John La Rose
Encyclopedia
John La Rose was a political and cultural activist, poet, writer, publisher, and Chairman of the George Padmore Institute. He was originally from Trinidad
but was involved in the struggle for political independence
and cultural and social change in the Caribbean
in the 1940s and 1950s and later in Britain, the rest of Europe and the Third World
.
, Trinidad
in 1927, La Rose taught at St. Mary's College and later became a leading insurance executive in a company, Colonial Life
, which was then in the process of becoming the biggest insurance company in the Caribbean. He later lived and taught in secondary schools in Venezuela
, before coming to Britain in 1961.
His interest in culture – so-called serious music, literature and folk language and proverbs – preceded his commitment to politics and trade union
ism. He saw these and cultural activity as interrelated in a vision of change. As he wrote in his statement "About New Beacon Review", that his conception "aims at the expression of the radical and the revolutionary. More easily definable in politics, and more complex and less easily definable, or indefinable, in the arts and culture". As an executive member of the Youth Council he produced their fortnightly radio programme "Voice of Youth" on Radio Trinidad; and in the mid-1950s, he co-authored with the calypsonian
Raymond Quevedo – Attila the Hun – the first serious study of the calypso, first entitled Kaiso, A Review, subsequently published as Atilla's Kaiso (1983).
La Rose helped to form the Workers Freedom Movement in the 1940s and was editor of the few published copies of their journal Freedom. He became as executive member of the Federated Workers Trade Union (later merged in the National Union of Government and Federated Workers), and later General Secretary of the West Indian Independence Party
, which was formed out of the merger of the WFM with active trade unionists. He was later involved with the struggle within the Oilfields Workers Trade Union (OWTU) by the "Rebels" for a radical, democratic and more representative trade unions, for one member one vote in regular periodical elections by secret ballot
. The "Rebel" candidates won the elections in 1962 and he retained his close links with the OWTU and the international trade union movement, serving as the European representative of the OWTU from the 1960s until his death in 2006.
In August 1966 La Rose founded New Beacon Books, the first specialist Caribbean publishers, booksellers and international bookservice. Later in December 1966, he was co-founder with Edward Kamau Brathwaite and Andrew Salkey, of the influential Caribbean Artists Movement. He was chairman of the Institute of Race Relations
(IRR) in 1972/73, the period when the IRR was establishing its independence, and was also chairman of Towards Racial Justice, which was the vehicle for publishing the campaigning journal Race Today
.
From the mid-1960s La Rose became closely involved in the Black Education Movement, including the fight against Banding
, and against the wrongful placing of West Indian children in schools for the Educationally Sub-normal. In 1969, he founded the George Padmore Supplementary School, one of the first of its kind, and helped to found the Caribbean Education and Community Workers Association, which published How The West Indian Child Is Made Educationally Sub-normal in the British School System. Later in the 1980s he helped to found the National Association of Supplementary Schools and was its chairman for two years.
In 1975 he co-founded the Black Parents Movement from the core of the parents involved in the George Padmore Supplementary School after an incident when a young black schoolboy was beaten up by the police outside his school in the London Borough of Haringey
.
The Black Parents Movement later formed an alliance with the Black Youth Movement and the Race Today Collective, which had, with the Race Today journal, by then separated from the IRR. Together they established a formidable cultural and political movement, successfully fighting many cases against police oppression and arbitrariness and for better state education. It was the Alliance that formed the New Cross
Massacre Action Committee in response to the arson attack which resulted in the death of 14 young blacks, and mobilised 20,000 black people and their supporters in March 1981 to protest the death of the young people and the failure of the police to conduct a proper investigation. La Rose was Chairman of the New Cross Massacre Action Committee.
In 1982 he was instrumental in the founding of Africa Solidarity, in support of those struggling against dictatorial governments and tyranny in Africa. That year he also became Chairman of the Committee for the Release of Political Prisoners in Kenya, whose founding members included the Kenyan novelist and critic Ngugi wa Thiong’o.
