The Solidarity Network for Cuba is dedicated to educating youth and workers about the global decolonial struggle. Our goal is to build a network of organisations that are committed to supporting the Cuban people and their struggles, both past and present. We aim to engage youth in liberatory solidarity movements and demonstrate this commitment through our screening of a film about the brave young British men and women who were recruited by the African National Congress (ANC) to fight against apartheid.

About the film

“Winner of Best Documentary at the Johannesburg Film Festival 2024. COMRADE TAMBO’S LONDON RECRUITS unfolds, after decades of secrecy, a nail biting journey of espionage with those who risked it all in taking on one of the 20th century’s most feared and brutal regimes.

By the late 1960s, the Apartheid regime in South Africa had reached brutal new heights. Nelson Mandela and other freedom fighters had been imprisoned, killed or forced into exile. The African National Congress (ANC) was outlawed and broken, from the leadership through to the township cells. In efforts to reinvigorate support for the liberation struggle, exiled ANC leader Oliver Tambo lit the fuse on a plan that saw young British women and men undertake missions on the ground in South Africa disguised as honeymooners, holiday makers and business trippers. The film features interviews from surviving ‘London Recruits’ and freedom fighters who recount their courageous and intriguing stories of espionage and danger to create, what Variety called ‘an edge of your seat thriller’ with ‘jaw dropping twists’.” from HPPH

This event is developed by
Programme seriesGlobal Solidarity

Over the last five centuries, colonialism has shaped the international trade system, consolidating who on the world stage exploits and who is exploited. European countries have maintained their global power by monopolising violence in many ways, among which land occupation, military invasion and genocide, economic sanctions, environmental destruction, and the ongoing exploitation of Global South workers and resources. Today, western countries’ economic, political and cultural interests remain the largest threat to equity, safety and peace for all living beings. This series zooms out to address these international dynamics, so we can collectively imagine historic and present day reparations and create systems change that fosters collaboration over domination. How might we build new structures for global solidarity? Together we contribute to international justice.

Inclusive
Inclusive