Windrush is remembered with Vale information towers
By Nub News Reporter
28th Oct 2023 | Local News
Members of the Windrush Elder community were invited to Vale of Glamorgan Council Civic Offices for the unveiling of the Windrush 75 Towers, which pay tribute to the 16,000 Black Caribbean men and women that served in World War II.
The Towers, which were produced in partnership by the National Windrush Museum and the Royal British Legion, are information stands which will be travelling around the Vale for the next 12 weeks for members of the public to view and learn more about some of the men and women from the Caribbean who served in the armed forces during World War II.
The Towers will be in the Civic Offices for the next three weeks before they are moved to Penarth Pier Pavilion.
Cllr Bronwen Brooks, Deputy Leader of the Council and Cabinet Member for Sustainable Places, said: "We were honoured when the Royal British Legion asked the Council to host the Windrush Towers here at the Civic Offices and venues across the Vale for 12 weeks.
"On behalf of the Council, it is my privilege to welcome the Windrush Elders to the Vale of Glamorgan and to recognise and thank those who answered Britain's call. These towers stand as a testament to their bravery and commitment for which we are eternally grateful. Thank you."
"The Windrush story came to my attention a few years ago when I was newly appointed to the Commission for Racial Equality. I attended an event in Bute Street, Cardiff, as the Vice Chair of the Black History Association Wales.
"At that meeting I met Mrs Elizabeth (Betty) Campbell. As she got to know me over the years, she began to pass on her need to share stories from our communities with me.
"She said to me 'many of us carry the legacy of those who came before us.'
"When you think about the people who have served this country to secure our freedom, there were so many from the Windrush generation, people who weren't born in this country but sacrificed their lives for it. This is why we have worked with the Office of the Lord-Lieutenant to honour the legacy of our Elders."
One of the Windrush Elders in attendance was Mrs Roma Taylor, a former nurse for Queen Alexandra's Royal Army Nursing Corps and founder of Windrush Cymru Elders.
Professor Iwobi added: "Auntie Roma Taylor was a nurse for over twenty-five years and is one of the people we are here to honour. Her story is one of forty-eight collected by the Royal British Legion. It is so important that these stories are never forgotten."
To conclude the event, Yvonne Howard-Bunt read aloud a poem she wrote for and performed at the Senedd's Windrush 75 Celebration in June earlier this year.
Titled 'The Council of the Elders', the poem pays tribute to the sacrifices the Windrush generation made, recognises the challenges and discrimination they faced when they arrived in the UK, and the legacy they have left behind.
The Council of The Elders
The Elders all do gather
In the here and now and then
The council of the Elders
Liberty, parchment, pen.
It was in the aftermath
Of World War Two,
A war-torn Britain,
Harsh, cold and blue.
Opened its doors
To the Windrush group
War veteran, Commonwealth Citizens
Among the troop.
Answering the call
From the promised land
Your homeland country needs you
Are you willing to take a stand.
Come, come, your mother country needs you
You'll find a welcome here
Your education system is akin to ours
You'll fit in well, no fear.
Help us to build this nation
From the decimation of war
Come, honour your beloved country
We need, we implore.
Departing on the Windrush
For King and country same
To a distant land known as home
They sailed to unknown gain.
The Windrush found no welcome
In the homeland they believed they knew
Faced discrimination and rejection
The promise proved untrue.
They lived in poor cluster neighbourhoods
In Cardiff and Tiger Bay
Among Somali and Yemini People
And other settlers who paved the way.
And as is oft repeated
Throughout time down the track
The Windrush Group are pioneers
Who put us on the map.
That they may teach others
From the wealth of experience, they have gained
In building blocks for others
Through their struggles, they've attained.
So dearest Windrush Elders
Sing your stories clear and loud
That your voices rise to uplift us all
Above the noisy crowd.
Add to the bank of knowledge,
Pray your truth. Do tell
On this 75th anniversary
Let's fill and swell the well.
Time is littered with oral histories
Backstories from worlds afar.
They are part of our national landscape
The chronicle of who and where we are.
Let's refine and build the new narrative
In this timeless arterial wall
For the pioneers who came before us
And the loved ones who stood tall.
Let's build a bridge for everyone
And positively embrace
A shared sense of vision,
for the human race.
The footprint of our neighbour
Is entwined within our life
And so many who've passed before us
In struggle and in strife.
We are all kindred spirits
In the quest for life's chance
Let's share a common future
Let's partake and dare to dance.
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