One of La Rose’s greatest achievements was the International Book Fair of Radical Black and Third World Books (1982-1995) organised originally jointly with Bogle L’Ouverture Books and Race Today Publications. He was joint director with Jessica Huntley of the Book Fair. After the withdrawal of Bogle L’Ouverture from the organising committee, he became its sole director.
Held in the UK, at first in London and then also in other parts of the country, the Book Fairs and Book Fair Festivals brought together people from across the globe to participate in debates, forums, readings, musical events, films, plays and other cultural productions, as well as browse through stalls from a multiplicity of publishers. They celebrated the enormous cultural and political achievements, addressed key issues of the times, and mirrored the achievements of black people throughout the world.
In response to concerns about the rise in fascism and xenophobia, La Rose helped to found European Action for Racial Equality and Social Justice in 1989, bringing together anti-racists and anti-fascists from Belgium, Italy, France and Germany.
La Rose was editor-in-chief of New Beacon Books until his death in 2006. He edited the occasional journal New Beacon Review (1968, 1985, 1986) and co-edited with Andrew Salkey the special issue Savacou Nos. 9/10 (1974) which provided a comprehensive anthology of black writing in Britain during the period of the Caribbean Artists Movement. He published his first collection of poems, Foundations, in 1966 and his second collection, Eyelets of Truth Within Me, in 1992 (both published by New Beacon Books). His poems and essays have been widely anthologised, and his journalism was published regularly in Race Today. He co-authored Kaiso Calypso Music: David Rudder in Conversation with John La Rose in 1990. He co-produced and scripted the documentary film Mangrove Nine, about the resistance to police attacks on the popular Mangrove restaurant
in the early 1970s, with the film director Franco Rosso. He produced a short film on the Black Church in Britain as part of a Full House BBC
2 TV programme on the Caribbean arts, which he produced and directed in 1973.
In 1991 La Rose, together with a number of colleagues, founded the George Padmore Institute (GPI), a library, archive and educational research centre housing materials relating to the life experiences of Caribbean, African and Asian communities in Britain. The aims and objectives of the Institute are to organise: a library, educational resource and research centre, that will allow the materials in its care to be available for use by interested individuals and groups, both in person at the Institute and through the use of modern storage, retrieval and communication methods; educational and cultural activities, including conferences, courses, seminars, talks and readings; the publication of relevant materials. He was the Chairman of the George Padmore Institute from its inception until his death in 2006.
In introducing La Rose's talk on "The Politics of Culture: Writing and Publishing Today", which he organised as Islington's Writer in Residence in London in May 1985, the novelist, playwright and critic Ngugi wa Thiong'o wrote:
Trinidad
Trinidad is the larger and more populous of the two major islands and numerous landforms which make up the island nation of Trinidad and Tobago. It is the southernmost island in the Caribbean and lies just off the northeastern coast of Venezuela. With an area of it is also the fifth largest in...
but was involved in the struggle for political independence
Independence
Independence is a condition of a nation, country, or state in which its residents and population, or some portion thereof, exercise self-government, and usually sovereignty, over its territory....
and cultural and social change in the Caribbean
Caribbean
The Caribbean is a crescent-shaped group of islands more than 2,000 miles long separating the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea, to the west and south, from the Atlantic Ocean, to the east and north...
in the 1940s and 1950s and later in Britain, the rest of Europe and the Third World
Third World
The term Third World arose during the Cold War to define countries that remained non-aligned with either capitalism and NATO , or communism and the Soviet Union...
.
Early life in the Caribbean - 1927-1960
Born in ArimaArima
The Royal Borough of Arima is the fourth largest town in Trinidad and Tobago. Located east of the capital, Port of Spain, Arima supports the only organised indigenous community in the country, the Santa Rosa Carib Community and is the seat of the Carib Queen...
, Trinidad
Trinidad
Trinidad is the larger and more populous of the two major islands and numerous landforms which make up the island nation of Trinidad and Tobago. It is the southernmost island in the Caribbean and lies just off the northeastern coast of Venezuela. With an area of it is also the fifth largest in...
in 1927, La Rose taught at St. Mary's College and later became a leading insurance executive in a company, Colonial Life
Colonial Life & Accident Insurance Company
Colonial Life & Accident Insurance Company is a U.S. insurance company based in Columbia, South Carolina . It was founded in 1937 and incorporated as Colonial Life & Accident Insurance Company in 1939...
