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Gerlin Bean

Gerlin Bean (born 10 February 1939) is a Jamaican community worker who was active in the radical feminist and Black nationalist movements in the United Kingdom in the 1960s and 1970s. Trained as a nurse, she became a dedicated community activist and social worker, involved in the founding of the Black Women's Action Committee of the Black Unity and Freedom Party, the women's section of the Black Liberation Front, the Brixton Black Women's Group, and the Organisation of Women of African and Asian Descent (OWAAD). Bean's work and activism focused on eliminating discriminatory policies for people of colour, women, and people with disabilities. She fought for equal educational opportunity, fair wages, adequate housing, and programmes that supported families, such as counselling services, child care, and health care.

Gerlin Bean
Born1939 (age 84–85)
Alma materLondon School of Economics; University of the West Indies
Occupation(s)Community worker, activist
Years active1959–present

In 1983, Bean left England when Zimbabwe gained its independence and worked there on development programmes for women and children for five years. She later returned to Jamaica and focused on women's and children's issues there too. She was the managing director of 3D Projects, a charity that provided assistance programmes for children with disabilities and their families. She has been involved in the development of schools to assist children and in other community education programmes regarding disability. Bean has also served on the St. Catherine's Parish Council. Her activism has been celebrated by activities arranged for the UK Black History Month festivities, such as the 2014 exhibit "400 Years of African Women Resistance Leaders" in Islington, and a 2017 sculpture of the clenched fists of Black women activists that was exhibited at the Guildhall Art Gallery in London.

Early life and education edit

Bean was born in 1939 in Hanover Parish, Jamaica, to a couple who were farmers.[1][2][3] The rural setting taught her about communal living and instilled the values of mutual aid in the community.[4] She trained as a general and psychiatric nurse after moving to Surrey, England, at the age of 19.[1][5][6] When she turned 20 in 1960, she had a daughter, Jennifer, but broke off her engagement to her daughter's father. From the time Jennifer was six months old, Bean arranged foster care for her with a local family so that her child's life would remain stable whilst she worked.[7] Bean earned a bachelor's degree in Social Science and Administration at the London School of Economics and in 1995 completed a master's degree in Public Health at the University of the West Indies in Mona, Jamaica.[8][9]

Career and activism edit

England (1960–1982) edit

Social work and community development edit

After several years of working as a nurse in London, Bean left the field of medical care and began working as a community development and youth activist.[1][2] She helped set up the 70s Coffee Bar in Paddington, which was organised by the Westminster City Council as a youth activities and counselling centre. Later, she left Paddington and moved to Brixton to found the Gresham Youth Project.[10] In 1969, the Caribbean Education and Community Workers' Association, based in North London, organised a conference to evaluate how West Indian children were faring in the British school system. A paper presented at the symposium by Bernard Coard demonstrated the systemic bias of administrative policies, which routinely placed Caribbean children in special classes for students with learning disabilities. Parents were outraged at the report's conclusion that their children were considered intellectually inferior because of their race.[11]

Parents from Brixton met to discuss a pioneering solution brought forward by Bean, Reverend Anthony Ottey, and the teacher Ansel Wong to hold supplementary schools to help children with their homework and reading. The plan also aimed to empower parents by teaching them how to interact with teachers and administrators and be more involved in their children's education. The trio, who worked together at the Gresham Youth Project, founded the Afiwe School, which among other services sent volunteers to accompany parents to school meetings, provided tutoring services, and assisted in outreach with schools and tuition solutions.[12] Bean, Ottey, and Wong also provided information to the Lambeth Council for Community Relations, which launched a temporary housing and counselling service for runaway youth.[13]

 
The Karibu Centre at 7, Gresham Road in Brixton (formerly the Abeng Centre). Number 5 is on the left

Bean, Gloria Cameron, and Mabel Carter began meeting as the West Indian Parents Action Group (WIPAG) around 1971, but the group was not formalised until 1974.[14] The goal of the organisation was to address under-achievement by Black children in the British school system and was particularly focused on early childhood education that gave training to children before they entered formal schooling.[15] Bean was also involved with Wong, Lu Garvey, and Tony Soares in 1972 in establishing a cooperative in the basement of 61 Golborne Road in Kensal Town, where community experts were able to train unemployed young people in various skills, including barbering, electrical repair, and typesetting.[16] Around the same time, Wong and Bean created the Abeng Centre in Brixton. The staff of the facility worked in conjunction with the Afiwe School, providing advice and counselling services, vocational training, and serving as a youth club.[17]

After searching for a suitable property, WIPAG secured a lease from the Housing Directorate of Lambeth in 1976 for 7 Canterbury Crescent, an abandoned terraced house.[18] Delays in funding for staff training and equipment pushed the opening of the facility back to January 1978.[19] Within a short period of time, 24 children were enrolled and more than 80 children were on the waiting list.[20] Problems with the building and the need for a bigger space led Bean and Cameron to search for a more suitable location.[21] They found a building at 3 & 5 Gresham Road and negotiated a 30-year lease at a peppercorn rent with the Lambeth Council.[22] The planning authority granted WIPAG renovation permission in 1979 and in 1981 the facility was given official charitable status.[23] The new nursery school officially opened in 1983, the year Bean moved to Zimbabwe.[24]

Political activism edit

Around 1966, Bean began to attend meetings with the Gay Liberation Front in London. While she recognised that some people viewed homosexuality as a threat to families, she maintained people should be free to be who they were.[25][26] In 1970, the Black Unity and Freedom Party (BUFP) was formed and Bean began pressing for the group to include a women's platform. She had been inspired by her attendance at the Women's Liberation National Conference held that year at Ruskin College, Oxford University.[1] There were 600 women at the meeting and Bean was one of only a few Black women attendees.[27][28][Notes 1] Before the BUFP was a year old, Bean had founded the Black Women's Action Committee, as its women's section.[1] She specifically wanted to focus on Black women's issues because white feminists addressed different issues, such as abortion and being paid for housework. These were not central problems for Black women who sought to be paid sufficient wages to provide child care for their children, needed adequate housing and educational opportunities, and called for protection from racism and violence.[29]

