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‘It’s about recognising our role in history’: Bradford exhibition to revisit live Somali display

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I t was, the posters said, a rare chance to see a “little known but interesting people”: a live display of 57 Somali men, women and children who cooked, weaved and danced for the entertainment of hundreds of thousands of Edwardians who flocked to Yorkshire to see them. More than 120 years later, this controversial – and, in its time, incredibly popular – show will be revisited in a new exhibition in Bradford that will put Britain’s colonial legacy under the spotlight. The Somali village is thought to have been one of the most popular and profitable of the attractions at Bradford’s Great Exhibition in 1904, drawing more than 350,000 visitors and helping to fund Cartwright Hall’s civic art collection for decades. In the original display, a village of Somalis – described as Bradford’s first Muslim community – were observed from May to October as they went about daily life, slaughtering sheep for meals, attending school and learning Arabic and the Qur’an.…

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