, which was then in the process of becoming the biggest insurance company in the Caribbean. He later lived and taught in secondary schools in Venezuela
Venezuela
Venezuela , officially called the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela , is a tropical country on the northern coast of South America. It borders Colombia to the west, Guyana to the east, and Brazil to the south...
, before coming to Britain in 1961.
His interest in culture – so-called serious music, literature and folk language and proverbs – preceded his commitment to politics and trade union
Trade union
A trade union, trades union or labor union is an organization of workers that have banded together to achieve common goals such as better working conditions. The trade union, through its leadership, bargains with the employer on behalf of union members and negotiates labour contracts with...
ism. He saw these and cultural activity as interrelated in a vision of change. As he wrote in his statement "About New Beacon Review", that his conception "aims at the expression of the radical and the revolutionary. More easily definable in politics, and more complex and less easily definable, or indefinable, in the arts and culture". As an executive member of the Youth Council he produced their fortnightly radio programme "Voice of Youth" on Radio Trinidad; and in the mid-1950s, he co-authored with the calypsonian
Calypso music
Calypso is a style of Afro-Caribbean music that originated in Trinidad and Tobago from African and European roots. The roots of the genre lay in the arrival of enslaved Africans, who, not being allowed to speak with each other, communicated through song...
Raymond Quevedo – Attila the Hun – the first serious study of the calypso, first entitled Kaiso, A Review, subsequently published as Atilla's Kaiso (1983).
La Rose helped to form the Workers Freedom Movement in the 1940s and was editor of the few published copies of their journal Freedom. He became as executive member of the Federated Workers Trade Union (later merged in the National Union of Government and Federated Workers), and later General Secretary of the West Indian Independence Party
West Indian Independence Party
The West Indian Independence Party was a political party in Trinidad and Tobago. It contested the 1956 general elections, but failed to win a seat. It did not contest any further elections....
, which was formed out of the merger of the WFM with active trade unionists. He was later involved with the struggle within the Oilfields Workers Trade Union (OWTU) by the "Rebels" for a radical, democratic and more representative trade unions, for one member one vote in regular periodical elections by secret ballot
Secret ballot
The secret ballot is a voting method in which a voter's choices in an election or a referendum are anonymous. The key aim is to ensure the voter records a sincere choice by forestalling attempts to influence the voter by intimidation or bribery. The system is one means of achieving the goal of...
. The "Rebel" candidates won the elections in 1962 and he retained his close links with the OWTU and the international trade union movement, serving as the European representative of the OWTU from the 1960s until his death in 2006.
Life and work in Britain - 1961-2006
After he came to Britain in 1961, La Rose made his home in London, while maintaining his close links with the Caribbean.In August 1966 La Rose founded New Beacon Books, the first specialist Caribbean publishers, booksellers and international bookservice. Later in December 1966, he was co-founder with Edward Kamau Brathwaite and Andrew Salkey, of the influential Caribbean Artists Movement. He was chairman of the Institute of Race Relations
Institute of Race Relations
The Institute of Race Relations is a think tank based in the United Kingdom. It was formed in 1958 in order to publish research on race relations worldwide, and in 1972 was transformed into an 'anti-racist think tank'....
(IRR) in 1972/73, the period when the IRR was establishing its independence, and was also chairman of Towards Racial Justice, which was the vehicle for publishing the campaigning journal Race Today
Race Today
Race Today was a monthly British political magazine. Launched in 1969 by the Institute of Race Relations, it was from 1973 published by the Race Today Collective, which included figures such as Darcus Howe, Farrukh Dhondy and Linton Kwesi Johnson...
.
From the mid-1960s La Rose became closely involved in the Black Education Movement, including the fight against Banding
Ability grouping
Ability grouping is the educational practice of grouping students by academic potential or past achievement.Ability groups are usually small, informal groups formed within a single classroom. Assignment to an ability group is often short-term , and varies by subject...