Bean published a pamphlet Black Women Speak Out in 1970–71.[28][30] Despite this overt expression of the point of view of Black women and the space afforded to women by the BUFP to "express themselves politically", the scholar Rosalind Eleanor Wild notes that some members continued to "feel very constricted".[30] The activist and academic Harry Goulbourne has also observed that the BUFP was "extremely authoritarian, extremely intolerant".[30] When the Black Liberation Front (BLF), a group with stronger socialist ties than a strictly Black nationalist focus, was formed in 1971, Bean left the Black Unity and Freedom Party.[1][10] She founded a women's section of the BLF and began publishing "Sister's Column" in the organisation's Grassroots newsletter.[1][27]

The three main black power movements — the British Black Panthers, the Black Liberation Front and the Black Unity and Freedom Party — all initially attracted women members, but women often found that their issues were not taken seriously.[27][31] According to scholars such as John Narayan and W. Chris Johnson, women activists in these movements often felt that they were the "oppressed of the oppressed" and "most exploited" because they were impacted by the same racial and class discrimination as Black males, but also had to face sexism from both white and Black men.[4][32]

By 1973, the British Black Panthers had dissolved and women in the other two political groups stopped gathering.[33][34] In 1974 Bean, Zainab Abbas and Wong formed part of the British delegation to the Sixth Pan-African Congress, which was hosted in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. The British delegates' address to the Congress reiterated the commitment of Black Britons to the liberation of Africans, people of African descent, and others throughout the world, from colonial policies, imperialism, and racism.[35]

Women's rights edit

In 1973, Bean joined with Abbas, Beverley Bryan, Olive Morris, Liz Obi and other activists to found the Brixton Black Women's Group (BBWG).[1][27][34] Though they were accused by some male activists of splitting the Black struggle, the women believed that their issues were not being heard and wanted to find solutions by working with other women, including women's groups in Africa.[36] Gail Lewis, a BBWG member, stated in a 2019 interview in Feminist Theory:

Activism was understood in a singular way, even if it happened in a multiplicity of places/spaces of life: work, the courtroom, the police station, the school, the local and central state. …It happens in all our kitchens, because whether they're from the Caribbean or from the African Continent or South Asia the women were leading from the kitchen. And by 'the kitchen' I mean an understanding that the lived realities and social relations of the kitchen were as much about politics as everything else, including the bedroom. And I also mean that 'the kitchen' was and is a place of political learning and theory-making. …[I]n that kind of register, and then of course we would – we being me, and Avtar [Brah] who was with Southall Black Sisters then, and Gerlin Bean, and all these people – would raise these questions with the guys. In Brixton we had a very tense relationship with Race Today, around feminism really, but they didn't just write us off, and it wasn't really hostile.[37]

Of paramount importance to the women were the lack of available housing; Sus laws, which allowed police to stop and search anyone who might be suspected of having the intent to commit an offence; and education.[10][38] Sus law arrests were often directed at Black youth and police at the time were given broad latitude in interpreting the terms "suspect" and "intent".[39][Notes 2] The Brixton Black Women's Group worked to obtain state funding to expand the Sabarr Bookshop, using the store as a link to provide educational materials both for schools and activists.[34][43]

In 1978, Bean, Stella Dadzie and Morris met with students from Ethiopia and Eritrea, who were attending the London School of Economics. Together, they formed the Organisation for Women of Africa and African Descent.[44] The formation of this group was identified by historians Line Nyhagen Predelli and Beatrice Halsaa as "a watershed in the history of Black women's rights activism" in their 2012 publication Majority-Minority Relations in Contemporary Women's Movements: Strategic Sisterhood.[45] Within six months, the group asked Asian activists to join them and the name changed to the Organisation of Women of African and Asian Descent, known as OWAAD.[46] This umbrella organisation allowed Black[44] — from the political stance[Notes 3] — women's groups throughout England to work together on common issues.[44] As one of the first Black feminist groups that was politically formalised, OWAAD gave members experience in how to organise their communities, battle against discrimination, and educate themselves and the community about government policies. Bean served as the chair of OWAAD's first conference held in 1979 at the Abeng Centre.[44] That same year, Bean and Dadzie went to Chicago, Illinois, to develop networks with the National Alliance of Black Feminists.[49]

Zimbabwe (1982–1988) edit

From 1982, Bean focused on establishing programmes to assist women and children in Zimbabwe.[50] Then, after Zimbabwe gained its independence from the UK, she moved to Africa in 1983.[51] She worked with women to develop plans for family health and children's welfare.[52] As a volunteer for the Catholic Institute for International Relations in Harare, Bean recruited doctors and nurses from the UK, encouraging them to move to Zimbabwe and work in rural areas to improve education and health facilities and programmes.[10] She maintained ties with WIPAG, sharing educational materials from Africa with the nursery school on Gresham Road in London.[53]

Jamaica (1988–present) edit

Bean returned to Jamaica in 1988 and studied for a degree in public health.[10][54][55] In 1994, she became the deputy director at the Project Dedicated to the Development of Persons with Disabilities, known as 3D Projects, a charitable organisation that provided services for persons with disabilities and support for their families.[56][57] She co-wrote a chapter titled "Mobilising Parents of Children with Disabilities in Jamaica and the English Speaking Caribbean" with Marigold J. Thorburn for a book published in 1995.[58] Within four years, Bean was serving as a project director of 3D Projects, which was headquartered in Spanish Town, in Saint Catherine Parish, and by 2002 had become its managing director.[59][60] As director of that development, in 2005, she initiated an innovative programme called "Skills For Life" to teach sex education to people with disabilities and their carers. The programme was designed to reduce the taboos of talking about sex and minimize the vulnerability and potential for sexual exploitation of persons with disabilities.[57] Supported with funds provided by the United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund, the programme was connected to a treatment project for young people in Jamaica who were living with HIV/AIDS.[61] In 2009, she established a school in Saint Catherine Parish to provide early education opportunities for children with disabilities.[62]

Bean participated in the University of the West Indies lecture series titled "That Time In Foreign — Life Stories of Jamaican England Returnees", which ran from 2006 to 2007.[63] She has been a presenter for numerous community seminars touching on issues of disability, family violence, HIV/AIDS education, and overall health and support for people with disabilities.[56][64][65] She worked as the chair of the gender section on the Council for Voluntary Social Services in 2007 and served as a member of the Saint Catherine Parish Committee from 2008 to 2011.[65][66] She has worked with international organisations such as the Committee on the Rights of the Child and UNESCO, national policy boards and regional policy groups of the Disabled Peoples' International in order to create and design inclusive policies for children and persons with disabilities.[67]

