For Black History Month, we鈥檙e highlighting Black British activists who have been pioneers in advocating for equality here in the UK.
Here are just a few of many Black British activists championing our values and making the world a fairer place for all.
Claudia Jones

Originally from Trinidad, Claudia Jones鈥 family moved to New York where she worked as a journalist and political activist for 30 years. She joined the Young Communist League of America and was eventually deported from the US for , coming to the UK as a political refugee in 1955.
Racial tensions were high in London in the 1950s, Claudia lived amongst the newly arrived Caribbean migrants who arrived in the UK upon the Empire Windrush, a passenger ship that brought one of the first large groups of postwar West Indian immigrants to the United Kingdom. In 1958, wanting to give a voice to the growing Caribbean community, Claudia Jones founded the West Indian Gazette. She believed that "people without a voice were as lambs to the slaughter".
Following the 1958 Notting Hill race riots, Claudia created the It was an event providing the Caribbean community with the space to celebrate their culture in London in the belief that:
The slogan of the event was 鈥楢 people鈥檚 art is the genesis of their freedom鈥. These celebratory events paved the way for one of the UK鈥檚 most famous celebrations: Notting Hill Carnival.
Lord David Pitt

Lord David Pitt was the first person of African descent to run for a parliamentary seat in Britain in the 1959 general election. Pitt was defeated in both his attempts to be elected as the first Black MP, however, in 1961 he was elected to the Hackney district in London鈥檚 city government which was later incorporated by the Greater London Council In 1964.
Lord Pitt served as deputy chair of the Greater London Council before becoming the first Black chair in 1974,
Lord Pitt was appointed to the House of Lords in 1975 by Prime Minister Harold Wilson. Born in Grenada, he was the second peer of African descent to sit in the House of Lords. Lord Pitt was granted a life peerage and was the longest-serving Black Parliamentarian.
Lord Pitt and in 1993 Lords debate upon the Asylum and Immigration Appeals Bill, In his speech, Lord Pitt argued that it was unreasonable to expect refugees to have all the 鈥減roper papers鈥 when they are running for their life: 鈥淪omeone running for his life may have had a passport but there is certainly no question of his going to get a visa.鈥
On reflection of his work, Lord Pitt 鈥淪ome Black people regard me as an Uncle Tom, while some whites regard me as a Black Power revolutionary. So I imagine I got it about right.鈥
Phyllis Opoku-Gyimah

Phyllis Opoku-Gyimah (also known as Lady Phyll) is , the first event of its kind in Europe celebrating LGBTQ people of African, Asian, Caribbean, Middle Eastern and Latin American descent. has increased visibility and advocacy for Queer, Trans and Intersex People of Colour in the UK and beyond, celebrating its 15th anniversary in August 2020.
Lady Phyll is also a trustee of Stonewall, the LGBT rights charity, and sits on the Trades Union Congress In 2019, she was appointed Executive Director at the Kaleidoscope Trust, the leading UK charity advocating for the human rights of LGBTQ people globally.
When we rise together, we are mighty.
In her activism fighting for LGBTQI+ rights for people from marginalised communities, she is vocally inclusive of refugees and asylum seekers, who often face fear of persecution for their sexuality and gender identities.
In 2016, Lady Phyll in the New Year鈥檚 Honours List in protest of LGBTQI+ persecution in Commonwealth countries that still have repressive anti-LGBT laws, saying: "I don't believe in empire. I don't believe in, and actively resist, colonialism and its toxic and enduring legacy in the Commonwealth, where - among many other injustices - LGBTQI people are still being persecuted, tortured and even killed because of sodomy laws鈥 that were put in place by British imperialists."
Marvin Rees

Marvin Rees was elected mayor of Bristol in May 2016, making Bristol the first major European city to have elected a mayor of Black African heritage. He has declared Bristol a city of hope, built on ambition, inclusion and social justice.
Marvin was born in Bristol to a mixed-race family. His dad came to the UK from Jamaica as a child, and his mother who was part of a white Welsh family. Rees remembers being met with racism as a daily occurrence growing up. Before running for Mayor, Rees鈥 early career was in Broadcast Journalism at BBC Bristol where he has about how he believes he experienced racial discrimination. as saying: 鈥淩acism has never been about calling people names. It鈥檚 a system of power.鈥
Marvin recognises the importance of refugee contributions to society here in the UK. In 2018, his work to integrate refugees in the city of Bristol gained an international profile and he Rees was also invited to the first-ever , where he attended a discussion about how sports can help integrate communities as well as shared learnings from partnership work taking place in his city.
Racism has never been about calling people names. It鈥檚 a system of power.
鈥淢y aim is to get people relating to each other with dignity; talking to each other, knowing that their children have the same life chances as each other,鈥 Marvin said in an interview with . 鈥淭hen you will have the basis for genuine integration.鈥