In this series we focus on Britain's colonial past and consider whether the country might be ready for a Truth And Reconciliation Commission, as a way to unite us and improve our relationship to the wider world.
We hear deeply personal stories that look at both the risks and healing potential of facing the past, exposing hidden histories and finally hearing the truth. Drawing on transformative justice models from around the world, and most recently in Europe, we consider how these could be adapted to fit Britain's history of Empire. We encourage constructive conversations on how and where we should start, when covering several hundred years of history, on an empire that spread across the world.
We interview mediators, International UN lawyers, TRC Commissioners and investigators, human rights activists, victims, perpetrators, “Heirs of Slavery” historians, authors, artists, and psychotherapists.
We talk to the descendants of both those that have benefited and others that have suffered from the enduring legacy of the Empire. Hearing new evidence recently uncovered in the dusty attics of ancient British homes. We widen the narrative, bringing back little known stories from across Britain's former colonies, and explore how these often conflicting narratives can be reconciled with the official story that Britain holds. We explore whether transformation is possible, discussing how to turn the page, correct the record and speak truth to power.
We also hear remarkable stories of reconciliation, restitution and gestures of repair, and consider the arguments for reparations, with creative solutions for how these might be delivered.
The podcasts are also a call for action, There is a link below to the global petition calling for an official British TRC to be established, If you agree please sign and share .
Your host is Tamara Gordon. In 1996 she made a multiple award winning film on South Africa’s Truth and reconciliation Commission for the BBC. Returning to the UK she held the hope that one day Britain might be courageous enough to attempt the same. She also returned to embark on her own personal search for truth to find her birth father, after being interracially adopted into Britain as a baby. However what she uncovered was a conflicted family story of Empire, which left her painfully divided. Her ancestors had both benefitted and been oppressed by this past that they shared. Having seen what was possible in South Africa she was hopeful they could reconcile their past in the present, bringing both sides of her family back together, centuries on. The story of which is also told across this series.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this series we focus on Britain's colonial past and consider whether the country might be ready for a Truth And Reconciliation Commission, as a way to unite us and improve our relationship to the wider world.
We hear deeply personal stories that look at both the risks and healing potential of facing the past, exposing hidden histories and finally hearing the truth. Drawing on transformative justice models from around the world, and most recently in Europe, we consider how these could be adapted to fit Britain's history of Empire. We encourage constructive conversations on how and where we should start, when covering several hundred years of history, on an empire that spread across the world.
We interview mediators, International UN lawyers, TRC Commissioners and investigators, human rights activists, victims, perpetrators, “Heirs of Slavery” historians, authors, artists, and psychotherapists.
We talk to the descendants of both those that have benefited and others that have suffered from the enduring legacy of the Empire. Hearing new evidence recently uncovered in the dusty attics of ancient British homes. We widen the narrative, bringing back little known stories from across Britain's former colonies, and explore how these often conflicting narratives can be reconciled with the official story that Britain holds. We explore whether transformation is possible, discussing how to turn the page, correct the record and speak truth to power.
We also hear remarkable stories of reconciliation, restitution and gestures of repair, and consider the arguments for reparations, with creative solutions for how these might be delivered.
The podcasts are also a call for action, There is a link below to the global petition calling for an official British TRC to be established, If you agree please sign and share .
Your host is Tamara Gordon. In 1996 she made a multiple award winning film on South Africa’s Truth and reconciliation Commission for the BBC. Returning to the UK she held the hope that one day Britain might be courageous enough to attempt the same. She also returned to embark on her own personal search for truth to find her birth father, after being interracially adopted into Britain as a baby. However what she uncovered was a conflicted family story of Empire, which left her painfully divided. Her ancestors had both benefitted and been oppressed by this past that they shared. Having seen what was possible in South Africa she was hopeful they could reconcile their past in the present, bringing both sides of her family back together, centuries on. The story of which is also told across this series.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today I speak with Richard Atkinson, author of Mr Atkinson's Rum Contract , the story of a tangled inheritance-a detective biography uncovering new truths in his family archives about Britains role in Transatlantic slavery. Evidence which can no longer be denied.
