Mistreatment of Windrush generation is 'stain on our history', says Notting Hill carnival boss
The Guardian|July 21, 2023
The organiser of the Notting Hill carnival has said the mistreatment of the Windrush generation is a "dark stain on our history," as the world famous festival prepares to honour people who moved from the Caribbean to Britain in the aftermath of the second world war
Harriet Sherwood
Mistreatment of Windrush generation is 'stain on our history', says Notting Hill carnival boss

The three-day carnival at the end of August will mark this year's 75th anniversary of the arrival of HMT Empire Windrush at Tilbury Docks. Members of the Windrush generation helped found the Caribbean Carnival in the late 1950s that was the fore-runner of today's festival.

The Windrush generation and their descendants should be treated with the "dignity, respect, and gratitude they deserve", Matthew Phillip, CEO of Notting Hill Carnival Ltd, told an event to launch this year's carnival.

The anniversary was a "momentous occasion that allows us to reflect on the tremendous contributions and enduring legacy of the Windrush generation, while also acknowledging the painful chapter that was the Windrush scandal," he said.

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