In 2020 Bean was one of the few Black feminists who participated in the Oxford International Women's Festival at Oxford University, which was organised to honour the 50th anniversary of the 1970 Ruskin Conference at Oxford. The event was criticised for being predominantly white and middle-class and Bean told The New Yorker that, as a Black woman, she "couldn't really pick on the relevance" of the conference.[68]

Legacy edit

Bean is thought of by many activists as a mentor who introduced them to and guided them in their political development.[50] Among these are Abbas, Dadzie, Ama Gueye, and Gail Lewis.[69] When the book The Heart of the Race (1985) was in the planning stages, Bean worked with Dadzie and Bryan to ensure that it involved as many varied experiences of women activists as possible and to show that they had united in the common cause to resist economic exploitation, imperialism, racism, and sexism.[70] When the Remembering Olive Collective was formed to gather materials in commemoration of Olive Morris, Bean donated her personal photographs and memorabilia of her friend to the archive.[71] The Olive Morris Collection was made available to the public in 2009 and is housed at the Lambeth Archives in South London.[72]

Bean has been the subject of two papers about her involvement radical feminism presented by W. Chris Johnson of the University of Toronto.[73][74] Her activism in Britain has been recognised in UK Black History Month celebrations, such as the 2014 exhibit "400 Years of African Women Resistance Leaders" hosted by Black History Walks in Islington and a 2017 sculpture, A Fighters' Archive, by Wijnand De Jonge, which was exhibited at the Guildhall Art Gallery in London.[75][76] The sculpture featured bronze casts of the clenched fists (to represent boxing or fighting) of 15 Black women activists, including Bean. The castings were made live with each of the women.[76]

In 2023, a book-length biography of Bean by A. S. Francis, Gerlin Bean: Mother of the Movement, was published by Lawrence & Wishart.[77]

Selected works edit

  • Bean, Gerlin; Thorburn, Marigold (1995). "Mobilising Parents of Children with Disabilities in Jamaica and the English Speaking Caribbean". In O'Toole, Bryan; McConkey, Roy (eds.). Innovations in Developing Countries for People with Disabilities (PDF). Chorley, Lancashire: Lisieux Hall Publications. pp. 105–120. ISBN 978-1-870335-18-8. (PDF) from the original on 5 November 2018.
  • Bean, Gerlin (2000). "Politics and the State: Caribbean". In Kramarae, Cheris; Spender, Dale (eds.). Routledge International Encyclopedia of Women: Global Women's Issues and Knowledge. Vol. III. Identity Politics—Publishing. New York, New York: Routledge. pp. 1577–1580. ISBN 978-0-415-92091-9.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Several sources indicate the presence of only two Black women. These sources include A. S. Francis, and Bean, who said in an interview that only herself and Pat Smith of Essex University attended;[10][27] however, Natalie Thomlinson, a historian at the University of Reading, notes that video recorded at the Ruskin conference shows Bean and "several Black women".[28]
  2. ^ The Home Affairs Committee on Race Relations and a subcommittee from Immigration conducted a study between 1979 and 1980 that found that Black youth were disproportionately targeted by the Sus laws and that only six police divisions actually used the laws as a basis for arrest.[40] Those that did use the laws had an average 78 per cent conviction rate throughout England and Wales. However, London's conviction rate was 82 per cent. The report also pointed out that the police were allowed to use their own judgement rather than relying on independent evidence or witness accounts.[41] Public outcry and the report itself eventually led to reforms beginning in 1984.[42]
  3. ^ The term "politically Black" as used by 1970s British women's groups meant anyone of or within the diaspora of African, Asian, Latina/o, or Middle Eastern descent, who was forced by society to face discrimination on the basis of their identity, including bi-racial women, as well as indigenous women.[47][48]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Francis 2021.
  2. ^ a b Shrew 1971, p. 10.
  3. ^ Bean & Thorburn 1995, p. 107.
  4. ^ a b Johnson 2019, p. 129.
  5. ^ Shrew 1971, pp. 10–11.
  6. ^ Francis 2020, p. 60.
  7. ^ Shrew 1971, p. 11.
  8. ^ Bean & Thorburn 1995, pp. 107–108.
  9. ^ BIREME 1995.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Bryan, Dadzie & Scafe 2010.
  11. ^ Cameron 2016, p. 129.
  12. ^ Cameron 2016, pp. 130–131, 158.
  13. ^ Cameron 2016, p. 158.
  14. ^ Cameron 2016, pp. 172, 174, 178.
  15. ^ Cameron 2016, pp. 172–174.
  16. ^ Johnson 2019, p. 133.
  17. ^ Johnson 2019, p. 134.
  18. ^ Cameron 2016, p. 175.
  19. ^ Cameron 2016, pp. 176–177.
  20. ^ Cameron 2016, p. 177.
  21. ^ Cameron 2016, pp. 178–179.
  22. ^ Cameron 2016, pp. 179–180.
  23. ^ Cameron 2016, p. 180.
  24. ^ Cameron 2016, pp. 180, 183.
  25. ^ Shrew 1971, pp. 11–12.
  26. ^ Francis 2020, p. 63.
  27. ^ a b c d e Francis 2020, p. 61.
  28. ^ a b c Thomlinson 2016, p. 67.
  29. ^ Bryan, Dadzie & Scafe 2018, pp. 148–150.
  30. ^ a b c Wild 2008, p. 97.
  31. ^ Thomlinson 2016, pp. 66, 69.
  32. ^ Narayan 2019, p. 951.
  33. ^ Agyepong 2016.
  34. ^ a b c Thomlinson 2016, p. 69.
  35. ^ Johnson 2019, p. 135.
  36. ^ Bryan, Dadzie & Scafe 2018, pp. 150–151.
  37. ^ Lewis & Hemmings (2019), pp. 405–421.
  38. ^ Terrill 1989, p. 438.
  39. ^ Terrill 1989, pp. 438–439.
  40. ^ Terrill 1989, pp. 439–440.
  41. ^ Terrill 1989, p. 440.
  42. ^ Terrill 1989, p. 442.
  43. ^ Longley 2021, p. 133.
  44. ^ a b c d Francis 2020, p. 62.
  45. ^ Predelli & Halsaa 2012, p. 55.
  46. ^ Bryan, Dadzie & Scafe 2018, p. 205.
  47. ^ Swaby 2014, pp. 12–13.
  48. ^ Warmington 2014, p. 111.
  49. ^ Ohene-Nyako 2018, p. 255.
  50. ^ a b Francis 2020, p. 64.
  51. ^ Ohene-Nyako 2018, p. 249.
  52. ^ Bryan, Dadzie & Scafe 2018, p. 263.
  53. ^ Cameron 2016, p. 231.
  54. ^ Cameron 2016, p. 329.
  55. ^ Bean & Thorburn 1995, p. 108.
  56. ^ a b The Gleaner 1994, p. 6.
  57. ^ a b Reid 2005.
  58. ^ Bean & Thorburn 1995.
  59. ^ The Gleaner 1999, p. 49.
  60. ^ The Gleaner 2002, p. 41.
  61. ^ BBC 2005.
  62. ^ Turner 2009, p. 4.
  63. ^ UWI 2006.
  64. ^ The Gleaner 2005, p. 25.
  65. ^ a b Jamaica Information Service 2007.
  66. ^ The Gleaner 2008, p. F4.
  67. ^ Committee on the Rights of the Child 2003; International Conference on Education 2007, p. 187; Emanuel 2008, p. 28; Vision 2030 Jamaica 2009, p. 61.
  68. ^ Srinivasan 2021.
  69. ^ Francis 2020, pp. 58, 65.
  70. ^ Ohene-Nyako 2018, p. 258.
  71. ^ Longley 2021, p. 128.
  72. ^ Longley 2021, p. 125.
  73. ^ North American Conference on British Studies 2018, p. 22.
  74. ^ Women & Gender Studies Institute 2018, p. 1.
  75. ^ Islington Council 2014, p. 8.
  76. ^ a b European Union News 2017.
  77. ^ "Gerlin Bean". Lawrence Wishart. Retrieved 3 January 2024.

