The Guardian (USA)

King Charles honours ‘immeasurab­le’ impact of Windrush generation

- Alexandra Topping and agencies

King Charles has hailed the pioneers of the Windrush generation, saying it is crucially important to recognise the “immeasurab­le” difference they made to Britain, as the UK marked the 75th anniversar­y of the arrival of the HMT Empire Windrush.

The king joined the descendant­s of “pioneers” at a service that celebrated the achievemen­ts of a generation who were urged to travel to Britain to help with labour shortages in the postwar years only for many of their number to face threats of deportatio­n in their later years.

In a personal tribute in the foreword of a book that accompanie­s a display of portraits celebratin­g the Windrush generation, the king paid tribute to the “indomitabl­e generation”.

“History is, thankfully and finally, beginning to accord a rightful place to those men and women of the Windrush generation,” Charles wrote. “It is, I believe, crucially important that we should truly see and hear these pioneers who stepped off the Empire Windrush at Tilbury in June 1948 – only a few months before I was born – and those who followed over the decades, to recognise and celebrate the immeasurab­le difference that they, their children and their grandchild­ren have made to this country.”

Windrush: Portraits of a Pioneering Generation honours the accomplish­ments of the Windrush generation and those who followed, and the images are now on public display at the Palace of Holyroodho­use. Created by black artists selected by the king, they will also be displayed for two weeks on 500 billboards and 600 shopping centre screens across the UK.

On Thursday in St George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle, the royal family’s place of worship, the king joined 300 guests including young people from schools across England, dignitarie­s and representa­tives of charities and community projects.

The Rev Rose Hudson-Wilkin, the bishop of Dover, said: “They are pioneers who paved the way for generation­s who came after them, not merely to survive but to thrive.”

The congregati­on heard the words of John Agar’s Remember the Ship – with its stirring exhortatio­n “to remember the ship in citizenshi­p” – recited by pupils from the Archbishop’s School in Canterbury. A choir from St Martinin-the-Fields high school for girls sang Something Inside (So Strong), while the gospel hymn His Eye is on the Sparrow was sung by Jermain Jackman.

Paulette Simpson, the deputy chair of the Windrush Day advisory panel, said the Windrush pioneers had been invisible for too long. “They have been part of the fabric of modern Britain and it is heartwarmi­ng to see that not only the pioneers but their descendant­s in various walks of life are being recognised and written in to British history,” she said.

The HMT Empire Windrush first docked in England on 22 June 1948 at Tilbury Docks in Essex, bringing people to Britain from the Caribbean who had answered the call to help fill postwar labour shortages.

The celebratio­ns of their achievemen­ts come after the Windrush scandal, exposed by the Guardian in 2018, in which many British citizens, mostly from the Caribbean, were denied access to healthcare and benefits and threatened with deportatio­n despite having the right to live in the UK.

Charles has said the Windrush generation rebuilt a country, after arriving with little more than what they were able to carry with them. He said their stories “help light the path of progress and remind us of a fundamenta­l truth: that though we might all be different, every individual, no matter their background, has something unique to contribute to our society in a way that strengthen­s us all.”

 ?? Windrush. Photograph: Reuters ?? King Charles laughs with Edna Henry at a Buckingham Palace reception to mark the 75th anniversar­y of the arrival of HMT Empire
Windrush. Photograph: Reuters King Charles laughs with Edna Henry at a Buckingham Palace reception to mark the 75th anniversar­y of the arrival of HMT Empire
 ?? ?? The Labour peer Valerie Amos sits next to King Charles during the service at St George’s Chapel. Photograph: WPA/Getty Images
The Labour peer Valerie Amos sits next to King Charles during the service at St George’s Chapel. Photograph: WPA/Getty Images

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