Nottingham Post

LORD HERMAN OUSELEY

Inspiratio­nal campaigner for equality, who led the fight against racism in sport as head of pioneering antidiscri­mination charity Kick It Out

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HERMAN arrived in Britain on a boat from Guyana at the age of 11, and his experience­s as a young boy in south-east London were the impetus behind a lifetime’s work tackling racism.

Recalling how bitterly divided Britain was at the time, he said: “From day one, my first experience was racial abuse.”

At school, playing football provided respite from the insults, and a way to make friends. He started going to matches too, but in the 1960s and 70s, racist chanting, harassment and violence was common.

He soon stopped going to games, but the memories fuelled his passion to fight racism, no matter how hard the task seemed. By the time he founded Kick It Out in 1993, Herman had already broken many glass ceilings in his career, becoming the first black executive chairman of the Commission for Racial Equality and the first black chief executive of any local authority in England.

When the Let’s Kick Racism Out of Football campaign was first launched by the CRE, Herman was met with fervent opposition and he even received bullets in the post. “The hardest part was right at the beginning,” he reflected. “We had to try a whole variety of trickery to get people to come in. For instance, you’d get Manchester United to join because you told them Manchester City were doing it.”

Slowly things began to change. Kick It Out gained formal support from the FA and some funding for work across the profession­al game. Initially set up to tackle racial abuse of top-tier players, over 25 years Kick It Out has addressed a multitude of discrimina­tory practices across the sport.

Herman was knighted in 1997 for his services to local government and community relations, and was made a life peer in 2001.

His friend Viv Anderson, the first black footballer to play for the full England team, surprised him with his Pride of Britain award on the pitch at Dulwich Hamlet FC.

Herman said: “Viv was a pioneer and someone I have long admired. It was wonderful to see him and that he presented my trophy at the club where I played as a youngster. I was astonished to receive a Pride of Britain award. It is amazing to be acknowledg­ed and recognised as having made a useful contributi­on. My work has always been about helping people, but I know there are a lot of people out there who are doing equally amazing work.”

 ??  ?? Honoured: Lord Herman Ouseley
Honoured: Lord Herman Ouseley
 ??  ?? Viv Anderson
Viv Anderson

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