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Woke-washing history? BBC show will teach children that early Britons were ‘black’

Woke-washing history? BBC show will teach children that early Britons were ‘black’

The BBC has been accused of reimagining British history to make it more woke-friendly after it emerged that a children’s programme will teach that the nation’s earliest inhabitants were black.

An episode of the BBC children’s series Horrible Histories will focus on the role of black people in Britain's past. Launched in 2009, the series uses comedy sketches to help young people familiarize themselves with troubling chapters from history.

Set to air on May 7, the episode dedicated to black history will feature abolitionists rapping that “our lives matter,” in a nod to the Black Lives Matter movement.

Speaking to the Telegraph, the show’s creative lead, Richard Bradley, said that the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police, as well as the toppling of a statue of 17th century slave trader Edward Colston in Bristol, created a need to “reevaluate” how Britons think about the past.

He said that the events provided an opportunity for the programme to “tackle the whole area of black history” and explained that the episode in question would explore how Britain has “always been a country with many races and ethnicities.”

In an effort to illustrate to young people that the nation had black inhabitants “from the start,” one of the show’s sketches will document how African troops were stationed along Hadrian’s Wall, when the country was under Roman occupation in the third century AD. The programme will also feature a song about how prehistoric Britons had dark skin “before these Isles were British.” The tune is a reference to a fossil, known as Cheddar Man, which dates back 10,000 years. A recent DNA analysis of the remains concluded that the prehistoric man had dark skin and black curly hair.

Bradley claimed that the programme’s writers had worked “carefully” to ensure that they got black history right, adding that young people and teachers had expressed interest in the subject.

“When we started out we had no idea of the responsibility we would end up having. There is an onus on us to get it right,” he said.

But judging from social media responses, many felt that the programme was doing a poor job of accurately relaying the country’s history.

One commenter accused the BBC of “rewriting” history, while another reply lamented that the public broadcaster was “bringing their race baiting narrative” to children.


The programme is part of a larger “progressive” agenda to “split us up into groups” and encourage “grievances against each other,” argued another observer.

Using the Cheddar Man as an example of “black history” in Britain was disingenuous and misleading, read a similarly peeved reply.


However, many others defended Horrible Histories and suggested that there was nothing inaccurate about what the show was teaching children. Several comments mocked outrage over the “black history” episode as an example of “white fright.”


The show is no stranger to controversy. In February, the series was accused of “anti-British” sentiments for airing a song that said that popular staples like sugar, tea and cotton are products of the country’s imperialist past and were “frankly stolen” from abroad.

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