✨ Grant Fundraising Workshops. Join us there and take your skills to the next level! 🎉
📅 20th June, as part of the Brighton Book Festival Writer’s Day 🖋️✨
📍 21st June at the British Library
🔗 Click the link in profile to noon
Book now onto our session on “How To Write Winning Grant Applications”
Being hosted on-line on 21st March from 2pm - 4.30pm (U.K. time)
Places are £35+booking fee. Visit the link to book - https://t.co/wAwAry7QeT
#fundraisingworkshop#fundraising#grants#grantapplications
The British Eliminated The Entire Aborigine Tasmanian Population Of Australia In The 1800s
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Tasmania is an island located about 200 miles off the southeast coast of Australia. Archaeologists estimate that Black indigenous people crossed into the island on an ancient bridge which connected Tasmania to the continent of Australia.
The peace and harmony that they enjoyed for years was disrupted in 1642 when the first Europeans arrived on the Island. A Dutch navigator, named Abel Jansen, was the one who led the expedition
In typical white explorer manner, he was quick to name the Island after the governor-general of the Dutch East India Company, Anthony Van Diemen and without the consent of the owners of the land, they continued to call the Island Van Diemen till 1855.
Before 1855, the British, as they scouted the world for lands to conquer & loot, reached the Island in 1777 and invaded the land and turned it into a settlement for their prisoners and convicted criminals.
By 1804, the British colonial government & their convicts started to slaughter and murder the Tasmanians in cold blood because they didn’t consider the Aborigines to be full humans.
They followed the lies of European scholars who twisted human history, placing Caucasians at the top of the pyramid and placing Black people at the bottom. Their mission was total annihilation of the Black race & they wasted no time in decimating the Tasmania population.
They did not just sit back & watch the invaders destroy them. They put up a strong resistance. The British declared war & named the genocide “The Black War of Van Dieman’s Land”.
This war lasted for 27 years, between 1803 and 1830. And in those evil years, the Black population of Tasmania was reduced from over 5,000 to less than 75 people.
Fundraising Workshop alert!
Hatch is dedicated to providing our clients with the tools to grow. Our renowned workshops are a part of this and @findingyemisi will be doing 2 workshops with @thebritishlibrary to do just that!
👉 https://t.co/DcU6V5iYIr
👉 https://t.co/Rq1MZJrzWL
Know Your Value.
Join us on Friday 28th July in #Brighton, we are hosting a workshop with @writingourlegacy. Learn how to unleash your unique value, attract dream clients and opportunities. This event is ideal for creatives. Sign up via the link below. ⬇️
https://t.co/Zd9ON8Li8R
For this week's #SpotlightOn we caught up with BIPC delivery partner @findingyemisi. Yemisi is the founder of @IdeasHatch, a consultancy that supports people and organisations develop their businesses, projects and ideas for cultural change and social impact.
My first book ‘A collection of Yorùbá lullabies: Ọmọ Mi - My Child’ is now available for sale on the CultureTree website.
Order here: https://t.co/e0h7kuzQc1
Please support by sharing with family and friends ❤️❤️❤️
#CultureTree#Yorubalullabies#Yoruba
After a surreal few days, I’m delighted that we have navigated a way through this. I want to thank you all for the incredible support, particularly my colleagues at BBC Sport, for the remarkable show of solidarity. Football is a team game but their backing was overwhelming. 1/4
We're steadily getting ready for this year's festival.
Sharing with you the Okoro AsaBaako 2023 warm-up mix.
Turn it up. Enjoy 🔊🔊🔊🔊
#AsaBaako2023#AfricanFestival#Afrohouse#Afrobeats
https://t.co/owigBBCXCh
Announcing - AsaBaako 2023!!!!!
See you on the Beach and in Jungle.
Click link for more details and to book your Jungle party tickets 🔥💫🙌🏾🌴
https://t.co/py1Ub3lv7G
“I really love this shift for Europe from ‘Do as we do’ to ‘What can we do together’”: Jury member Yemisi Mokuolu reflects on the paradigm shift from cultural diplomacy to #culturalrelarions supported by #EuropeanSpacesofCulture.