In 1983, he became a journalist, and in the late 1980s, was editor of The Voice newspaper, launching the "Innvervision" column.[4] He is also a regular contributor to New African magazine.[5] He worked as a senior producer and director at BBC Television, where his many credits included Ebony, Ebony People, Ain't No Black in the Union Jack and Will to Win.[3] In the late 1990s, he worked in the US for two years making the PBS documentary Hopes on the Horizon (2001).[3]
In 1998, he compiled the volume Empire Windrush: Fifty Years of Writing About Black Britain, commemorating the 50th anniversary of the arrival at Tilbury Docks of the Empire Windrush, bringing some 472 passengers from Jamaica.[6]
In 2002, Wambu became information officer at the African Foundation for Development (AFFORD),[1] where he is currently Executive Director.[7] Established in 1994, AFFORD is an international organisation that describes its mission as being "to expand and enhance the contributions Africans in the diaspora make to African development", achieving this through a variety of projects, programmes and partnerships.[8]
Wambu is the editor of the anthology Empire Windrush: Reflections on 75 Years & More of the Black British Experience, published in June 2023.[9][10] Featuring a preface by Margaret Busby and new writing from Bernardine Evaristo, Mike Phillips and others, the collection "conjures a unique journey through the British past, present and future, via the prism of the Black imagination."[11]
Works
Books
(ed.) Empire Windrush: Fifty Years of Writing About Black Britain (Preface by E. R. Braithwaite. London: Victor Gollancz, 1998. Published in the United States by Continuum under the title Hurricane hits England: An Anthology of Writing about Black Britain.
^ abBernard, Sheila Curran (2013). "Onyekachi Wambu". Documentary Storytelling: Making Stronger and More Dramatic Nonfiction Films. Taylor & Francis. p. 349. ISBN978-1-136-04234-8.