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  • 23/06/2025
The Medway African and Caribbean Association, along with a Medway Council, held events to remember the generation who came to Britain to rebuild after World War 2.

Transcript
00:00Windrush Day was celebrated on the 22nd of June.
00:03It commemorates everyone from the Windrush generation who came over to Britain just after
00:07World War II.
00:08There was a ship called the Windrush that people came over on, but it's also important
00:12to recognise that there have been many people from Africa and the Caribbean that have been
00:17here for decades and centuries, way before the Windrush arrival.
00:24I feel a great sense of pride, particularly when I'm second generation Windrush, my parents
00:28came over in the early 50s.
00:33Like many of that generation, they answered the call.
00:36Founded around the late 80s, MACA started as a small community of people supporting each
00:40other until they found a temporary home in the Sunlight Centre where they stand today.
00:45When I first came to Medway many, many years ago, there was not such a big African-Caribbean
00:53community, but it has built up from people who have come from all different areas in England.
01:03Celebrating Windrush for us in MACA, it recognises what, not just us, but our parents and our parents'
01:10who have been here, the contributions that they have made to Medway.
01:15Here in Medway, we've got a fantastic organisation in the Medway African and Caribbean Association,
01:19known as MACA, and they are great champions for that community and particularly Dr. Carol Stewart
01:24does a phenomenal job working hard, working with partners like ourselves, the police and
01:29leaders, to really raise the profile, raise the voices and make sure those individuals
01:34are heard.
01:35MACA, also known as the Medway African and Caribbean Association, raised a flag this morning,
01:40right outside of the Medway Council Building.
01:42And here at the Community Hub this afternoon, a special talk is happening to commemorate those
01:47from the Windrush generation and the impact that they've had on Britain.
01:51What we're doing is we're chronicling and we're telling the history and stories of some of the
01:58families of the Windrush that came into England back in the 1950s and 60s. We're concentrating
02:05on many, many family members, but my family's involved in that as jazz musicians and klebsonians.
02:12We need to remember the history and we need to remember the journey. Many of them were
02:19told stories of picking money from trees and money off the ground and all these kinds of
02:23things and it was very exciting for them. So it's important for us to pass these stories
02:29on and for our children and children's children.
02:31As MACA continues to grow in numbers and as time passes all too quickly, the importance of
02:36remembering the past and the rich history of our nation shines through on days like this.
02:42Kai Wei for Kame TV in Chatham.

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