The First Of Ten New Community Centres For Ethnic Groups Has Been Opened

1983 , Luton (Bedfordshire)

No video

There’s no web video for this work.

Please do get in contact to discuss other ways you could view this work.

Funding to create community centres and provide translation services for minority groups.

Ten new community centres for ethnic groups will be supported with a year’s funding from the Manpower Services Commission. In Luton a small crowd of men and children watch a man up a ladder as he hammers a sign above a doorway for the Bangladesh Welfare Association. The entrance is next to the Halal Meat grocery store on the corner of Hampton Road. Scenes of other community centres. Inside a kitchen, people of West Indian appearance struggle with a damaged carpet. At a Hindu shrine at the end of a sports hall, people celebrate with singing and bells. Anglia TV reporter Owen Spencer-Thomas talks to Roy Edwards who describes the community benefits of the funding. Jobs will be created, enabling support services with language translation to help answer enquiries at organisations like the Town Hall, the DHSS and the education service and for youth work. He hopes this will help promote multi-racialism in the town. What will happen in a year’s time when the funding ends? This video was made to be shown in a news story on Anglia Television early evening news / magazine programme About Anglia.

Keywords

Community centres; Hindu shrines; Translation services; Multi-racial communities

Manifestations

The First Of Ten New Community Centres For Ethnic Groups Has Been Opened

Copyright restrictions apply.

Please see our terms of use. Films on this website are provided for personal viewing. Should you wish to use the films in any other way please contact eafa@uea.ac.uk

terms of use

The data for this page was generated on 01/11/2024 05:27:28+00:00. Click to regenerate this page .