Carbis Bay, England: Prime Minister Boris Johnson gave President Joe Biden president, a framed photo of a British mural who described the Abolitionist Black Armeter Abolitionist Frederick Douglass, the British leader office said on Thursday.
Biden replied by presenting Johnson, a sharp cyclist, with a bicycle and helmet Made U.S and gave a silk scarf and leather bag made by a military wife for his wife Carrie.
Johnson’s prize, which was presented during the G7 Summit, which marked the official official involvement of Biden and the opportunity to reaffirm the trans-Atlantic bond, was a nod in the movement of the black life material that has encouraged racial relations in both countries.
Douglass escaped slavery in the United States, happened to be an abolitionist leader who conducted a tour of England and Ireland, with Biden having ancestral ties.
Biden quoted Douglass in a 2020 speech in the race when the country faced a question about the injustice of contemporary and historical races triggered by the protest movement which also spread to England and pushed similar outoursions.
Murals painted on the wall corner of the residential road in Edinburgh, a city where Douglass lived on the tour, by artist Ross Blair who used the #blacklivesmatter hashtag when it first launched a discount online in 2020.
The portraits of black and white murals from Douglass were photographed by Dual British-U.S. National Melissa Highton.
Lady Lady Jill Biden was given a copy of the first edition of the Apple Tree ‘- a collection of short stories in the 20th century British writer Daphne du Maurier, who lived in Cornwall, a beautiful English corner that accommodated the G7 summit.