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Black history events every month: inspire action, education & connection
Black history events every month: inspire action, education & connection
Collection by Eventbrite
It’s never been more important to celebrate the work of Black event creators who are bringing communities together, sharing their culture, and working to enact change. Experience the work of Black artists or gain a deeper understanding of Black history as you explore this collection of enlightening events, selected by Eventbrite’s experts.
Black history events every month: inspire action, education & connection
Black history events every month: inspire action, education & connection
Black history events every month: inspire action, education & connection
Black history events every month: inspire action, education & connection
Collection by Eventbrite
It’s never been more important to celebrate the work of Black event creators who are bringing communities together, sharing their culture, and working to enact change. Experience the work of Black artists or gain a deeper understanding of Black history as you explore this collection of enlightening events, selected by Eventbrite’s experts.
It’s never been more important to celebrate the work of Black event creators who are bringing communities together, sharing their culture, and working to enact change. Experience the work of Black artists or gain a deeper understanding of Black history as you explore this collection of enlightening events, selected by Eventbrite’s experts.

Led by Racial Justice Network, a network dedicated to ending racial justice and colonialism, this informative online talk will teach you the basics of how to create solidarity between different groups and how to be a better ally.

Held on the last Wednesday of the month, this inclusive virtual space is a place for the Black community to support each other and talk. If you’re looking for a safe venue to open up about your woes, you can commune with your peers at Your Black Matters.

Join Twerk After Work instructor Jazzie Gabriella as she leads this fun-filled, hour-long evening workshop to help you twerk and whine to the best Afrobeats and dancehall music — all while building your confidence in a safe and supportive environment.

Are you looking for more out of life and need someone to talk to about everything that’s going on? Anyone in need can join I Am, a support group for Black people of African ancestry that offers healing, connection, and a supportive space to share and grow.

A difficult but necessary talk for anyone who wants to help survivors of domestic abuse in their community. Led by HERSANA, this three-hour session looks at how unconscious bias can create barriers for Black women survivors when seeking help.

In this monthly writing session created for Black and Brown men, participants will be guided on a therapeutic journey to discovering themselves, focusing on self-care routines, personal growth, and creating a more holistic approach to life.

In a collaborative event held at the Online Design Festival, Black Girls in Design will host a conversation diving into the specific challenges women of colour face in the design world, spotlighting influential designers of colour, and the steps needed to build an equal industry.

In this educational workshop, you’ll learn how to understand racism through the lens of the six stages framework created by Dr M'gadzah. You'll prepare to deal with challenges when they arise and learn about where you can go for support.

At this online Black women’s group, women can join together to discuss the harm racism, chronic stress, and racialised trauma has had on them. This is a monthly circle designed as a safe space for Black women to build community.

Take a stroll through the streets of London from the comfort of your home in this fascinating virtual tour of the city that documents the history of 19th-century African Americans who wrote about their experiences of slavery and abolition.

If you’re an aspiring designer with dreams of making it big, you need to get yourself to this Online Design Festival talk with multidisciplinary graphic designer Sandra Adu, whose work has been used by brands like HSBC, Net-A-Porter, and JP Morgan.

Do you have a half-written novel that you’re desperate to finally finish? Reinvigorate your dreams of becoming an author by joining this online creative writing group in the new year ,where you can share your stories with others and get tips on ways to improve your work.

Celebrate the many extraordinary Black women in business at this great networking event for African women in business. Learn more about how to navigate your industry and hear from guest speakers and entrepreneurs like human rights lawyer Jacqueline Onalo FSRA.

Explore Black music and global African politics as its presented (and spread throughout the world) through through videos shared on TikTok and WhatsApp.

Presented as part of the Bloomsbury Festival and hosted by digital storyteller Tamera Heron, this online book club for young people of colour explores new and old texts — some of which link back to the original Bloomsbury set of writers.

If you work in the education sector in some capacity, this course for educators and community leaders can help you learn how to support anti-racist activism and address the concerns of students of colour in your classroom.