Bibliography edit

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  • Cameron, Gloria (2016). Case Dismissed!: An Ordinary Jamaican Woman, an Extraordinary Life. Hertford, Hertfordshire: Hansib Publications. ISBN 978-1-910553-41-1.
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  • Emanuel, Leslie A. (March 2008). Equal Opportunities for All: Respecting the Rights of Persons With Disabilities (PDF) (Report). Potters Village, Antigua & Barbuda: Disabled Peoples' International. (PDF) from the original on 24 May 2022. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
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  • Francis, A. S. (Autumn 2020). "The Mother of the Movement: Gerlin Bean". History Matters. 1 (1). London: Black and Asian Studies Association: 58–65. Retrieved 21 May 2022.
  • Johnson, W. Chris (2019). "7. 'The Spirit of Bandung' in 1970s Britain: The Black Liberation Front's Revolutionary Transnationalism". In Adi, Hakim (ed.). Black British History: New Perspectives. London: Zed Books. pp. 125–143. ISBN 978-1-78699-427-1.
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  • Narayan, John (September 2019). "British Black Power: The Anti-Imperialism of Political Blackness and the Problem of Nativist Socialism" (PDF). The Sociological Review. 67 (5). Thousand Oaks, California: SAGE Publishing for the University of Keele: 945–967. doi:10.1177/0038026119845550. ISSN 0038-0261. OCLC 8061038713. S2CID 150411821. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
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  • Predelli, Line Nyhagen; Halsaa, Beatrice (2012). Majority-Minority Relations in Contemporary Women's Movements: Strategic Sisterhood. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-137-02074-1.
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  • "Gerlin". Shrew. Vol. 3, no. 8. London: Women's Liberation Workshop. September 1971. pp. 10–12. OCLC 1001130639.
  • Gerlin Bean (January 2010). (Interview). Interviewed by Bryan, Beverley; Dadzie, Stella; Scafe, Suzanne. London: Black Cultural Archives. Reference No. ORAL/1/3. Archived from the original on 6 June 2022. Retrieved 7 October 2022.{{cite interview}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
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Further reading edit

  • Addie Tadesse, "Black women activists in British history | Women's History Month 2022", including a short biography of Gerlin Bean with a photograph
  • Francis, A.S. (2023). Gerlin Bean: The Mother of the Movement. Lawrence & Wishart. ISBN 9781913546373

