"Today in Britain, Black communities face institutional racism, police brutality and chronic community underfunding. 50 years ago, Black Britons were fighting these same evils. Indeed, it was in this same context that Black radicalism found ground in the 1970s.
Taking inspiration from their American counterparts, young British radicals formed collectives and organisations in defence of their community. In 1968, Eddie Lecointe, Peter Martin and Nigerian playwright Obi Egbuna founded the British Black Panther movement. Egbuna went on to write Destroy This Temple, which served as his Black Power manifesto".