Neville Lawrence: ‘'UNISON has stayed
with us'
|
Neville Lawrence |
Interview with Neville Lawrence before his moving speech
to Conference on 21/6/12: By John Stevenson.
It's a question you dread asking Neville
Lawrence. He must have been asked it a million times
yet he answered with the thoughtful respect and honesty
we've come to know over an inspirational and dignified
18 year campaign.
It is horrific enough for a parent to lose
a child. To lose a child in the circumstances in which
he lost Stephen
is unthinkable. What keeps him going?
"To be honest, I don't know", said Neville. "When
I came to this country I had the belief that if you were
in trouble you would be helped... It was wrong that something
can happen like this just because of the colour of someone's
skin."
"I decided that if I could get the support - and that
came from UNISON - I would fight this and I will go on
trying to fight it as long as possible".
Neville
is clear about what needs to change. He is clear that
the death of his son marked a change.
"It always takes a tragedy for people to get things done. I don't know why
we do that but we were never able to sit down and discuss racism until the death
of Stephen".
"Things have changed", Neville
explained. "When the young man
Anthony Walker was killed in Liverpool, there was a trial in six months. It
was 18 years
for me".
But behind the strength and dignity, there
is the pain and hurt. "I
have three grandchildren. But I will never see a grandchild from my first
born. It
hurts to know that. My family has been robbed", said Neville with
a quiet frankness that had eyes filling up around the room.
The emotion
was not confined to us. Neville spoke of looking round the
Conference hall on Thursday. "I saw some of the faces that had been
there supporting us from the start and I burst into tears", he said. "UNISON
has stayed with us for all that time. It is very special for me today".
"I've always been a person who never forgets people who have helped. It
will be a chance for me to thank those people tomorrow".
"By myself, no-one would have listened to me. UNISON gave us a voice."
Trade unions are seen as mainly focussing on work but "UNISON has looked
beyond that" and families can see they are there to help if they
are in trouble.
As a young man, Neville reflected that
everyone had their union card. "It
is better to have the card in your hand and the strong backing of
the union behind you all the time", he said.
UNISON's
part in the story started in 1993 when members raised
the issue of Stephen's murder and support for his family's
quest for
justice. UNISON
was
the first union
to take a lead, raising the issue at the TUC with President Dave
Anderson handing over a UNISON donation of £5,000 to the campaign.
Relations
between the black community and the police were very tense. Despite
the lack of respect shown to the family in the past (they
had to resort
to a private prosecution) Neville gave credit to the police officers
who led
the most
recent investigation. "If they had been there at the start
we would have had a just solution", he said. He still hopes
that the murder weapon can be found to provide the evidence to
bring others
who were
undoubtedly involved
to justice.
And he had a warning about privatisation
of police services. If that went ahead it would be harder
to make complaints and there
would
be "no control over
the police".
When you meet Neville Lawrence he has such
a presence that you have to remind yourself that this
was an ordinary
working father
whose
world was shattered
one day by the racist murder of his son.
That tragic event
showed there was nothing ordinary about Neville Lawrence.
He and his family took forward a campaign for justice
for Stephen,
but also a campaign
that shook the country into awareness of institutional
racism, not just in the police but across society.
..........................
On 22 April 1993 Stephen Lawrence was murdered
in Eltham, south-east London.
In 1999 the Macpherson report made 70 recommendations
to break down institutionalised racism.
Earlier this year two men were convicted
of Stephen's murder and the Judge told police to hunt
down the 'three or four' others still at large.
TUC's
Stephen Lawrence Fundraising Appeal
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