External links edit

  • GerlinBeanProject.com

gerlin, bean, born, february, 1939, jamaican, community, worker, active, radical, feminist, black, nationalist, movements, united, kingdom, 1960s, 1970s, trained, nurse, became, dedicated, community, activist, social, worker, involved, founding, black, women, . Gerlin Bean born 10 February 1939 is a Jamaican community worker who was active in the radical feminist and Black nationalist movements in the United Kingdom in the 1960s and 1970s Trained as a nurse she became a dedicated community activist and social worker involved in the founding of the Black Women s Action Committee of the Black Unity and Freedom Party the women s section of the Black Liberation Front the Brixton Black Women s Group and the Organisation of Women of African and Asian Descent OWAAD Bean s work and activism focused on eliminating discriminatory policies for people of colour women and people with disabilities She fought for equal educational opportunity fair wages adequate housing and programmes that supported families such as counselling services child care and health care Gerlin BeanBorn1939 age 84 85 Hanover Parish JamaicaAlma materLondon School of Economics University of the West IndiesOccupation s Community worker activistYears active1959 present In 1983 Bean left England when Zimbabwe gained its independence and worked there on development programmes for women and children for five years She later returned to Jamaica and focused on women s and children s issues there too She was the managing director of 3D Projects a charity that provided assistance programmes for children with disabilities and their families She has been involved in the development of schools to assist children and in other community education programmes regarding disability Bean has also served on the St Catherine s Parish Council Her activism has been celebrated by activities arranged for the UK Black History Month festivities such as the 2014 exhibit 400 Years of African Women Resistance Leaders in Islington and a 2017 sculpture of the clenched fists of Black women activists that was exhibited at the Guildhall Art Gallery in London Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career and activism 2 1 England 1960 1982 2 1 1 Social work and community development 2 1 2 Political activism 2 1 3 Women s rights 2 2 Zimbabwe 1982 1988 2 3 Jamaica 1988 present 3 Legacy 4 Selected works 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Bibliography 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life and education editBean was born in 1939 in Hanover Parish Jamaica to a couple who were farmers 1 2 3 The rural setting taught her about communal living and instilled the values of mutual aid in the community 4 She trained as a general and psychiatric nurse after moving to Surrey England at the age of 19 1 5 6 When she turned 20 in 1960 she had a daughter Jennifer but broke off her engagement to her daughter s father From the time Jennifer was six months old Bean arranged foster care for her with a local family so that her child s life would remain stable whilst she worked 7 Bean earned a bachelor s degree in Social Science and Administration at the London School of Economics and in 1995 completed a master s degree in Public Health at the University of the West Indies in Mona Jamaica 8 9 Career and activism editEngland 1960 1982 edit Social work and community development edit After several years of working as a nurse in London Bean left the field of medical care and began working as a community development and youth activist 1 2 She helped set up the 70s Coffee Bar in Paddington which was organised by the Westminster City Council as a youth activities and counselling centre Later she left Paddington and moved to Brixton to found the Gresham Youth Project 10 In 1969 the Caribbean Education and Community Workers Association based in North London organised a conference to evaluate how West Indian children were faring in the British school system A paper presented at the symposium by Bernard Coard demonstrated the systemic bias of administrative policies which routinely placed Caribbean children in special classes for students with learning disabilities Parents were outraged at the report s conclusion that their children were considered intellectually inferior because of their race 11 Parents from Brixton met to discuss a pioneering solution brought forward by Bean Reverend Anthony Ottey and the teacher Ansel Wong to hold supplementary schools to help children with their homework and reading The plan also aimed to empower parents by teaching them how to interact with teachers and administrators and be more involved in their children s education The trio who worked together at the Gresham Youth Project founded the Afiwe School which among other services sent volunteers to accompany parents to school meetings provided tutoring services and assisted in outreach with schools and tuition solutions 12 Bean Ottey and Wong also provided information to the Lambeth Council for Community Relations which launched a temporary housing and counselling service for runaway youth 13 nbsp The Karibu Centre at 7 Gresham Road in Brixton formerly the Abeng Centre Number 5 is on the left Bean Gloria Cameron and Mabel Carter began meeting as the West Indian Parents Action Group WIPAG around 1971 but the group was not formalised until 1974 14 The goal of the organisation was to address under achievement by Black children in the British school system and was particularly focused on early childhood education that gave training to children before they entered formal schooling 15 Bean was also involved with Wong Lu Garvey and Tony Soares in 1972 in establishing a cooperative in the basement of 61 Golborne Road in Kensal Town where community experts were able to train unemployed young people in various skills including barbering electrical repair and typesetting 16 Around the same time Wong and Bean created the Abeng Centre in Brixton The staff of the facility worked in conjunction with the Afiwe School providing advice and counselling services vocational training and serving as a youth club 17 After searching for a suitable property WIPAG secured a lease from the Housing Directorate of Lambeth in 1976 for 7 Canterbury Crescent an abandoned terraced house 18 Delays in funding for staff training and equipment pushed the opening of the facility back to January 1978 19 Within a short period of time 24 children were enrolled and more than 80 children were on the waiting list 20 Problems with the building and the need for a bigger space led Bean and Cameron to search for a more suitable location 21 They found a building at 3 amp 5 Gresham Road and negotiated a 30 year lease at a peppercorn rent with the Lambeth Council 22 The planning authority granted WIPAG renovation permission in 1979 and in 1981 the facility was given official charitable status 23 The new nursery school officially opened in 1983 the year Bean moved to Zimbabwe 24 Political activism edit Around 1966 Bean began to attend meetings with the Gay Liberation Front in London While she recognised that some people viewed homosexuality as a threat to families she maintained people should be free to be who they were 25 26 In 1970 the Black Unity and Freedom Party BUFP was formed and Bean began pressing for the group to include a women s platform She had been inspired by her attendance at the Women s Liberation National Conference held that year at Ruskin College Oxford University 1 There were 600 women at the meeting and Bean was one of only a few Black women attendees 27 28 Notes 1 Before the BUFP was a year old Bean had founded the Black Women s