Graham Wood // Jayaben Desai, treasurer of the Grunwick strike committee, in 1977
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Graham Wood // Jayaben Desai, treasurer of the Grunwick strike committee, in 1977
A featured session in our new stream of 'Famous Strikes' is Grunwick, 1976 when migrant women workers changed the course of labour history in Britain.
I remember Grunwick from when I was a child growing up in North West London. A legendary piece of modern London and Anglo-Indian history. It all began on 20th August 1976 More here https://www.ourmigrationstory.org.uk/oms/from-east-africa-to-grunwick-jayaben-desai
Musician Georgie Fame, journalist John Simpson and exhibition curator Poulomi Desai.
Interview on the BBC Robert Elms show - discussing my research, curation and production for the Grunwick 40 “We are the Lions” exhibition - the first comprehensive exhibition on the Grunwick strike 1976 - 1978. More info: https://www.newasianpost.com/lions-grunwick-strike-1976-1978-26-mar-2017/
The Grunwick Dispute 1977 "We are the Lions" — Homer Sykes
28.06.17 36 pages 14cm x 20cm b/w digital Edition of 200
You are invited to the first comprehensive exhibition about the Grunwick strike that shook industrial relations 40 years ago, the resonances of which live on today. Before punk hit the headlines in 1976, a group of Asian women were leading a strike that obsessed the media, made the police and government go on the offensive and changed the heart of the trade union movement. With unseen photographs, archival material, recently released special branch reports, huge banners, including the original Grunwick strike banner inspired by Russian Constructivism, posters, artworks, soundtracks and films, the story of the Grunwick strike that lasted two years in a backstreet of London and changed the face of Britain comes alive in an exhibition that unravels the complex politics about power, empire, immigrant / migrant workers, class, race and gender. It will be great to see you there. Exhibition 19 Oct 2016 - 26 March 2017. Mon-Fri 9am-8pm| Sat-Sun 10am-5pm Brent Museum, The Library at Willesden Green, 95 High Road, London NW10 2SF "We are the lions" curated by Poulomi Desai, Artistic Director - Usurp Art www.usurp.org.uk
Grunwick 40 is a joint project run by Brent Trades Council and Willesden Green Town Team, in partnership with Brent Museum & Archives. It is set up to commemorate the 40 years of the Grunwick strike and funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund, Near Neighbours and donations from numerous individuals and organisations. More info: https://grunwick40.wordpress.com
The Grunwick exhibition will run from 19 October 2016 – 2 April 2017 at Willesden green Library
On 20th August 1976, one of the hottest days of the year, a group of South Asian workers walked out of a factory in protest at their working conditions and the way they were treated. Little did they know that this act would lead to a two-year strike and one of the largest mobilisations of support the UK had ever seen by trade unions, anti-racist campaigners and feminist groups. Led by Jayaben Desai, the striking workers demanded their right to be treated with dignity and to be represented by a union.
I am very pleased that I have been chosen to curate the "We are the Lions - the story of the Grunwick strike”, a commemorative exhibition about solidarity that opens on 19th October 2016 at Brent Museum. The work involves a huge amount of research; exploring archives, listening to interviews, rummaging in boxes of press cuttings and hunting down photographers and their photographs. I am also responsible for creating the conceptual elements of the exhibition and the sound design of the space. It is a gargantuan task that I am embracing with enthusiasm as the many layered perspectives on this particular moment of British industrial history reveal themselves in my research. I have found many photographs that have not been seen before, been submerged in the sounds of up to 20,000 people protesting in a narrow residential street, been engrossed in recently released special branch files, perplexed by the different perspectives on the ownership and psychology of protest, and overwhelmed by the plethora of press from the time that resonates today in terms of their screaming racist headlines of migrants etc. It is an ambitious task and the first comprehensive exhibition on the strike with the strikers in the centre of the historical analysis.
The Grunwick strike gained media attention and political prominence. It helped to change the perception of South Asian women in wider society and challenged trade unions to recognise the rights of minority and women workers. Today, it is remembered as an iconic struggle in trade union history and beyond.
‘We are the lions’ introduces the context and events of the Grunwick strike to stimulate a conversation about solidarity and collective organising. It illustrates the struggles of challenging power, the role of the police in industrial disputes, the part journalism and photography play in defining society, and how histories are created and remembered.
As the first workers left the factory, one – Jayaben Desai – offered a parting shot to the management - “What you are running here is not a factory, it is a zoo. But in a zoo there are many types of animals. Some are monkeys who dance on your fingertips, others are lions who can bite your head off. We are the lions, Mr Manager.”
Grunwick 40 aims to remember those lions.