Richard speaks of his conflicted feeling in writing and exposing this story, but ultimately feeling morally obliged to publish, as an act of radical honesty, only a few months before the horrific murder of George Floyd.
After publication he had one last extraordinary discovery when an unknown and most unexpected family connection takes him right back to where this story started in Jamaica, connecting the past directly to the present and affirming his belief that despite his fears his family history has ultimately widened and deepened his world in the most unexpected and positive ways.
Today he encourages others to unearth their records and bring them into the public domain , believing it is in all our interest to engage in these journeys of truth and reconciliation .
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Today is part two of our documentary series on the Seychelles Truth, Reconciliation and National Unity Commission . Beneath the surface of this paradise archipelago lies a hidden and tragic history of torture, murder and forced disappearances. I speak with Demetri Wijesinghe, an international investigator at the TRC and ask him how he managed to persuade the high level intelligence operatives, military officers and perpetrators of death squads to open up and reveal their truths, and how the victims families felt when finally facing these perpetrators.
We discuss whether the process helped them and country move forward and whether justice and reparations will ever be delivered.
As always we connect how these processes of truth telling could be applied in the Uk context when looking into our colonial past. The aim of which is to create dialogue over division, and help us overcome the toxic culture wars of today.
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Today we begin our 2 part documentary on the Seychelles Truth, Reconciliation and National Unity Commission. Beneath the surface of this paradise archipelago lies a hidden and tragic history of torture, murder, and forced disappearances,. I chat with renowned international legal practitioner and and Chair of the Seychelles TRC Gabrielle McIntyre.
Against all odd and expectations, often comic if not so tragic, the commission completed its work only afew months ago, after fulfilling their mandate to look into the gross human rights abuses that occurred during the coup of 1977, under the one party state that persisted until 1993 and then on up to the present
We discuss the many lessons learnt that might be helpful if a British TRC was to be established over our colonial past, how not to do it perhaps. But due to Gabrielles utter determination she believes that the Seychelles TRC did manage to achieve a shared version of the past that might allow the country to move forward together with this as their new foundation. The value of such was not lost on us as we looked for ways for Britain to unite beyond the culture wars over our colonial past.
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I speak to Peter Lepping, a consultant psychiatrist in Wrexham, and an honorary professor in Bangor University in Wales and Mysore medical college in India.
Peter grew up in Germany and experienced the countries struggle to come to terms with its past, moving beyond shame by learning the lessons that gave a greater sense of responsibility for the future .
,When he moved to live in Britain he was surprised by how much this country was in denial over many aspects of its colonial history. Which came to a fore for him when he witnessed the vicious reactions to the BLM movements from certain sectors of society. It made him question what Britain was most afraid of in widening the narrative on its past and what he could offer from his experiences in Germany that might allow the country to become more at ease with its history
Looking into his area of expertise he considers the imperial legacy on psychiatry, looking at the on going effects of eugenics, which, he believes has left an legacy of racism and a sense of white superiority that still very much impacts both psychiatry, the medical establishment and society today.
He ends with suggestions for intergenerational healing and hope, drawing on his experiences from Germany, and what he believes is beginning to happen wit the younger generations in Britain today.
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Today I speak with Sibo Kanobana, Postdoctoral Researcher, sociolinguistics and lecturer in postcolonial studies at Ghent University, Belgium and The Open University, Netherlands. We discuss his paper “Black activism through colonial monuments” which was presented at a conference on Courts, Commissions and the Making of an "official" Colonial Memory at NIAS in The Netherlands .
These podcasts are also a call for action, There is a link below to the global petition calling for an official British TRC to be established, If you agree please sign and share .
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Alex Renton is a British journalist and broadcaster. He is the author of several historical and investigative books, most recently Blood Legacy: Reckoning With a Family's Story of Slavery (2021).
In April 2023 he co-founded Heirs of Slavery, a group of descendants of people who had profited from British transatlantic slavery and want to make amends in the form of reparations. The group has called on the British Prime Minister and King Charles to make a formal apology on behalf of the United Kingdom.
