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Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image - Politics - Nairaland

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Who Was Olaudah Equiano? Google Marks 272nd Birthday Of Abolitionist / Oladuah Equiano: Twisted History By Igbos / Sad Memories Of Slavery As GOOGLE Celebrates Anambra Born Olaudah Equiano- PICS (2) (3) (4)

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Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by Nobody: 2:00am On Oct 16, 2017
Igbo amaka grin grin

cc
Leez



Sad memories of slavery


The hall was silent. The atmosphere was tense. Screams and wailings of children, women and men filled the air. Heads bowed in deep reflection. Some raised their eyes upwards looking at the ceiling. Many tried hard to fight back tears.

It was no funeral wake but the screening of a film, entitled: The Slave Route: The Soul of Resistance. The 36-minute documentary showed the sufferings of the era, focused on the transatlantic slave trade. It reconciled the history, influences and rationale behind the various characters involved in the era.

The screening was part of the activities marking this year’s International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Slavery and the Transatlantic slave trade organised by the United Nations Information Centre (UNIC), Lagos, in collaboration with African Anti-Slavery Coalition (ASLAC).

This year’s theme: Forever Free: Celebrating Emancipations reechoed the age-long advocacy for freedom, especially by the victims of slavery.


As guests walked into the lecture hall, they were first confronted with the pictures and stories of some of the heroes of emancipation like Phillis Wheatley, Harriet Tubman, John Brown, Olaudah Equiano (an ex-lbo slave who was kidnapped from Isseke Village in present-day Anambra State), Frederick Douglas and more. But nothing prepared them for the film.


According to the organisers, the screening was meant to involve the young generation in the campaign against slavery. UNIC Officer in-charge, Mrs Olajumoke Araba, who read the UN chief’s speech, said: “The film paints an apt picture. And we can see that there are lessons for everybody learn from what happened during the period, especially the pupils. It is hoped that involving the young ones would ignite in them the need to carry on the fight against all forms of racism and slavery. Even though the programme fell during their examination period and when many schools are on holiday, we were glad for the ones that came. Each watched with deep concentration and I’m sure it has improved their knowledge of history.”

The era, sad as it was, produced great minds like Wheatley who became one of the most accomplished writers, it was learnt. She published her first poem at age 12. Born in Senegambia in 1753, she was sold into slavery at the age of 7 and transported to North America. She was purchased by the Wheatley family of Boston, who taught her to read and write, and encouraged her poetry when they saw her talent.

Despite the rare opportunities she had as a slave, she probably would have preferred to be free, it was said. Perhaps that is why the United Nations (UN) chief Ban Ki-moon describes slavery “as a global crime against humanity”. Wheatley and other key figures, who fought to eliminate slavery, with many losing their lives in the process, he said, are heroes and heroines of the emancipation. And the day is a tribute to the struggles of that era.

Ki-moon said: “On the International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Slavery and the Transatlantic Slave Trade, we tell the world to never forget this global crime against humanity… As we reflect on the contemporary consequences of this tragedy, let us remember the bravery of those who risked everything for freedom and those who helped them on that perilous path.

“Their courage should inspire us as we struggle against contemporary forms of slavery, racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia, and related intolerance. On this day, let us pledge to honour and restore the dignity of affected people and to intensify efforts to eliminate the slavery that persists in our world”.




Advocating through film

The film’s heartbreaking scenes of sufferings and maltreatment of African slaves not only painted a vivid picture and degradation of the era, but also buttressed Mr Olufemi Phillips, a human rights activist’s the lecture by on the theme at a forum before the screening.

Beyond the academic rigour, Philips, who is the co-founder of ASLAC, had a unique story to tell. He is a descendant of one of the victims of the transatlantic slave trade, who returned during the abolition. Reflecting on the period, he said, brought back sad memories that are better forgotten.

He recounted: “The transatlantic slave trade can never be erased from the memories of some Africans, especially those whose great-great-great-grandparents or ancestors were victims. My late great grandmother was captured during the Ogedengbe war at Ikole-Ekiti. She was a princess from lloti compound, forced to trek from Ikole-Ekiti up to Badagry coastal area, where she was sold to Brazilian slave traders that transported her and others to Bahia, Brazil. My great-grandmother survived the slavery and during the abolition of slave trade in Brazil, she returned back to West Africa where she first settled at Greenhouse present day Republic of Benin and later on traced her son’s home at 177, Igbosere Road, Lagos Island. There are many returnee slaves such as Do-Regos, De-Souza, Delfonso, Pinheiro, Da-Rocha, Jorge Campos, Da -Silva, Da-Costa, Martins, Ferreira, Pereira etc.”

He described the era as being an “ugly incident that had brought Africa back retrogressively”. He, however, lamented that unfortunately Africans are still experiencing all sorts of enslavement, noting that the worst of it is, “self-enslavement”, which he linked to bad governance. He said there is the need for all-round emancipation, while calling for a proactive approach involving the government, civil societies and the public, so that better results can be achieved.