, and against the wrongful placing of West Indian children in schools for the Educationally Sub-normal. In 1969, he founded the George Padmore Supplementary School, one of the first of its kind, and helped to found the Caribbean Education and Community Workers Association, which published How The West Indian Child Is Made Educationally Sub-normal in the British School System. Later in the 1980s he helped to found the National Association of Supplementary Schools and was its chairman for two years.
In 1975 he co-founded the Black Parents Movement from the core of the parents involved in the George Padmore Supplementary School after an incident when a young black schoolboy was beaten up by the police outside his school in the London Borough of Haringey
London Borough of Haringey
The London Borough of Haringey is a London borough, in North London, classified by some definitions as part of Inner London, and by others as part of Outer London. It was created in 1965 by the amalgamation of three former boroughs. It shares borders with six other London boroughs...
.
The Black Parents Movement later formed an alliance with the Black Youth Movement and the Race Today Collective, which had, with the Race Today journal, by then separated from the IRR. Together they established a formidable cultural and political movement, successfully fighting many cases against police oppression and arbitrariness and for better state education. It was the Alliance that formed the New Cross
New Cross Fire
The New Cross Fire was a devastating house fire which killed 13 young black people during a birthday party in New Cross, southeast London on Sunday 18 January 1981...
Massacre Action Committee in response to the arson attack which resulted in the death of 14 young blacks, and mobilised 20,000 black people and their supporters in March 1981 to protest the death of the young people and the failure of the police to conduct a proper investigation. La Rose was Chairman of the New Cross Massacre Action Committee.
In 1982 he was instrumental in the founding of Africa Solidarity, in support of those struggling against dictatorial governments and tyranny in Africa. That year he also became Chairman of the Committee for the Release of Political Prisoners in Kenya, whose founding members included the Kenyan novelist and critic Ngugi wa Thiong’o.
One of La Rose’s greatest achievements was the International Book Fair of Radical Black and Third World Books (1982-1995) organised originally jointly with Bogle L’Ouverture Books and Race Today Publications. He was joint director with Jessica Huntley of the Book Fair. After the withdrawal of Bogle L’Ouverture from the organising committee, he became its sole director.
Held in the UK, at first in London and then also in other parts of the country, the Book Fairs and Book Fair Festivals brought together people from across the globe to participate in debates, forums, readings, musical events, films, plays and other cultural productions, as well as browse through stalls from a multiplicity of publishers. They celebrated the enormous cultural and political achievements, addressed key issues of the times, and mirrored the achievements of black people throughout the world.
In response to concerns about the rise in fascism and xenophobia, La Rose helped to found European Action for Racial Equality and Social Justice in 1989, bringing together anti-racists and anti-fascists from Belgium, Italy, France and Germany.
La Rose was editor-in-chief of New Beacon Books until his death in 2006. He edited the occasional journal New Beacon Review (1968, 1985, 1986) and co-edited with Andrew Salkey the special issue Savacou Nos. 9/10 (1974) which provided a comprehensive anthology of black writing in Britain during the period of the Caribbean Artists Movement. He published his first collection of poems, Foundations, in 1966 and his second collection, Eyelets of Truth Within Me, in 1992 (both published by New Beacon Books). His poems and essays have been widely anthologised, and his journalism was published regularly in Race Today. He co-authored Kaiso Calypso Music: David Rudder in Conversation with John La Rose in 1990. He co-produced and scripted the documentary film Mangrove Nine, about the resistance to police attacks on the popular Mangrove restaurant
Mangrove restaurant
The Mangrove was a Caribbean restaurant located at 8 All Saints Road, Notting Hill, west London. It was opened in 1968 by Trinidadian community activist and civil rights campaigner Frank Crichlow...
in the early 1970s, with the film director Franco Rosso. He produced a short film on the Black Church in Britain as part of a Full House BBC
BBC
The British Broadcasting Corporation is a British public service broadcaster. Its headquarters is at Broadcasting House in the City of Westminster, London. It is the largest broadcaster in the world, with about 23,000 staff...
