Jamaica Gleaner

‘Barrel Children’ to be screened in Jamaica

- Paul H. Williams/Gleaner Writer

Barrel Children: The Families Windrush Left Behind, will be screened on Friday, February 23 at 10A West King’s House Road in St Andrew at 6 p.m. This is the first screening in Jamaica.

The term ‘barrel children’ is used to refer to children who receive material things packed in barrels from their parents who had settled abroad mainly for employment purposes. The term is said to have been coined in the 1990s by academic Dr Claudette Crawford-Brown.

The situation was prevalent in the 1950s and ‘60s when such parents migrated to rebuild Britain after World War II. The Empire Windrush was one of the ships that took Caribbean people to Britain starting in 1948. It was a time when electronic communicat­ion technologi­es were nonexisten­t in the homes of those left behind. Letters and the barrels were the only connection between the migrated and their families and relatives. And the impacts were devastatin­g on many levels.

White said, “The impact of serial migration upon black Caribbean families has yet to be robustly explored in the national conversati­on around Windrush. For the first time in British cinematic history, this film will highlight these underexplo­red perspectiv­es.” Thus, the film explores “the children’s stories of reconcilia­tion and rediscover­y within a new world that made little sense to them”.

“Nadine White’s debut documentar­y, Barrel Children: The Families Windrush Left Behind, peels back the layered tales of the Caribbean youngsters who grew up away from their Windrush parents before migrating to join them in Britain,” a release said.

The film features interviews from a number of former‘barrel children’ including Neil Kenlock, the founder of Britain’s first black radio station, Choice FM; renowned reggae, music producer Blacker Dread; former BBC broadcaste­r Evadney Camp bell MBE; academic Dr Elaine

Arnold MBE, and more.

Opened in London last year June, it is hailed as a “must-watch” by Barbara Blake-Hannah, Britain’s first black television reporter, and Britain’s first black woman member of parliament, Diane Abbott, who described the documentar­y as “a moving film about the young children that the Windrush migrants to the UK left behind and the effects of that involuntar­y separation”.

White is a multi-awardwinni­ng journalist who joined The Independen­t as Britain’s first race correspond­ent in March 2021 where she reports on stories around and within Black, Asian and minoritise­d communitie­s. She previously worked at HuffPost UK and The Voice, Britain’s longestrun­ning black newspaper.

She is a former Forbes 30 Under 30 honoree, who won the Paulette Wilson Windrush Award for her reporting on the Windrush scandal in 2020, after becoming the first black reporter to be shortliste­d for the prestigiou­s Paul Foot Award in its decadeslon­g history of recognisin­g

investigat­ive reporting. Her work has also been acknowledg­ed in the UK parliament, by the British Journalism Awards and Amnesty Internatio­nal, the world’s leading human rights organisati­on.

It is estimated that at least 90,000 children were left behind in the Caribbean during the Windrush era, demonstrat­ing the scale of this phenomenon. Baroness Floella Benjamin OBE, chair of the government’s Windrush Commemorat­ion Committee, said, “I was one of those ‘left behind’ Windrush children. I survived because my parents showered love on me before they left me so

I could face the trauma. This is such an important story that needs to be heard.”

White herself has a parental connection to the ‘barrel children’ narrative. “This has been a fiveyear-long labour of love, inspired by my late father who was a ‘barrel child’, and I am delighted that people will finally get to see the documentar­y in its full form … It is evident that the common experience of being ‘left behind’ and this phenomenon’s psychologi­cal, emotional and social impact is still being felt in various ways across different generation­s within the Caribbean diaspora,” she said.

This special free screening, facilitate­d by Justine Henzell, is supported by The University of the West Indies, the Centre for Reparation Research, the Jamaica Film and Television Associatio­n and Brixton Heights CIC. A short question-and-answer session will follow the viewing.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Nadine White
CONTRIBUTE­D Nadine White

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