He said: “However, it is sad that Africans are no longer sold against their will or forced into slavery but are freely giving themselves to all forms of enslavement. Every day, many, especially the young, are constantly crossing their borders to enslave themselves because of poverty. We see history repeating itself with the case of Equiano, who was kidnapped from his homeland into slavery; centuries later, nothing has changed. The place is still plagued with many cases of kidnappings.

“Young ladies are constantly being tricked into enslavement in the guise of employment. And this is the offshoot of bad governance and corruption in Africa. Africans are not enjoying the dividend of democracy that is why many are freely opting for enslavement abroad. Corruption has become a dreaded virus in our system. We, members of the civil societies, in collaboration with government, security operatives and the public, need to do more in our campaigns, to address the precedence.”

The film, he said, brought to life the pains of that period. As the audience, who were mainly pupils, history teachers, diplomats and the media, watched with mixed emotions, it was evident that scenes borrowed from diverse slavery films, such as Roots, perhaps helped to drive the plot. But unlike those films, its characters, consisting slaves (women, men and children), those born into slavery, man hunters, slave traders and more, told their sides of the story as if trying to convince the audience in a debate scenario.

The accounts of Juan, a boy born into slavery in Cuba that saw his father, who had made several escape attempts, hanged; Lala, a girl from the kingdom of Congo, was captured by man hunters while trying to gather firewood to cook dinner and Musa, who was waiting for his initiation to become a hunter like his ancestors, was captured and sold to an Arab merchant and died during the operation when he was being castrated to become a eunuch, which was very expensive in those days.



The young speak out for emancipation

At the end of the screening, guests, especially the pupils did not take the experience with a pinch of salt. Apparently moved by the film, they spoke with deep emotions against slavery.

After watching the film, Tolulope Oke, SS Three, Kings College, was heartbroken. “Going by what we saw, it was also embarrassing to see that people were treated like animals,” he said. “I asked myself: “how would they have felt then?’ It was quite heartbreaking to see an African being maltreated like that. It enlightened me more. It also taught me how to fight back when being oppressed and how to face challenges of life.”

Tofunmi Ajao, Dowen College, was enraged. She said: “Watching the film has helped me acquire more understanding of the period. I felt very sorrowful watching it. It is an experience you’d wish the whites would never start all over again for whatsoever reasons. And for some reasons, you’d wish that we could retaliate because it’s just as if they went away with it. I heard certain mitigation was made, especially financially; but money is not enough, did you see what they did; money can’t cover all the pain they caused.”

On the part of Olayemi Awolade SS2, Dowen College, the film awakened in him a sense of advocacy. “Watching the film, we saw the slavery in a different light; and that it is our time to change things and end all forms of slavery.”

For History tutor, Dowen College, Ogundeji Elijah, the film is a good teaching aid where the pupils were able to see what they were taught in class. This, he said, would give them a better understanding of how to tackle the period.



The celebrations of emancipation

In the same vein, this year’s celebration was particularly unique as it marked several global milestones in the eradication of slavery. They include the 150th year anniversary of Abraham Lincoln issuing the Emancipation Proclamation, freeing millions of African-Americans from enslavement; the 180th anniversary of the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833 in the British Empire; also in 1833, slavery ended in Canada, the British West Indies and the Cape of Good Hope. Others include the Indian Slavery Act of 1843 signed some 170 years ago; in France, slavery was abolished 165 years ago; Argentina (160 years ago) and the former Dutch colonies (150 years ago), among others.


https://www.google.com.ng/amp/thenationonlineng.net/sad-memories-of-slavery/amp/

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Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by Nobody: 2:06am On Oct 16, 2017
nice
Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by andreweb(m): 2:30am On Oct 16, 2017
IDI AMEEN will not kill person with laugh:It's not for me. I tried human flesh and it's too salty for my taste.

3 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by Leez(m): 2:44am On Oct 16, 2017
giftq:
Igbo amaka grin grin
cc Leez
all the time bro all the time

72 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by Leez(m): 3:02am On Oct 16, 2017
giftq:
Igbo amaka grin grin
cc Leez
emm lalasticlala move this thread to fp na

7 Likes

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by hucienda: 3:05am On Oct 16, 2017
Happy birthday Olaudah.

A great man who played his part in ending slave trade.

Your determination, grit and zeal inspires still.

63 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by Leez(m): 3:07am On Oct 16, 2017
conductorH1:
An Igbo man who was sold to slavery in Britain, served out his time, earned money, bought his freedom from his master and started agitating for the abolishment of slave trade.

The current crop of lazy parasite One Neajeriya yoots will label him a terrorist for "challenging the Federal Government" and "brainwashing his gullible IPOD followers" for demanding abolishment of slave trade.

