Skip to main content
Mayor of London logo London Assembly logo
Home

UNESCO's Transatlantic Slave Trade and its Abolition Day 2020

Mayor AkomaAsa 2x1

Please note that this event has already occured.

Key information

Date: Sunday 23 August 2020

Time: 4:00pm to 4:45pm

Cost: Free

Mayor of London in partnership with Sankofa Day*

We invite you to join us virtually for this year’s very special Commemoration event to mark the 22nd year of UNESCO’s International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition.

This year’s event offers us an opportunity to reflect on how the the Transatlantic Slave Trade continues to have a profound impact on the lived realities of so many. We will consider how Britain’s role in the slave trade has been depicted over the years, who have been the story tellers and what stories are yet to be told.

Commemoration Ceremony: 4pm - 4.45pm

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan and Deputy Mayor for Social Integration, Social Mobility and Community Engagement, Debbie Weekes-Bernard alongside a range of academics will reflect on the event's theme of ‘reclaiming the past’. We are delighted to welcome S.I.Martin (author and historian), Olivette Otele (Professor of History of Slavery, Bristol University) and musical performances by saxophonist Xhosa Cole and Chineke! Orchestra.

Looking to the Future: 7pm – 8.30pm

Shezal Laing from Slavery Remembrance, with host SisDr Sandra Richards and invited speakers will lead through us panel discussions. These will focus on the social, physical and economic impact of the transatlantic slave trade on London, and how this period of history is currently taught. We will also have featured performances from pianist and violinist Sam West and singer-songwriter Ayanna Witter-Johnson.

Panel discussion 1 – Statues, Docks, Sugar & Money

Chair: Shezal Laing (founder of Slavery Remembrance) featuring special guests including Esther Stanford (Reparations Committee), Arike Oke (Black Cultural Archives), Toyin Agbetu (Ligali) and Jak Beula (Nubian Jak).

Panel discussion 2 - Education and History

Chair: Tony Warner (founder of Black History Walks) featuring special guests including Apex Zero (My Tribe), The Young Historian Project and Florence Onbanjo (GLA Peer Outreach worker).

We would love you to join us for this important, timely and relevant event. We look forward to seeing you virtually. Register your ticket on Eventbrite here.

Gentle Notice:

There will be a British Sign Language (BSL) interpreter present at the event.

Sankofa Day* is an annual memorial in London’s Trafalgar Square, hosted by Slavery Remembrance, to remember the 20+ million victims of human trafficking during the 400 years of Transatlantic Slavery. It also marks UNESCO’s International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition.

Historic Background

The night of 22 - 23 August 1791, in Santo Domingo (today Haiti and the Dominican Republic) saw the beginning of the uprising that would play a crucial role in the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade.

The International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition is intended to inscribe the tragedy of the slave trade in the memory of all peoples. It should offer an opportunity for collective consideration of the historic causes, the methods and the consequences of this tragedy, and for an analysis of the interactions to which it has given rise between Africa, Europe, the Americas and the Caribbean. (UNESCO)

Need a document on this page in an accessible format?

If you use assistive technology (such as a screen reader) and need a version of a PDF or other document on this page in a more accessible format, please get in touch via our online form and tell us which format you need.

It will also help us if you tell us which assistive technology you use. We’ll consider your request and get back to you in 5 working days.