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Radical History Blog
100 Years of Nelson Mandela
Back in June 1988, 72,000 people crammed into the old Wembley Stadium. They were treated to a music masterclass. Some of the eighties' best were performing: Simple Minds, Whitney Houston, Stevie Wonder, Sting.
Ghassan Kanafani: The Commando Who Never Fired a Gun
It was a warm Egyptian summer when in 1975, a 39-year-old Palestinian writer, , strolled up to the Cairo HQ of the Afro-Asian Writers' Association. The assassination of Ghassan Kanafani This was a proud moment for the Palestinian.
The NHS: 70 Years of British Socialism
- who brought the NHS into existence 70 years ago today - had a disappointing life. I don't mean this in a personal sense.
Created Equal: Values From The American Revolution
"All men are created equal and have the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness." - Thomas Jefferson, July 4th, 1776 Despite growing up among those bad-guy redcoats in the UK, I've always felt the draw of our American cousins and the radicalism that made the revolution.
The Fight for the 1928 Equal Franchise Act
They say the was the first campaigning body to use design and colour to create its own 'corporate identity'. And WOMAN did that work for them!
Red Emma Goldman: Suppressed in her Time, but not Forgotten in ours
Left-wingers sometimes ask, resentfully, 'Why is there no socialism in the USA?' The point isn't 100% true, but you can't deny that socialism has had a far less successful past century in the United States than it has everywhere else in the world.
Down With Afrikaans: The Story of the Soweto Uprising
On this day in 1976, the schools of Soweto were empty. It wasn't a weekend or a bank holiday. The black students of the township in southern Johannesburg were on .
W.B. Yeats: Ireland's Cultural Defendant in Chief
Hammersmith in West London was a bit of a melting pot for artsy types around the turn of the twentieth century. The revolutionary English socialist,, made his home there.
Muhammad Ali's Anti-War Defiance
– 'The Greatest' – died today in 2016. He suffered septic shock while hospitalised in Scottsdale, Arizona. But he could have died 49 years earlier somewhere in Vietnam.
International Emancipation: Maya Angelou, Malcolm X & Cuba
It was 1965 in Accra, the capital city of Ghana. had been set up there for a few years working as a journalist. It was a long way from her birthplace in St Louis (Missouri), but she enjoyed life in Africa.