A
pacifist and a
Quaker, and "contributed to a series of statements by
post-colonial activists on 'race' in the run-up to the
1964 UK general election, published by
Theodore Roszak, editor of
Peace News." As Kalbir Shukra describes in
The Changing Pattern of Black Politics in Britain (1998): "After the election, Glean brought together Alan Lovell and
Michael Randle, who were pacifists and former members of the
Committee of 100, with other friends who had written for
Peace News including an Asian woman,
Ranjana Ash (an active member of the
Movement for Colonial Freedom),
C. L. R. James and
Barry Reckord (African-Caribbean playwright and actor)." According to
The Guardian′s report at the time: "Mrs Glean, together with
Canon L. John Collins, hastily assembled about 30 Indians, Pakistanis, West Indians, and Africans...at the Hilton Hotel in London, where Dr King spoke for only a few minutes. The whole discussion lasted only an hour and a half, but at the end of it the new movement was formed and Mrs Glean appointed secretary." ==Writings, 1970s==