This online tour will show you around the most important sites in the UK and Ireland connected to anti-slavery activist Fredrick Douglass. Learn more about the impact Douglass had on his many visits and the other freedom fighters that came as well.

Figuring out how to talk about money — and how to make more of it — can be a daunting challenge. During this online monthly meet-up organised by She Decided, women of colour can discuss everything they want to know about finances in a welcoming space.

Join this important educational talk looking at some of the most important documents from the Windrush era that show why Caribbean migrants were invited to the UK, who arrived and what they would go on to achieve, like Sam King who became major of Southwark.

A Black-centric, family-focused virtual event, Auntie Jean’s Afrikan Culture Market offers an afternoon of music and entertainment from spoken word artists Stella B. & Nat Nye, along with free drumming lessons for children.

In this era where the concept of being digital nomads is gaining popularity, this workshop on traveling the world while Black couldn't be more useful. Learn more about becoming a travel influencer, growing your brand, and how to make a living while traveling.

Join textile expert Laura Moseley as she breaks down the radical history of textiles using two zines. The talk will focus on a publication about Black women’s contributions to weaving and textiles, as well as a zine exploring how artists have taken to the medium of quilting.

To celebrate the 75th anniversary of the Windrush, the Windrush Revival Voyager, a luxury-chartered replica of the original ship, will complete its journey from the Caribbean to the UK and kick off a four-day event in celebration of this tremendous moment in British history.

London’s East End has been host to a bevy of important African American activists, leaders, and thinkers throughout centuries. This talk looks at the stories of freedom fighters like Josiah Henson and Rev. John Sella Martin, who educated Brits about the reality of slavery.

Take in the key sites in London where African-American activists made an important impact in this online tour led by Dr Hannah-Rose Murray. The tour will shine a light on those freedom fighters who educated 19th Century audiences on the horrors of slavery.

Join art consultant and writer Pacheanne Anderson as they discuss their career and give fellow artists advice on how to build a viable future, what routes to take early in your career, and how to find the support and community you need to keep going.

This monthly space is for Black Muslim women who experience racial prejudice and gendered Islamophobia. Access a space where you can engage in compassionate, loving therapeutic practices rooted in Islamic spiritual heritage.

This June, join your girls and get the chance to make lasting connections with other Black women from similar backgrounds at Sisters Talk Virtual Cafe, an online meetup group that provides a safe space for Black women to explore issues around mental health and more.

At this exciting virtual networking event, you can join Chiedza Ikpeh for an empowering session dedicated to Black women in business. Bring your own mimosas and learn how to climb the corporate ladder as you listen to the experiences of other professionals.

Are you looking link up with someone to snuggle the winter blues away? Attend this online event to learn more about Maiobi, an event-based dating platform designed to connected Black British professionals looking for committed relationships.

Have you been looking for love but keep coming up short? This online speed dating event for Black singles aged 28-43 could be the best place to turn around that losing streak and meet the special someone you’ve been searching for.

Join social justice campaigner and writer Hári Sewell as he leads a discussion on how racism can cause emotional distress and trauma. Sewell looks at how this leads to people of colour being over represented in the mental health system, where they receive poorer quality care.

This seminar looks at Eric Williams’ 1944 study of Capitalism and Slavery, which argues that chattel slavery directly helped Britain power the industrial revolution and that the motives to wind down slavery were more about low profits than morality.

Explore the world of textiles and crafting with design lecturer Rose Sinclair as she discovers the craft techniques of artists featured in the "We Out Here" exhibition at Hastings Contemporary, including Lorna Hamilton-Brown, Paul Hope, Elaine Mullings, and more.

In this era of increasing concern for the environment, many are doing what they can to make their plates more environmentally sound. This networking event is for home gardeners of colour who are growing for their community and reducing their reliance on imported food.

In the latest Tech Dissect session, a series designed to help women, non-binary, and trans people enter the music industry, South London producer Fiyahdred will discuss how to build percussive layers to a club track. For lovers of funky house and amapiano.

In this new intriguing new class from London Drawing Group, Dr Sheree Mack examines Black female artists who have challenged misogynoir and stereotyping by documenting their own (and their mothers') bodies.