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Our Brick Lane

Our Brick Lane is an oral history and film making project and over the past 14 months has worked with young people from the Bengali and Somali communities of Spitalfields. Using oral history techniques they have helped to retrieve from oblivion, the experiences of their elders in Brick Lane since the 1960s, as well as uncovering the memories of the former Jewish residents of the area. The project has produced a series of documentary films made by a group of young Somali and Bengali boys, themselves, and forms a part of the education pack.

Brick Lane

The young people researched the history of the Brick Lane area and used archived material from the Jewish Free School, visited the Jewish Museum, British Museum, Museum of London, and received talks about the history of the area.

The young people attended over 40 workshops, which involved training in oral history interviewing, video camera
recording, sound recording and editing, music mixing and video editing, and assisted interviewing over 30 elders from the Jewish, Bengali and Somali communities.

We have also been working closely with the Surma Elders group (Toynbee Hall). Here is an extract from one of the Bengali Elder's experiences about living in the area:

"We'd watch Bengali films in Naz, brick lane. There was one place we'd get together - Mussa's place, a café. I used to go there - everyone did - young, old. I went there around 1965, but it existed before that - the seamen before us used to go there. It was in Brick lane, near the railway bridge. There were many English people there too. People would just gather there, to eat."

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