In this episode he tells of the discovery of his families ties to slavery, from rummaging around in his family homes attic, and the way this hidden history has transformed the way he sees his ancestors and Britain today. The reframing of his family story has led Alex to encourage others in Britain to unearth their records and for the UK to acknowledge this history, apologise and discuss reparations for the legacy of slavery that still impacts so many today.
The podcasts are also a call for action, There is a link below to the global petition calling for an official British TRC to be established, If you agree please sign and share .
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Nana-Jo Ndow founded the African Network Against Extrajudicial Killings and Enforced Disappearances (ANEKED), following her family tragedy when her father, Saul Ndow, was forcibly disappeared in 2013. She is a Human Right Activist, storyteller and gender rights specialist, based in The Gambia. In this episode we follow her search for the truth of what happened to her father, and her experience of The Gambian Truth, Reconciliation and Reparations Commission and her continued calls for justice and accountability until today. We also hear of her creation of The Memory House, a place where the forcibly disappeared are remembered and the lessons of the past never forgotten.
The podcasts are also a call for action, There is a link below to the global petition calling for an official British TRC to be established, If you agree please sign and share .
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Richard Rogers is an expert in international human rights and international criminal law. He has held senior positions in the UN and the OSCE dealing with war crimes, human rights and legal reform, in Kosovo, Cambodia, and Yugoslavia. Recently he has advised on The Truth and Reconciliation Commission in The Seychelles. In this episode Richard draws on examples from his experience to discuss topics such as truth, justice, peace, amnesty, and reconciliation, and considers whether the models from other countries could work in Britain if it was to set up a Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
The podcasts are also a call for action, There is a link below to the global petition calling for an official British TRC to be established, If you agree please sign and share .
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This taster has extracts from the interviewees recorded for the series so far.
We hear clips from International UN Lawyers, Chairs of Truth Commissioners, victims and perpetrators who have testified, journalists and authors writing about British slavery and colonialism, human rights activists, psychiatrists, academics, those who have discovered new truths in family archives and those still searching for the truth or coping with the consequences of denial.
Both personal and political the stories look at how to deal with the past in a way that allows for hope and transformation for the future.
The podcasts are also a call for action, There is a link below to the global petition calling for an official British TRC to be established, If you agree please sign and share .
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
How can we move beyond the divisions and toxic culture wars polarising us over Britain's colonial past?
Over this series I interview Conflict Mediators, International UN Lawyers and Investigators, Truth and Reconciliation Commissioners, victims and perpetrators that have testified at commissions, human rights activists, “Heirs of Slavery”, authors, artists, and psychotherapists.
We hear new evidence, recently uncovered in the dusty attics of ancient British homes, and widen the narrative with little known stories of Empire from across Britain's former colonies, and we ask how can we reconcile these often clashing narratives. These personal stories tell of both the risks and healing potential in exposing hidden histories, told by the descendants of those that suffered and others that benefited from a past that they share. We also hope to inspire with remarkable stories of restitution and reconciliation alongside growing calls for reparations .
Learning from both individuals and entire countries that have dared to confront their past, from around the world, and most recently in Europe, we ask how best to correct the record, redress the legacy and turn the page in hope of a less fractured future.
The series is hosted by Tamara Gordon, BBC Producer and conflict mediator.
On returning to the UK after living in South Africa and filming their Truth and Reconciliation Commission for the BBC she held the hope that one day Britain might be courageous enough to attempt the same. Tamara also embarked on her own personal search for truth, to find her birth father after being interracially adopted into Britain as a baby. However what she uncovered was a conflicted family story of Empire, which left her painfully divided. Her two sets of ancestors had both benefitted and been oppressed by this past that they shared. Luckily, having witnessed what was possible in South Africa, she held the belief that it would be possible to reconcile their past in the present, generations on bringing both sides of her family back together over their love of one child. The story of which is also told across this series.
The podcasts are also a call for action, There is a link below to the global petition calling for an official British TRC to be established, If you agree please sign and share .
Constructive feedback and interviewee suggestions please write to
info@britishtruthcommission.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.