We are a very specific museum and we are
usually fighting against three big ideas,
three big fake ideas. 
One is that slavery, it's all things from the past.
In fact we all know, or all Black people know,
that the legacy of slavery is still going on.
The second idea is that slavery, it's just 
things for Black people, Black people interests.
If you are Black people you are interested in slavery,
if you're not you can have a kind of curiosity about it but not really an interest
and it's completely false because in terms of working-class history
and in terms of oppression, for example in this part of UK north of UK
the working class, the white working class,
had the same master than the African people in Caribbean.
It was the same owner that owned the plantation in Caribbean and the mills in Manchester
so we have this this common history and it's really not a question of colour in terms of slavery.
So this is a second big error that people make, usually make, and the third big mistake,
it's that people usually think that young people cannot be engaged or fighting against something.
That it's too late, that it was, 
older generation was able to do it
but now people are only on Facebook and things like that.
So I think that this adventure that we lived with the Liverpool John Moores University
is the proof that these three big ideas are totally false.
