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THE CARNIVAL IS OVER
The spirit of Notting Hill
was lost when it started to be about cross-cultural
harmony
Joseph Harker
Saturday August 26, 2000
The
Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/carnival2001/story/0,1166,540909,00.html
Nine years ago, when I decided
to publish a weekly African-Caribbean newspaper, Black
Briton, I knew there was only one way to launch it.
So on the weekend of the Notting Hill carnival our
staff all went down to put up posters, stick balloons
on floats and flood the place with leaflets.
At the time it was the place to
make an instant connection with hundreds of thousands
of our target readers. And we weren't the only ones:
the Voice newspaper had launched in a similar way
nine years previously; and the carnival was synonymous
with the Caribbean Times, who gave away thousands
of papers, had their name on numerous floats and bedecked
the main music stage with huge banners.
Call it commercial if you like,
but each of these was consistent with the carnival's
original ethos of black people reclaiming the streets,
in a demonstration of cultural pride undimmed by racial
hatred and discrimination.
During the 90s, though, things
changed, and the carnival of today bears little resemblance
to the idealistic hopes of its pioneers. Nowadays,
the corporate sponsors have moved in: Heinz Salad
Cream, Bud Ice and Asda. The official carnival guide
is now produced by London's Evening Standard, a paper
whose constituency is 25% ethnic minority but whose
editor was fiercely criticised in a TV debate two
years ago for having next to no black staff.
Is it really possible to attract
such sponsors yet keep the carnival spirit alive?
Not only that, but what used to be definitively a
"black thing" has now become, in adman's language,
"a glorious celebration of integration and racial
harmony".
Yes, it may be true that they are
expecting 2.2m people this weekend; but that means
that, even if every single Afro-Caribbean man, woman
and child in the country visited for one of the days,
they would still be out numbered by more than two
to one.
In reality, nowadays only a small
proportion of the "revellers" are black, and an event
which used to be by and for African Caribbeans, now
just has a small core creating the music and the atmosphere,
all for the benefit of a separate audience like a
music concert, but with a few more black entertainers
and where the customers get it all for free.
Just like Notting Hill itself,
the carnival has become "gentrified", somewhere young
trendies go to show off their "cool". Where once there
was the ruthless landlord Rachman exploiting the impoverished
residents, today the streets are home to rows and
rows of property millionaires. Where once August bank
holiday was the high point of the year for the locals,
today the wealthy homeowners make sure they get the
hell out for the weekend.
When the first steel bands took
to the streets of west London in 1964, the problems
highlighted by the Notting Hill race riots and the
murder of the Antiguan-born Kelso Cochrane during
the late 1950s had still not been resolved. Soon Trinidadians
added the flavour of their own carnival, which had
itself grown since 1833 as a celebration of freedom
from slavery and a satirical jibe at their former
masters.
The Notting Hill festival grew
in popularity, although it never fully took off until
1975 when reggae sound systems, brought in the previous
year for the first time, attracted far more younger
people and increased the crowds to 500,000. Shocked
at these numbers, the local constabulary (pre-Scarman
inquiry, pre-Macpherson report, pre any admissions
of "institutional racism") swamped the area the following
year, sparking riots which have stained the carnival's
name ever since.
For the next decade, the event
was reported in the media purely as a crime story
(number of muggings, number of arrests), although
it continued to grow in popularity. It was during
this period that I started going, attracted by the
huge mass of people, the thumping bass booming through
my body, the smells of samosas, ackee-and-saltfish
and herb-smoke wafting through the air, and amazed
at the utter chaos of it all, with teenage boys charging
through the crowds selling Red Stripe lager from their
shopping trolleys.
In 1987, however, a mini-riot and
the murder of a man following an argument over a Coke
can sparked a media furore which threatened the carnival's
very existence. In a compromise deal, restrictions
were placed on the carnival route, and it was forced
to shut down before dusk (when, for many people including
me, the fun was only starting).
In 1988, dogged by years of underfunding
and mismanagement, the carnival was on the brink of
bankruptcy, its organisers forced out shortly afterwards
by a new administration which effectively ended the
festival's years as a "community" event.
The new group, known today as the
Notting Hill CarnivalTrust, sought to maximise revenue
through sponsorship. But, just as I discovered in
the newspaper business, it was very hard to sell anything
"black" to white people, and the event became repositioned
using phrases such as "cross-cultural harmony", ","racial
tolerance", ","cosmopolitan" - the die was cast.
In a way it worked: slowly, sponsors
who a few years ago wouldn't be seen dead giving money
to anything black began opening their wallets. This
year, the carnival organisers will receive £300,000
in sponsorship, and more will go to the floats. But
the donors aren't necessarily targeting black people
- their audience is just as likely to be the trendy
whites who now dominate the carnival crowds.
The whole thing has become a nauseating
display of mutual backslapping between audience and
advertisers for being so "cutting edge" - yet another
example of what the black academic Tony Sewell described
this week as "a commercial culture which doesn't appear
to be able to market trainers, CDs or mobile phones
without a black image".
All this makes me wonder whether
I'd ever go to another carnival, but I would never
want to take anything away from the Masqueraders,
Calypsonians, steelband players, DJs and stallholders
who continue to make the event such an attraction
for its visitors. They keep doing what they've loved
for decades and won't have their enjoyment spoiled
by the New Order.
On the official carnival
website there's an interview with Joanne, who's been
serving up roasted corn husks for the past 25 years.
1976 was a good year, says Joanne: "There were a few
riots, but I've never sold so much as I did that year."
That truly is the carnival spirit.
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