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Published Date: 01 February 2007
City plans celebrations to mark 200th anniversary of end of slavery
Leeds is planning to be dancing in the streets to mark 200 years since the end of slavery.
But the city and its former grand citizens will also be put under the microscope in an examination of what part Leeds played in the slave trade.
Thanks to more than half a million pounds, a line up of carnival-style events will be held in the city, overseen by the Leeds West Indian Centre and the men and women who are the brains behind the city's annual Caribbean street party.
The trans-Atlantic slave trade spanned 300 years and the lottery funding will also be used to explore its wide reaching impact on Leeds and the rest of the UK.
Leeds West Indian Carnival
Leeds West Indian Carnival
Ten million pounds is being given nationally across the UK in 2007 for bi-centenary projects, marking the end of slavery in 1807.
A grant of £408,000 from the Heritage Lottery Fund, (HLF) was awarded to the Leeds West Indian Centre Charitable Trust who will run an extensive year-long programme of activities across the city to commemorate the Abolition of the Slave Trade Act.
Activities include the Leeds West Indian Carnival, celebrating its 40th year in 2007.
There will be numerous carnival-style events, displays, performances as well as the chance for people of all ages and cultures to get together.
Harewood House also gets a £100,000 bi-centenary grant from the Arts Council to host performances of Carnival Messiah in September.
The project will provide opportunities for young people to get involvedin concerts, shows and other activities.
Government minister for Culture David Lammy, MP for Tottenham, received a warm welcome yesterday at the West Indian Centre in Chapeltown. He was met by cow horn player Herbert Wuver, of the Pan African Arts and Cultural Group.
Mr Lammy said: "The range of events taking place in this region is both imaginative and inspirational and demonstrates how much people are thinking about 1807 and how it relates to their own lives today.
"We must not forget that people living here in Yorkshire boycotted slavery. We gather and celebrate different cultures, we realise how far we have come."
Community leader Ian Charles, co-ordinator of the Leeds Carnival and secretary of the West Indian Centre, which is celebrating its 25th anniversary, said: "There are lots of events being planned. This grant is great news for Leeds and its people.
"We are already working on the carnival and this year it will be better and bigger than ever."
The £100,000 Arts Council grant will enable Harewood House, among other things, to host performances of Carnival Messiah in September.
Dr Fiona Spiers, Heritage Lottery Fund manager for the Yorkshire region, said: "This year is a poignant time to reflect on our history and the roots of present day society. Above all, it is a chance to gain a fuller understanding about how the various strands of our population developed as a result of what was happening during the period."
Harewood House also gets £484,000 HLF grant to encourage greater community involvement at the tourist attraction, situated just outside Leeds.

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  • Last Updated: 01 February 2007 10:31 AM
  • Source: n/a
  • Location: Leeds
 
 
 


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