Action Committee as its women s section 1 She specifically wanted to focus on Black women s issues because white feminists addressed different issues such as abortion and being paid for housework These were not central problems for Black women who sought to be paid sufficient wages to provide child care for their children needed adequate housing and educational opportunities and called for protection from racism and violence 29 Bean published a pamphlet Black Women Speak Out in 1970 71 28 30 Despite this overt expression of the point of view of Black women and the space afforded to women by the BUFP to express themselves politically the scholar Rosalind Eleanor Wild notes that some members continued to feel very constricted 30 The activist and academic Harry Goulbourne has also observed that the BUFP was extremely authoritarian extremely intolerant 30 When the Black Liberation Front BLF a group with stronger socialist ties than a strictly Black nationalist focus was formed in 1971 Bean left the Black Unity and Freedom Party 1 10 She founded a women s section of the BLF and began publishing Sister s Column in the organisation s Grassroots newsletter 1 27 The three main black power movements the British Black Panthers the Black Liberation Front and the Black Unity and Freedom Party all initially attracted women members but women often found that their issues were not taken seriously 27 31 According to scholars such as John Narayan and W Chris Johnson women activists in these movements often felt that they were the oppressed of the oppressed and most exploited because they were impacted by the same racial and class discrimination as Black males but also had to face sexism from both white and Black men 4 32 By 1973 the British Black Panthers had dissolved and women in the other two political groups stopped gathering 33 34 In 1974 Bean Zainab Abbas and Wong formed part of the British delegation to the Sixth Pan African Congress which was hosted in Dar es Salaam Tanzania The British delegates address to the Congress reiterated the commitment of Black Britons to the liberation of Africans people of African descent and others throughout the world from colonial policies imperialism and racism 35 Women s rights editIn 1973 Bean joined with Abbas Beverley Bryan Olive Morris Liz Obi and other activists to found the Brixton Black Women s Group BBWG 1 27 34 Though they were accused by some male activists of splitting the Black struggle the women believed that their issues were not being heard and wanted to find solutions by working with other women including women s groups in Africa 36 Gail Lewis a BBWG member stated in a 2019 interview in Feminist Theory Activism was understood in a singular way even if it happened in a multiplicity of places spaces of life work the courtroom the police station the school the local and central state It happens in all our kitchens because whether they re from the Caribbean or from the African Continent or South Asia the women were leading from the kitchen And by the kitchen I mean an understanding that the lived realities and social relations of the kitchen were as much about politics as everything else including the bedroom And I also mean that the kitchen was and is a place of political learning and theory making I n that kind of register and then of course we would we being me and Avtar Brah who was with Southall Black Sisters then and Gerlin Bean and all these people would raise these questions with the guys In Brixton we had a very tense relationship with Race Today around feminism really but they didn t just write us off and it wasn t really hostile 37 Of paramount importance to the women were the lack of available housing Sus laws which allowed police to stop and search anyone who might be suspected of having the intent to commit an offence and education 10 38 Sus law arrests were often directed at Black youth and police at the time were given broad latitude in interpreting the terms suspect and intent 39 Notes 2 The Brixton Black Women s Group worked to obtain state funding to expand the Sabarr Bookshop using the store as a link to provide educational materials both for schools and activists 34 43 In 1978 Bean Stella Dadzie and Morris met with students from Ethiopia and Eritrea who were attending the London School of Economics Together they formed the Organisation for Women of Africa and African Descent 44 The formation of this group was identified by historians Line Nyhagen Predelli and Beatrice Halsaa as a watershed in the history of Black women s rights activism in their 2012 publication Majority Minority Relations in Contemporary Women s Movements Strategic Sisterhood 45 Within six months the group asked Asian activists to join them and the name changed to the Organisation of Women of African and Asian Descent known as OWAAD 46 This umbrella organisation allowed Black 44 from the political stance Notes 3 women s groups throughout England to work together on common issues 44 As one of the first Black feminist groups that was politically formalised OWAAD gave members experience in how to organise their communities battle against discrimination and educate themselves and the community about government policies Bean served as the chair of OWAAD s first conference held in 1979 at the Abeng Centre 44 That same year Bean and Dadzie went to Chicago Illinois to develop networks with the National Alliance of Black Feminists 49 Zimbabwe 1982 1988 edit From 1982 Bean focused on establishing programmes to assist women and children in Zimbabwe 50 Then after Zimbabwe gained its independence from the UK she moved to Africa in 1983 51 She worked with women to develop plans for family health and children s welfare 52 As a volunteer for the Catholic Institute for International Relations in Harare Bean recruited doctors and nurses from the UK encouraging them to move to Zimbabwe and work in rural areas to improve education and health facilities and programmes 10 She maintained ties with WIPAG sharing educational materials from Africa with the nursery school on Gresham Road in London 53 Jamaica 1988 present edit Bean returned to Jamaica in 1988 and studied for a degree in public health 10 54 55 In 1994 she became the deputy director at the Project Dedicated to the Development of Persons with Disabilities known as 3D Projects a charitable organisation that provided services for persons with disabilities and support for their families 56 57 She co wrote a chapter titled Mobilising Parents of Children with Disabilities in Jamaica and the English Speaking Caribbean with Marigold J Thorburn for a book published in 1995 58 Within four years Bean was serving as a project director of 3D Projects which was headquartered in Spanish Town in Saint Catherine Parish and by 2002 had become its managing director 59 60 As director of that development in 2005 she initiated an innovative programme called Skills For Life to teach sex education to people with disabilities and their carers The programme was designed to reduce the taboos of talking about sex and minimize the vulnerability and potential for sexual exploitation of persons with disabilities 57 Supported with funds provided by the United Nations International Children s Emergency Fund the programme was connected to a treatment project for young people in Jamaica who were living with HIV AIDS 61 In 2009 she established a school in Saint Catherine Parish to provide early education opportunities for children with disabilities 62 Bean participated in the University of the West Indies lecture series titled That Time In Foreign Life Stories of Jamaican England Returnees which ran from 2006 to 2007 63 She has been a presenter