Echoes of the Caribbean Podcast Por Oastlers School in partnership with Checkpoint and Digital Advantage arte de portada

Echoes of the Caribbean

Echoes of the Caribbean

De: Oastlers School in partnership with Checkpoint and Digital Advantage
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Celebrate Bradford's Black History as we share a treasure trove of first hand testimony recorded in 1986 as the Windrush generation reflect on their experiences setting up a new life in Yorkshire. This podcast was made by learners at Oastlers School in Bradford in partnership with Checkpoint, Bradford’s West Indian Community Centre and the charity Digital Advantage.Oastlers School in partnership with Checkpoint and Digital Advantage Mundial
Episodios
  • Episode Four - Gladstone's Story
    Mar 31 2025

    In this episode of Echoes of the Caribbean, Gladstone Rowe came in to meet students at Oastlers School to tell them first hand about his experience relocating from Jamaica to Bradford in 1960.

    Actor Shaun Thomas hears some of the learners' creative writing as they put themselves in the shoes of the Windrush generation.

    Test your knowledge on West Yorkshire's Caribbean community in our quiz and the team tries their hand at making jerk chicken.

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    55 m
  • Episode Three - Forging A Legacy
    Oct 30 2023

    In our final episode of this series, we are going to look back to see how conditions for Bradford’s West Indies community has improved as the community grew bigger and stronger.

    Later we will talk to some of the people who are running Checkpoint, Bradford’s West Indies Community Centre, for their opinions on issues that face the 2nd, 3rd and 4th generation community today.

    Some of the audio you can hear on this podcast was recorded nearly 40 years ago and the speakers were reflecting on their life experience as a migrant over the previous 30 years.



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    34 m
  • Episode Two - The Struggle for Acceptance
    Oct 23 2023

    In this episode of 'Echoes of the Caribbean' we examine the prejudice that Bradford’s early West Indian migrants faced as they built a life here.

    Many people who had travelled from the Caribbean had a strong sense of their Britishness, plenty had served in the British armed forces during the war and they had an expectation that they would be welcomed in the 'mother country'. 

    However, this was not always the case, many of the indigenous population were not used to seeing black people and saw the migrants as a threat.

    Facing racism and prejudice on a daily basis made life hard for many in Bradford’s West Indian community.  But on occasions it could be even worse when hate turned to violence.

    In 1986 volunteers at Checkpoint West Indian Community Centre in Bradford recorded the memories of early settlers, talking about their experiences over the previous three decades settling into a new way of life in Yorkshire.

    We have now been given access to this treasure trove of first hand testimony that we can share with you.

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    29 m
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