CHRIS SEARLE welcomes a startling vision of contemporary Newport from a veteran photographer of the British working class
Born in 1909, Peter Blackman was the son of a quasi-illiterate stonemason and a laundress in St John's parish, Barbados - one of the poorest parts of the island.
He was given a scholarship to an exclusive colonial school by an Anglican church eagerly seeking "native" recruits to the priesthood.
Despatched to Durham University, he became a priest in 1933 and was sent to Gambia as a missionary. There he very soon discovered that black priests like himself were on a lower stipend than their white colleagues.
19.01.1930-23.04.2026
Kate Clark pays tribute to Ricardo, whose life spanned the hopes of Allende’s Chile, the horrors of military dictatorship and decades of campaigning for justice in exile
A lifelong communist and community organiser, Pinder helped shape anti-racist and anti-colonial activism in Britain while dedicating himself to youth work and collective struggle, writes David Horsley
TONY FOX invites readers to come and hear the story of the remarkable Liverpudlian International Brigader Alexander Foote
GUILLERMO THOMAS is persuaded by a scathing critique of the Church of England and its embeddedness in imperialism