for numerous community seminars touching on issues of disability family violence HIV AIDS education and overall health and support for people with disabilities 56 64 65 She worked as the chair of the gender section on the Council for Voluntary Social Services in 2007 and served as a member of the Saint Catherine Parish Committee from 2008 to 2011 65 66 She has worked with international organisations such as the Committee on the Rights of the Child and UNESCO national policy boards and regional policy groups of the Disabled Peoples International in order to create and design inclusive policies for children and persons with disabilities 67 In 2020 Bean was one of the few Black feminists who participated in the Oxford International Women s Festival at Oxford University which was organised to honour the 50th anniversary of the 1970 Ruskin Conference at Oxford The event was criticised for being predominantly white and middle class and Bean told The New Yorker that as a Black woman she couldn t really pick on the relevance of the conference 68 Legacy editBean is thought of by many activists as a mentor who introduced them to and guided them in their political development 50 Among these are Abbas Dadzie Ama Gueye and Gail Lewis 69 When the book The Heart of the Race 1985 was in the planning stages Bean worked with Dadzie and Bryan to ensure that it involved as many varied experiences of women activists as possible and to show that they had united in the common cause to resist economic exploitation imperialism racism and sexism 70 When the Remembering Olive Collective was formed to gather materials in commemoration of Olive Morris Bean donated her personal photographs and memorabilia of her friend to the archive 71 The Olive Morris Collection was made available to the public in 2009 and is housed at the Lambeth Archives in South London 72 Bean has been the subject of two papers about her involvement radical feminism presented by W Chris Johnson of the University of Toronto 73 74 Her activism in Britain has been recognised in UK Black History Month celebrations such as the 2014 exhibit 400 Years of African Women Resistance Leaders hosted by Black History Walks in Islington and a 2017 sculpture A Fighters Archive by Wijnand De Jonge which was exhibited at the Guildhall Art Gallery in London 75 76 The sculpture featured bronze casts of the clenched fists to represent boxing or fighting of 15 Black women activists including Bean The castings were made live with each of the women 76 In 2023 a book length biography of Bean by A S Francis Gerlin Bean Mother of the Movement was published by Lawrence amp Wishart 77 Selected works editBean Gerlin Thorburn Marigold 1995 Mobilising Parents of Children with Disabilities in Jamaica and the English Speaking Caribbean In O Toole Bryan McConkey Roy eds Innovations in Developing Countries for People with Disabilities PDF Chorley Lancashire Lisieux Hall Publications pp 105 120 ISBN 978 1 870335 18 8 Archived PDF from the original on 5 November 2018 Bean Gerlin 2000 Politics and the State Caribbean In Kramarae Cheris Spender Dale eds Routledge International Encyclopedia of Women Global Women s Issues and Knowledge Vol III Identity Politics Publishing New York New York Routledge pp 1577 1580 ISBN 978 0 415 92091 9 Notes edit Several sources indicate the presence of only two Black women These sources include A S Francis and Bean who said in an interview that only herself and Pat Smith of Essex University attended 10 27 however Natalie Thomlinson a historian at the University of Reading notes that video recorded at the Ruskin conference shows Bean and several Black women 28 The Home Affairs Committee on Race Relations and a subcommittee from Immigration conducted a study between 1979 and 1980 that found that Black youth were disproportionately targeted by the Sus laws and that only six police divisions actually used the laws as a basis for arrest 40 Those that did use the laws had an average 78 per cent conviction rate throughout England and Wales However London s conviction rate was 82 per cent The report also pointed out that the police were allowed to use their own judgement rather than relying on independent evidence or witness accounts 41 Public outcry and the report itself eventually led to reforms beginning in 1984 42 The term politically Black as used by 1970s British women s groups meant anyone of or within the diaspora of African Asian Latina o or Middle Eastern descent who was forced by society to face discrimination on the basis of their identity including bi racial women as well as indigenous women 47 48 References editCitations edit a b c d e f g h Francis 2021 a b Shrew 1971 p 10 Bean amp Thorburn 1995 p 107 a b Johnson 2019 p 129 Shrew 1971 pp 10 11 Francis 2020 p 60 Shrew 1971 p 11 Bean amp Thorburn 1995 pp 107 108 BIREME 1995 a b c d e f Bryan Dadzie amp Scafe 2010 Cameron 2016 p 129 Cameron 2016 pp 130 131 158 Cameron 2016 p 158 Cameron 2016 pp 172 174 178 Cameron 2016 pp 172 174 Johnson 2019 p 133 Johnson 2019 p 134 Cameron 2016 p 175 Cameron 2016 pp 176 177 Cameron 2016 p 177 Cameron 2016 pp 178 179 Cameron 2016 pp 179 180 Cameron 2016 p 180 Cameron 2016 pp 180 183 Shrew 1971 pp 11 12 Francis 2020 p 63 a b c d e Francis 2020 p 61 a b c Thomlinson 2016 p 67 Bryan Dadzie amp Scafe 2018 pp 148 150 a b c Wild 2008 p 97 Thomlinson 2016 pp 66 69 Narayan 2019 p 951 Agyepong 2016 a b c Thomlinson 2016 p 69 Johnson 2019 p 135 Bryan Dadzie amp Scafe 2018 pp 150 151 Lewis amp Hemmings 2019 pp 405 421 Terrill 1989 p 438 Terrill 1989 pp 438 439 Terrill 1989 pp 439 440 Terrill 1989 p 440 Terrill 1989 p 442 Longley 2021 p 133 a b c d Francis 2020 p 62 Predelli amp Halsaa 2012 p 55 Bryan Dadzie amp Scafe 2018 p 205 Swaby 2014 pp 12 13 Warmington 2014 p 111 Ohene Nyako 2018 p 255 a b Francis 2020 p 64 Ohene Nyako 2018 p 249 Bryan Dadzie amp Scafe 2018 p 263 Cameron 2016 p 231 Cameron 2016 p 329 Bean amp Thorburn 1995 p 108 a b The Gleaner 1994 p 6 a b Reid 2005 Bean amp Thorburn 1995 The Gleaner 1999 p 49 The Gleaner 2002 p 41 BBC 2005 Turner 2009 p 4 UWI 2006 The Gleaner 2005 p 25 a b Jamaica Information Service 2007 The Gleaner 2008 p F4 Committee on the Rights of the Child 2003 International Conference on Education 2007 p 187 Emanuel 2008 p 28 Vision 2030 Jamaica 2009 p 61 Srinivasan 2021 Francis 2020 pp 58 65 Ohene Nyako 2018 p 258 Longley 2021 p 128 Longley 2021 p 125 North American Conference on British Studies 2018 p 22 Women amp Gender Studies Institute 2018 p 1 Islington Council 2014 p 8 a b European Union News 2017 Gerlin Bean Lawrence Wishart Retrieved 3 January 2024 Bibliography edit Agyepong Heather 10 March 2016 The Forgotten Story of the Women Behind the British Black Panthers The Debrief Archived from the original on 28 May 2018 Retrieved 22 May 2022 via Grazia Bryan Beverley Dadzie Stella Scafe Suzanne 2018 The Heart of the Race Black Women s Lives in Britain London Verso ISBN 978 1 78663 586 0 Cameron Gloria 2016 Case Dismissed An Ordinary Jamaican Woman an Extraordinary Life Hertford Hertfordshire Hansib Publications ISBN 978 1 910553 41 1 Committee on the Rights of the Child 30 May 2003 Committee on the Rights of the Child Reviews Second Periodic Report of Jamaica CRC 33rd session Report Geneva Switzerland Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 Retrieved 24 May 2022 a href Template Cite report html title Template Cite report cite report a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Emanuel Leslie A March 2008 Equal Opportunities for All Respecting the Rights of Persons With Disabilities PDF Report Potters Village Antigua amp Barbuda Disabled Peoples International Archived PDF from the original on 24 May 