of 1965.

The history of the civil rights movement is a uniquely American story. But it is intertwined with the fight for equality and human rights around the world, from post-colonial Britain and France to apartheid South Africa. The anti-slavery campaigns of the English politician William Wilberforce, begun in the 1780s, would later be recognised by Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln as an essential part of the struggle.

The liberating experience of GIs stationed in unsegregated Britain during the Second World War surely contributed to the birth of America’s civil rights movement.

Trinidadian anti-racism campaigner Claudia Jones was an activist in Harlem, New York, before being deported to the UK in 1955. In London she continued her work for equality by establishing a landmark newspaper, the West Indian Gazette, and helped found what later became the Notting Hill Carnival, now one of the world’s largest celebrations Afro-Caribbean culture.

W.J. Weatherby, a fearless Guardian journalist, was among those beaten during protests in Oxford, Mississippi in 1962. You can read more about the links between the British and American struggles against racism in our Buzzfeed article here.

Britain’s racial history is of course different to America’s. Although there have been black Britons for hundreds of years, the biggest wave of immigration from British colonies in Africa, Asia and the Caribbean took place in the decades after the Second World War.

Families came not as slaves, but in many cases to fill low-skilled jobs in Britain’s expanding welfare state and public transport system. They did not face US-style segregation but, as the Bristol bus strike illustrates, encountered discrimination and prejudice that would be gradually rolled back by legislation.

Like Americans, black and mixed-race Britons have our own landmark events. Although I grew up in a predominantly white, middle-class area of the UK, I recall the shocking images of police clashing with black youths in the infamous Brixton riots of 1981.

Some twenty years later I lived in a Brixton that was undergoing gentrification and regeneration to match the historically black neighbourhoods of New York, Chicago or Washington – with both positive and negative results.

No black Briton forgets the 1993 murder of London teenager Stephen Lawrence: the failure to prosecute his killers led an inquiry to conclude that our police force had been “institutionally racist”, and changed the debate on race in the UK.

Black Britons also had our own cultural and sporting icons – such as the soccer players who endured racist chants from their own fans through the 1970s and 80s. But for sheer class and audacity, the inspirational figures were in America: Muhammed Ali and James Brown; Arthur Ashe and Stevie Wonder; Tiger Woods and Chuck D.

According to the 2011 census, the non-white population of the UK is now around 14%, of whom 7.5% are of Asian descent and 3.3% Black. As in America, great strides have been made to ensure racial equality before the law over the last 50 years.

The London Olympics showed just what a diverse country we have become, while many black Britons have become leaders in spheres that go well beyond sport and entertainment. Personally, I am fortunate to work in a Diplomatic Service that is making great efforts to strengthen diversity of all kinds, including through the recruitment and promotion of ethnic minorities.

But I think that most Britons would agree that, as in America, a historic legacy of prejudice and discrimination remains; and that more needs to be done to achieve equality of economic and social opportunity. And in Britain – as elsewhere in Europe – black political leaders have not reached the prominence of Jesse Jackson and Eric Holder; Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice; and of course President Obama.

With the succession to the throne now established for three generations, I don’t think my country will be seeing a black head of state any time soon. But we should continue to share experiences and learn lessons from our American cousins, and take inspiration from the efforts here to realise Dr King’s Dream.

3 comments on “Dr King’s British Legacy

  1. Great piece. Unfortunately, MLK’s dream is not yet a reality; fortunately there is the on-going will to make it so.

  2. I agree it’s not likely that the UK will see a black head of state too soon. But remember that the US concentrates the roles of “head of state” and “head of government” in one person, while the UK selects heads of state by the order of their descent from Sophia, Electress of Hanover. In other words, becoming the head of state in the UK is entirely based on who your parents are.

    But perhaps the UK might find itself with a head of government that breaks some racial barriers sometime soon? Paul Boateng made history in 2001 as the first black Cabinet Minister; how far away do you suppose the first black PM might be?

  3. It’s a confusing situation where young children are not naturally racist and as they grow up their incense is corrupted as the go from identifying with what is held in common to dwelling on differences which is indicative of the corruption of inadequacies of human courage and lack of charity. I blame the same destruction and corruption of the message of love by religious doctrines and established religious institutions many of which are deeply suspicious and have been responsible for perpetuating hatred that is precipitated by the insecure and proud. What evil is perpetuated as intellectual justification of less than childlike common sense. We are all very different and there is good and bad in us all but it is the fear of difference and lack of courage that fails us and makes us intrinsically scared of healthy variety and the beneficial blending of cultures and races in a spirit of tolerance, it’s fear and insecurity that spoil us. Be secure, be strong, just be and let be and we will all benefit. If you achieve as a minority it usually means you have had to struggle and work harder to get there and shown more courage to defy the odds.

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About James Kariuki

James Kariuki has been Counsellor and Head of Politics, Economics and Communication Group since July 2012. This is his second tour in the United States, having served at the UK…

James Kariuki has been Counsellor and Head of Politics, Economics and Communication Group since July 2012. This is his second tour in the United States, having served at the UK Mission to the UN in New York from 2002 to 2007. Between these postings James held a series senior roles in London: Head of Policy Planning for Foreign Secretary David Miliband (2007/08); Deputy Director in Gordon Brown’s National Economic Council (2008/09); Deputy Director for Europe in the FCO (2010/11).

After graduating from Jesus College, Cambridge, in 1992, James began his career on Middle East affairs: first on the Iran desk and then on secondment to the UN weapons inspection team in Baghdad (UNSCOM). He was then posted to the British Embassy Caracas, where he became the first Western diplomat to engage Hugo Chavez as a Presidential candidate. A spell in London from 1998-2002 covered mostly multilateral and economic issues: first as head of the G8 Summit team under Tony Blair; then as head of the FCO team focusing on EU economic policy.

James is married to Pascale Puthod, a journalist, and they have a 4 year old son, Paul.

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