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Editors Letter – October 2025

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Editor’s Letter | Black History Month: Standing Firm in Pride and Power
As we welcome October, we step into Black History Month — a time to honour our heritage, celebrate resilience, and embrace our collective strength. From trailblazers shaping industries to communities creating change, this month reminds us of our shared power, pride, and purpose.
At Black Wall St Media, we reflect, celebrate, and amplify the voices that define us. Read our latest Editor’s Letter and join the conversation on what Pride and Power mean to you.

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Editors Letter – September 2025

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“August is like the Sunday of summer.” From the vibrant streets of Notting Hill Carnival to quiet moments of reflection, August reminds us of joy, community, and resilience. As we step into September, it’s the perfect time to carry that energy forward—invest in ourselves, celebrate our heritage, and embrace new beginnings. Dive into my latest piece on how the spirit of August can inspire us all.

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The Carnivalesque

By ART & CULTURE, LATESTNo Comments

Carnival is more than a party — it’s a protest, a prayer, and a powerful act of survival.
As Notting Hill Carnival draws near, The Carnivalesque: Body, Mind and Spirit exhibition invites us to look deeper. Curated by Onyekachi Wambu and supported by Ra Hendricks, this thought-provoking showcase explores the African spiritual, cultural, and political roots of carnival — from resistance on the plantation to modern-day urban struggles.

Featuring newly commissioned artworks, talks, screenings and more, this is carnival reimagined — bold, beautiful, and unapologetically radical.

Read the full article by John Stevenson and discover why this exhibition matters now more than ever.

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Screaming Silences

By LATEST, Social JusticeNo Comments

The System Was Not Designed to Save Us — It Was Designed to Survive Us

When Black men enter mental health services, they’re too often met not with care — but with control. This isn’t new. What’s new is that someone finally dared to name it, plainly.

A landmark study published in PLOS Mental Health breaks decades of silence. Co-produced with those most affected, it reveals a damning reality:
Black men are over three times more likely to be detained under the Mental Health Act.
Their culture is misunderstood, their spirituality pathologised, their voices ignored.

This is not a broken system. This is a system working exactly as it was built. And the truth?
We don’t need more “awareness.” We need accountability.

Read the full piece by Black Wall St Media below. Then share it. Talk about it. Break the silence.

Read now: The System Was Not Designed to Save Us. It Was Designed to Survive Us.

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The Crime of Being Visible

By LATEST, Social JusticeNo Comments

What does it cost to speak the truth while Black, female, and visible in Britain?

Diane Abbott has been suspended—again. But this moment goes beyond party politics or headlines. It asks a harder question: What happens when a Black woman names a truth this country isn’t ready to hear?

“The Crime of Being Visible” is not just about one MP. It’s about what Britain does when marginalised voices speak clearly, unapologetically, and from lived experience.

A searing read on race, power, and the ritual of silencing.

Read the full article:

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Editors Letter – May 2025

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As we step into May, a month of renewal and reflection, I’m taking a moment to look back on some powerful moments from April. From global solidarity with Burkina Faso, to spotlighting Black excellence at the Football Black List, to the urgent issues raised during Black Maternal Health Week—these stories remind us of the strength in our shared experiences across the Black diaspora.

In this roundup, I also reflect on the Leigh Day Immigration Summit, the impact of stress and inequality during Stress Awareness Month, and the need for real change in maternity care for Black women in the UK.

There’s so much to learn, feel, and act on. Read, reflect, and let’s move forward together.

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Editors letter – January 2025

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When America sneezes, England catches a cold—so what does Trump’s presidency mean for us? As diversity and inclusion face growing attacks, we must ask: What does moral courage truly look like?

From political shifts to economic empowerment, now is the time to stand firm in our values. Initiatives like Cashblack show how supporting Black businesses can be a powerful form of resistance. As Black History Month begins in the U.S., let’s commit to action, unity, and justice because our fight is far from over.

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