Anthony Walker: 16 Years Later...

Picture this: You’re 18 years old! It’s 11pm on a Friday night in the middle of summer and you’ve just spent the evening with your girlfriend! You walk her to the bus station with your cousin like true gentlemen, and on your way you get racist comments hurled at you. You ignore them of course, sticks and stones and all that, but when you get off the bus they’re there waiting for you, ice pick in hand. They strike your skull. You die as your cousin and your girlfriend run away to get help.
This was the heart-breaking reality of the night of the 29th July, 2005, when Anthony Walker was brutally murdered.
The assailants targeted Anthony for the colour of his skin and they went out of their way to chase him down and murder him for it.
Anthony was in the middle of his A-Levels at college and was studying to become a lawyer. There is a twisted irony that his life was ended with such aggressive injustice, when all he wanted was to make the world fair and just.
The Crown Prosecution Service offered up a scholarship for one black or minority ethnic person in Merseyside who wanted to train up to be a lawyer, to give them the chance that Anthony never got, and to bridge the gap into being a more ethnically diverse organisation.
Also founded from the pain of his death is the Anthony Walker Foundation, a charity dedicated to educating young people on racism, discrimination and hate crimes and supporting people who have been victim to them. They work with other organisations to encourage the reporting of discrimination and racism through means less daunting than contacting the police. They also have their own report form on their website called Speak Out! Stop Hate, wherein a person can either report of their own racial abuse, or someone else’s that they’ve witnessed. The foundation was created by Anthony’s friends and family in the hopes of keeping his memory alive and preventing anyone else from going through what they have endured. In the last 5 years, the Anthony Walker Foundation has worked with nearly 40,000 young people through educational and outreach programmes; supported nearly 10,000 people who have experienced hate crime; and has engaged with thousands of community members in a bid to build safer, stronger and more thriving communities.
16 years after Anthony’s death, we still feel the anger and the devastation of such an evil and unprovoked attack. In the UK we might be lucky that compared to other countries we see very little cases as extreme as Anthony’s, but that doesn’t detract from the unjust travesty of all the individual, small-scale cases of racism that Black, Brown, Asian and other ethnically diverse persons are subject to every day.
Today we would like to give our thoughts to Anthony, his friends and family, but also to anyone who has ever found themselves in a situation of blatant racism and injustice.
Find out more about the Anthony Walker Foundation
Website: https://anthonywalkerfoundation.com/
Twitter: @awf_liverpool
Facebook: @theanthonywalkerfoundation
Hope| Motivation |
Action | Change









