do you remember the coronation? yeah. we had a street party, with a loaf of bread and a pot ofjam and 30 people. did you see it on telly? no, didn t have a telly. didn t have a television. i mean, it s so different now. somebody did have a television up the road, and it was only that big, and we all gathered around it. you kind of alluded to what the queen means to you. what does she mean to you? you ve met her on a few occasions that must have been amazing? as i said, she s been so much part of my life, it s almost, she s almost, i don t know, almost like a sister, you know? she s always been in the background of my life. cheering. i ve met her a couple of occasions. so we were doing a charity concert at st james s palace for her majesty and the late duke of edinburgh. and they were only sitting
We brought her to the police station on May 16. After questioning she was arrested and the court sent her to judicial custody on the next day, he added.
ukraine, enable the quicker response online. because children are able to get back online. i was actually with a headmistress just a little bit earlier, in zaporizhzhia, a town about an hour south of here. she said that out of 1200 of her pupils, 1000 were going back online. so getting some learning. some of those were abroad, some were still inside ukraine. so, that s great to see that learning. but it s also, school provides more. school provide safety, should provide safety. it provides a nurturing, caring environment. and for children to be with children, to play. that s what they re missing out on right now. one of the concerns of what is happening in ukraine, and the massive displacement, and, as you heard in the intro, so much of the food crisis and security, that not everyone prior to the war, all parts of the region, and picking up, yemen are getting the same resources as they were before. as a result of the exacerbation of food prices and food insecurity. can you speak on h
race or gender should define a child s life. i went out to the headmistress and told her that i wanted to be a teacher. and she said, oh, get the idea out of your head right away. you d have insurmountable problems. and even if that tender age of 15, i knew that she meant if you re black, that s your lot. she was the first to make black history part of the curriculum. a community looked to her to lead. if nan said she was going to do something, she absolutely was going to do it. and i think that worked in her favour when it came just to kind ofjust trying to support the community. whether it was, i don t know, some additional resources or some additional funding. she absolutely went away and did it. incredibly, this is the first and only monument for a real life woman in wales. who we celebrate with statues, how and where we commemorate them, isn t set in stone. the future of over 200 monuments and street names just in wales is under review, because of their links to the slave trade.
to honourfemale pioneers. betty campbell was used to being first. she was amongst the first female intake at teachers college, something she was told at school to forget about. i was in a class of 36 girls and i told the headmistress i wanted to be a teacher. she said, get that idea out of your head. you have insurmountable problems. and even aged 15, i knew that she meant if you re black, that s your lot, you will not get far in teaching. i sat down and cried and that is the first time i ever cried in my life over a colour problem. she became the first black head teacher in wales at the cardiff mount stuart primary where she taught for three decades and ensured that children learnt about racism