2022 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Francis A S 8 March 2021 Leading Women of the Black Radical Movement lwbooks co uk London Lawrence amp Wishart Archived from the original on 14 August 2021 Retrieved 21 May 2022 Francis A S Autumn 2020 The Mother of the Movement Gerlin Bean History Matters 1 1 London Black and Asian Studies Association 58 65 Retrieved 21 May 2022 Johnson W Chris 2019 7 The Spirit of Bandung in 1970s Britain The Black Liberation Front s Revolutionary Transnationalism In Adi Hakim ed Black British History New Perspectives London Zed Books pp 125 143 ISBN 978 1 78699 427 1 Lewis Gail Hemmings Clare 21 August 2019 Where Might We Go If We Dare Moving beyond the Thick Suffocating Fog of Whiteness in Feminism PDF Feminist Theory 20 4 London SAGE Publications 405 421 doi 10 1177 1464700119871220 ISSN 1464 7001 OCLC 8206584041 S2CID 202286402 Longley Oumou November 2021 Olive and Me in the Archive A Black British Woman in an Archival Space Feminist Review 129 1 Thousand Oaks California SAGE Publishing 123 137 doi 10 1177 01417789211041898 ISSN 0141 7789 OCLC 9332924247 S2CID 244348631 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Narayan John September 2019 British Black Power The Anti Imperialism of Political Blackness and the Problem of Nativist Socialism PDF The Sociological Review 67 5 Thousand Oaks California SAGE Publishing for the University of Keele 945 967 doi 10 1177 0038026119845550 ISSN 0038 0261 OCLC 8061038713 S2CID 150411821 Retrieved 22 May 2022 Ohene Nyako Pamela September 2018 The Heart of the Race Black Women Contesting British Imperialism and Whiteness Third World Feminist Internationalism in Britain in the 1970s 1980s PDF Tijdschrift voor Genderstudies 21 3 Amsterdam Netherlands Amsterdam University Press 249 264 doi 10 5117 TVGN2018 3 004 OHEN ISSN 1388 3186 OCLC 1125160699 S2CID 165670974 Retrieved 21 May 2022 Predelli Line Nyhagen Halsaa Beatrice 2012 Majority Minority Relations in Contemporary Women s Movements Strategic Sisterhood Houndmills Basingstoke Hampshire Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 02074 1 Reid Tyrone S 6 November 2005 Disabled Jamaicans to Receive Sex Videos Posters under New Education Drive Jamaica Observer Kingston Jamaica Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 Retrieved 24 May 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Srinivasan Amia 13 September 2021 Who Lost the Sex Wars The New Yorker Vol 97 no 28 New York City Conde Nast ISSN 0028 792X Archived from the original on 26 March 2022 Swaby Nydia A November 2014 Disparate in Voice Sympathetic in Direction Gendered Political Blackness and the Politics of Solidarity Feminist Review 108 1 London SAGE Publishing 11 25 doi 10 1057 fr 2014 30 ISSN 0141 7789 JSTOR 24571917 OCLC 5698852868 S2CID 146949251 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Terrill Richard J Summer 1989 Margaret Thatcher s Law and Order Agenda American Journal of Comparative Law 37 3 Oxford Oxfordshire Oxford University Press 429 456 doi 10 2307 840088 ISSN 0002 919X JSTOR 840088 OCLC 846848962 Retrieved 22 May 2022 Thomlinson Natalie 2016 Race Ethnicity and the Women s Movement in England 1968 1993 PDF Houndmills Basingstoke Hampshire Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 44280 2 Archived PDF from the original on 23 May 2022 Turner Rasbert 29 June 2009 New School for Ja s Challenged The Gleaner Kingston Jamaica p 4 Retrieved 24 May 2022 via Newspaperarchive com Warmington Paul 2014 Black British Intellectuals and Education Multiculturalism s Hidden History Milton Park Abingdon Oxon Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 75236 3 Wild Rosalind Eleanor August 2008 Black Was the Colour of Our Fight Black Power in Britain 1955 1976 PDF PhD Sheffield South Yorkshire University of Sheffield OCLC 551613493 Archived PDF from the original on 16 April 2022 Retrieved 21 May 2022 An Urgent Appeal The Gleaner Kingston Jamaica 15 April 2002 p 41 Retrieved 23 May 2022 via Newspaperarchive com Bean Gerlin 1995 Trauma in children presenting at the Bustamante Hospital for Children BIREME Biblioteca virtual em Saude Thesis Sao Paulo Brazil Centro Latino Americano e do Caribe de Informacao em Ciencias da Saude Reference Id 1153 Archived from the original on 23 May 2022 Retrieved 23 May 2022 Black and Caribbean Diasporic Feminisms Research Workshop April 6 7 2018 PDF Women amp Gender Studies Institute Toronto Ontario University of Toronto 2018 Archived PDF from the original on 24 May 2022 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Black History Month 2014 PDF Vai org London Islington Council February 2014 Archived PDF from the original on 24 May 2022 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Caribbean Symposium on Inclusive Education Preparatory Activity of the 48th Session of the International Conference on Education PDF Report Kingston Jamaica IBE UNESCO 7 December 2007 Archived PDF from the original on 21 January 2022 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Commemoration of Black Women s Movement Fight for Social Justice European Union News Lyon France 3 February 2017 Gale A480639454 CVSS to Host Forum on Gender Based Violence Jamaica Information Service Kingston Jamaica Government of Jamaica 6 November 2007 Archived from the original on 25 October 2020 Retrieved 23 May 2022 Gerlin Shrew Vol 3 no 8 London Women s Liberation Workshop September 1971 pp 10 12 OCLC 1001130639 Gerlin Bean January 2010 Oral Histories of the Black Women s Movement for The Heart of the Race Interview Interviewed by Bryan Beverley Dadzie Stella Scafe Suzanne London Black Cultural Archives Reference No ORAL 1 3 Archived from the original on 6 June 2022 Retrieved 7 October 2022 a href Template Cite interview html title Template Cite interview cite interview a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Jamaica Revamps HIV AIDS Treatment Programme BBC Monitoring Americas 2 November 2005 p 1 JSIF Backs the Disabled The Gleaner Kingston Jamaica 27 May 1999 p 49 Retrieved 23 May 2022 via Newspaperarchive com North American Conference on British Studies Providence Rhode Island October 25 28 2018 PDF Northeast Conference on British Studies Beverly Massachusetts North American Conference on British Studies 2018 Archived PDF from the original on 22 October 2021 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Parish Committees 2008 2011 The Gleaner Kingston Jamaica 26 October 2008 p F4 Retrieved 24 May 2022 via Newspaperarchive com Sexual Health Progamme for Persons with Disabilities The Gleaner Kingston Jamaica 7 November 2005 p 25 Retrieved 23 May 2022 via Newspaperarchive com St Mary orientation on disability The Gleaner Kingston Jamaica 20 February 1994 p 6 Retrieved 23 May 2022 via Newspaperarchive com That Time In Foreign mona uwi edu Mona Jamaica Marketing and Communications Office University of the West Indies 2006 Archived from the original on 23 May 2022 Retrieved 23 May 2022 Vision 2030 Jamaica National Development Plan for Persons with Disabilities PDF Report Kingston Jamaica Government of Jamaica June 2009 Archived PDF from the original on 27 January 2022 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Further reading editAddie Tadesse Black women activists in British history Women s History Month 2022 including a short biography of Gerlin Bean with a photograph Francis A S 2023 Gerlin Bean The Mother of the Movement Lawrence amp Wishart ISBN 9781913546373External links editGerlinBeanProject com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gerlin Bean amp oldid 1224437038, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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