Remembering What’s Forgotten is a new 12-month co-produced programme and exhibition to amplify the unheard community-based and lived experience narratives challenging mental health inequality and the racial injustice facing black and minority ethnic communities in Leeds.
Remembering What’s Forgotten is a new 12-month hybrid programme and exhibition championing community and lived experience narratives to tackle the overrepresentation of black and South Asian men detained under the Mental Health Act in Leeds.
Co-founded by Synergi-Leeds and Words of Colour, the programme will draw on 50 years of unsung community initiatives, allyship and knowledge to reimagine a more inclusive and equitable mental health system, guided by racial justice.
Using creative and heritage methods, from film, audio, and poetry to archive, co-production and photovoice techniques, the digital and in-person exhibition will feature the narratives of 60 contributors supported by a curated timeline, categorised under The Past, The Present, The Future.
The programme partners include Leeds City Council and Public Health, Leeds & York Partnership NHS Foundation Trust and Forum Central. Touchstone, Heritage Corner and Leeds Young Authors are co-producing partners while project allies include New Writing North, Manchester Poetry Library at Manchester Metropolitan University, Leeds Playhouse, Northern School of Contemporary Dance, Thackray Museum of Medicine, Museum X and Renaissance One.
Remembering What’s Forgotten will host an in person preview at Leeds Playhouse in September 2024 and will launch the digitral platform in February 2025.
The aim is for the co-produced programme to act as a catalyst for better mental health experiences and outcomes for black and minority ethnic communities amid enduring statistics which show that:
A creative and heritage-inspired response, the narratives and legacy will be used to influence policy, how mental health services are commissioned and delivered, determine what research is conducted and privilege lived experience and community knowledge