Barbara Blake Hannah | |
---|---|
Born | Colony of Jamaica, British Empire | 5 June 1941
Other names | Barbara Makeda Blake-Hannah Barbara Blake |
Occupation(s) | Journalist, author, film maker, politician |
Known for | One of the first black on-camera reporters on British TV |
Barbara Makeda Blake-Hannah (born 5 June 1941) is a Jamaican author and journalist known for her promotion of Rastafari culture and history. She is also a politician, filmmaker, festival organiser and cultural consultant. She was one of the first black people to be an on-camera reporter and interviewer on British television [a] when, in 1968, she was employed by Thames Television's evening news programme Today . [1] [2] Hannah was sacked because viewers complained about having a black woman on screen. [3] [4] She later returned to Jamaica and was an independent senator in the Parliament of Jamaica from 1984 to 1987. [1]
In Jamaica, Blake-Hannah had read television news bulletins and had written for a monthly news magazine managed by her father, Evon Blake, [5] who founded the Press Association of Jamaica. [3]
She arrived in Britain in 1964 to work as an extra on the film A High Wind in Jamaica (1965). [5] In the next few years she wrote for The Caribbean Times , West Indian World , The Sunday Times , Queen and Cosmopolitan . [5] [3] Blake-Hannah was appointed in 1968 as a reporter on Thames Television's Today, at the time presented by Eamonn Andrews, in which role she interviewed prime minister Harold Wilson and actor Michael Caine. [1]
After nine months, she was dismissed without formal explanation, although her producer said the company was under pressure from a negative response from viewers for them having a black woman on television, [5] and said that the station had had calls from viewers, telling them to "get the Nigger off the screen". [3] Blake-Hannah then worked for the local news programme broadcast by ATV in Birmingham. [3] She was unable to find a hotel that would allow her to stay, and had to commute from London each day until she found a room at the YWCA. [3] She was deliberately kept away from the studio on a day when Enoch Powell was being interviewed. [3] Following this, she worked as a researcher on the BBC's documentary series Man Alive . [1]
Chris Blackwell and Perry Henzell offered her a job in 1972 as public relations officer for The Harder They Come , the first Jamaican feature film. She returned home permanently to Jamaica. [1] Here Blake-Hannah had a successful career as a film-maker and has also been an independent senator in the Parliament of Jamaica from 1984 to 1987. [3] Thus, Blake-Hannah also became the first Rastafarian representative in the parliament. [4] [6] [7]
She has written several books, including a 1981 account of the Rastafarian religion (Rastafari – The New Creation, "the first book on the religion written by a practising member"), [8] and produced several more films, including a documentary for Britain's Channel 4, Race, Rhetoric, Rastafari (1982). [4] Blake-Hannah's 1982 memoir Growing Out: Black Hair and Black Pride in the Swinging Sixties charts her life and career in Britain. [3]
Her son, Makonnen David Blake Hannah, was appointed in 1998, aged 13, as a youth technology consultant by Phillip Paulwell, then Minister of Commerce and Technology, and was the youngest consultant ever appointed by the Jamaican government. [9]
Known for her promotion of Rastafari culture and history, she currently serves as executive director of the Jamaica Film Academy, which organises the Reggae Film Festival. [10] [11]
In April 2020, Blake-Hannah gave an interview to Bryan Knight's Tell A Friend podcast, where she candidly spoke about her experience working in Britain. She spoke of the racism prevalent at the time and her journey to black consciousness. [12]
The British media periodical Press Gazette launched the "Barbara Blake-Hannah Prize" in 2020 to recognise emerging talented journalists from minority backgrounds. [13]
She has been active in the call for reparations for slavery. [14] [15] [16] In 2001, she established the Jamaica Reparations Movement after returning from the UN-backed World Conference Against Racism where the issue of reparations had been debated. [17] However, in 2022, she said: "After seven years of trying to drum up support for the J.A.R.M. [Jamaican Reparations Movement], ...I handed the work over to the government. Twenty years later, hardly one of the UN’s 19 Forms of Reparations have been implemented by any country, least of all Britain." [17]