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Martha Osamor (born 1940, Delta State, Nigeria) is a British politician, community activist and civil rights campaigner.[1]
Born Martha Otito Osantor in Delta State, Nigeria. Osamar moved to the UK in 1963 to join husband who was then a student who was studying there. Osamor and her husband moved to Tottenham in London, where they had four children. Her husband died unexpectedly in 1975.[2]
Early life
[edit]Whilst they lived here, they had four children and although they had plans to move back to Nigeria, they never managed to do it due to the political instability in the country. When things subsided and they finally thought they could move back, Martha's husband unexpectedly died in a car crush during one of his preparation trips to Nigeria. As a single mother of 4, Martha then decided to remain in the UK, where her children had been born and brought up. Osamor joined the Black Women's Movement, which started when she became a single mother and she became involved with other women to organise themselves around issues of childcare, the after-school club, the Residents' Association, and so on. As a result she and a group of other women founded the United Black Women's Action Group (UBWAG). Osamor has been active within the Unions and has been part of the NUT, the Transport and General Workers' Union - now called UNITE. She has taken positions in these Unions as Chair, Equalities Officer, Race Committee member, and so on. Osamor began working at Tottenham Law Centre (from '77 till '97, now called Haringey Law Centre) which overlapped with her work with the UBWG. During this time, Martha was part of Broad Water Farm Youth Association Mothers' Project and helped to organise the Black community of a near-by estate.[3]
Following the Broadwater Farm uprising Osamor and Dolly Kiffin organised the "first Civil Rights Demonstration ever held in Britain" on 3 October 1987 and produced a Manifesto for Civil Rights and Justice.
http://www.calmview.eu/BCA/CalmView/Record.aspx?src=DServe.Catalog&id=ORAL%2f1%2f28
http://www.calmview.eu/BCA/CalmView/Record.aspx?src=DServe.Catalog&id=OSAMOR xc njm
References
[edit]- ^ "Style: The return of thick tights". the Guardian. 2003-02-28. Retrieved 2021-05-19.
- ^ Helmer, Hendrik (2017-11-10). "Experience: A cockroach got stuck in my ear". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2017-11-10.
- ^ James, King (1607). The Holy Bible. Caxton Printing Inc. pp. 1–23.