2 TV programme on the Caribbean arts, which he produced and directed in 1973.
In 1991 La Rose, together with a number of colleagues, founded the George Padmore Institute (GPI), a library, archive and educational research centre housing materials relating to the life experiences of Caribbean, African and Asian communities in Britain. The aims and objectives of the Institute are to organise: a library, educational resource and research centre, that will allow the materials in its care to be available for use by interested individuals and groups, both in person at the Institute and through the use of modern storage, retrieval and communication methods; educational and cultural activities, including conferences, courses, seminars, talks and readings; the publication of relevant materials. He was the Chairman of the George Padmore Institute from its inception until his death in 2006.
In introducing La Rose's talk on "The Politics of Culture: Writing and Publishing Today", which he organised as Islington's Writer in Residence in London in May 1985, the novelist, playwright and critic Ngugi wa Thiong'o wrote:
"John La Rose is immensely aware of the revolutionary potential of literature and culture in the world today. As a writer, publisher and cultural activist, he has helped in the growth of many writers in Africa, Caribbean, Europe and America. Rarely has anybody come into contact with him without being affected by his generous, searching, modern renaissance spirit."
Poetry
- Foundations (1966) New Beacon Books
- Eyelets of Truth Within Me (1992) New Beacon Books ISBN 1873201052
Major works on John La Rose
- Roxy Harris & Sarah White (eds) (1991) Foundations of a Movement: A Tribute to John La Rose. London: John La Rose Tribute Committee. ISBN 1-873201-07-9.
- A Feschrift in honour of John La Rose on occasion of the 10th Book Fair. With over 60 celebratory tributes on his contribution to the struggle for social justice, cultural and social transformation from writers, artists, scholars and activists.
- Anne Walmsley (1992) The Caribbean Artists Movement: A Literary and Cultural History 1966-1972. London: New Beacon Books. ISBN 1-873201-06-0.
- A history of the Caribbean Artists Movement (CAM) founded in London in 1966 by Edward Kamau Brathwaite, Andrew Salkey and John La Rose. The book provides a narrative account of the movement in its historical context. Among the many CAM members were CLR James, Wilson Harris, Ronald Moody, Aubrey Williams, Orlando Patterson, Kenneth Ramchand, Gordon Rohlehr, Ivan van SertimaIvan van SertimaIvan Gladstone Van Sertima was an associate professor of Africana Studies at Rutgers University in the United States....
, Louis James, James Berry, Errol Lloyd and Doris Brathwaite.
- A history of the Caribbean Artists Movement (CAM) founded in London in 1966 by Edward Kamau Brathwaite, Andrew Salkey and John La Rose. The book provides a narrative account of the movement in its historical context. Among the many CAM members were CLR James, Wilson Harris, Ronald Moody, Aubrey Williams, Orlando Patterson, Kenneth Ramchand, Gordon Rohlehr, Ivan van Sertima
- Brian W. Alleyne (2002) Radicals against Race: Black Activism and Cultural Politics. New York: Berg. ISBN 1-85973-527-4.
- A scholarly account of the story of New Beacon Books and the network of activist organisations that coalesced and developed around the bookshop and publishing house.
- Sarah White, Roxy Harris, Sharmilla Beezmohun (eds) (2005) A Meeting of the Continents: The International Book Fair of Radical Black and Third World Books – Revisited. London: New Beacon Books. ISBN 1-873201-18-4.
- A comprehensive account of the Book Fair with information on how it started, how it was organised, the role of La Rose, how and why it ended, memoirs from people all over the world who participated; plus the twelve brochures that accompanied each Book Fair and Book Fair Festival are reprinted in full.
- Kevin Meehan (2006) "Brilliant Episodes of Invention", in Wasafiri 21(3) November 2006, pp59–64. ISSN 0269 -0055 (print) ISSN 1747-1508 (online) - critique of American poet Jayne Cortez’s poetic tribute to La Rose in Foundations of a Movement (op. cit.)
- E.A. (Archie) Markham (2006) "Bookmarks for John La Rose", in At Home with Miss Vanesa, pp3–14. Birmingham, UK: Tindal Street Press. ISBN 0-9551384-0-X - a memoir of La Rose by the noted Caribbean poet and writer.