"Our constitution does not support abolishment of slave trade" - Omenka

"You're calling for war by agitating freedom" - Sarrki

"The Nigerian soldiers should shoot him dead for demanding freedom" - Ngeneukwenu

"Lets join hands together and build this country. The British can't help you by giving you clothes and education and you want to repay them by demanding freedom" - Madridguy

"Olaudah is damanding for freedom because his master's party lost the presidential election" - Nairaland BMC/Zombie chapter cheesy
u called all d chief zombies grin grin

138 Likes 7 Shares

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by Nobody: 3:17am On Oct 16, 2017
conductorH1:
An Igbo man who was sold to slavery in Britain, served out his time, earned money, bought his freedom from his master and started agitating for the abolishment of slave trade.

The current crop of lazy parasite One Neajeriya yoots will label him a terrorist for "challenging the Federal Government" and "brainwashing his gullible IPOD terrorist followers" because he demanded abolishment of slave trade.

"Our constitution does not support abolishment of slave trade" - Omenka

"You're calling for war by agitating freedom" - Sarrki

"The Nigerian soldiers should shoot him dead for demanding freedom" - Ngeneukwenu

"Lets join hands together and build this country. The British can't help you by giving you clothes and education and you want to repay them by demanding freedom" - Madridguy

"Olaudah is damanding for freedom because his master's party lost the presidential election" - Nairaland BMC/Zombie chapter cheesy
Gbam
1. Oladeebo will open 1,000 new thread discussing Olaudah and his Igboness. grin
2. Vivere will continue to wonder why Olaudah simply refuses to perpetually dobale to slave masters. grin
3. T9ksy will be forming suffersticated political and historical analyst, while bowing down to perpetual slavery. grin
4. Omenka will be jumping from one Igbo thread to another, while Fulani herdsmen decimate his Middle Belt region.

Say NO to dullardism, zombie-ism and indiscriminate mumu-ism

cc Leez

140 Likes 14 Shares

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by ipoblogic: 3:49am On Oct 16, 2017
conductorH1:
An Igbo man who was sold to slavery in Britain, served out his time, earned money, bought his freedom from his master and started agitating for the abolishment of slave trade.

The current crop of lazy parasite One Neajeriya yoots will label him a terrorist for "challenging the Federal Government" and "brainwashing his gullible IPOD terrorist followers" because he demanded abolishment of slave trade.

"Our constitution does not support abolishment of slave trade" - Omenka

"You're calling for war by agitating freedom" - Sarrki

"The Nigerian soldiers should shoot him dead for demanding freedom" - Ngeneukwenu

"Lets join hands together and build this country. The British can't help you by giving you clothes and education and you want to repay them by demanding freedom" - Madridguy

"Olaudah is damanding for freedom because his master's party lost the presidential election" - Nairaland BMC/Zombie chapter cheesy

"All slaves are advised to buy their freedom and leave our lands on before Oct 1st or face the consequences" Areas Youths.

"Those calling for abolishment of slavery trade were not born during the war" Buhari

"Calls for abolishment of slave trading is mischievous" APC

"Igbo's love being slaves" Okorocha

".

89 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by DanseMacabre(m): 3:54am On Oct 16, 2017
Without mincing words, one can say that this was the 'greatest' slave to come out of Africa. Just reading about his antecedents would get one bamboozled.


I wish say dem capture my great-great-great grandfather as slave. I'd have been either a great white shark, or a coloured American, something in the ilk of Kendrick Lamar.

15 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by BabaRamota1980: 4:17am On Oct 16, 2017
giftq:
Igbo amaka grin grin

cc
Leez

He is Igala, not Ibo.

3 Likes

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by NIGHTMAREOO7: 4:19am On Oct 16, 2017
BabaRamota1980:


He is Igala, not Ibo.

My friend, igbo he is !!

64 Likes 1 Share

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by Nobody: 4:21am On Oct 16, 2017
BabaRamota1980:


He is Igala, not Ibo.
Igbo amaka

"Two years later, Irving recruited Equiano for a project on the Mosquito Coast in Central America, where he was to use his African background and Igbo language to help select slaves and manage them as labourers on sugar cane plantations."


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olaudah_Equiano#Freedom

39 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by Nobody: 4:22am On Oct 16, 2017
BabaRamota1980:


He is Igala, not Ibo.
Stop hating

55 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by BabaRamota1980: 4:40am On Oct 16, 2017
giftq:

Igbo amaka

"Two years later, Irving recruited Equiano for a project on the Mosquito Coast in Central America, where he was to use his African background and Igbo language to help select slaves and manage them as labourers on sugar cane plantations."


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olaudah_Equiano#Freedom

He is Igala. His family settled and lived in Ibo country for commercial trade. When he was kidnapped by a yanminri he already spoke Ibo language.

There is nothing in his name or looks that feature Ibo roots. The man is not Ibo.

12 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by Nobody: 4:42am On Oct 16, 2017
BabaRamota1980:


He is Igala. His family settled and lived in Ibo country for commercial trade. When he was kidnapped by a yanminri he already spoke Ibo language.

There is nothing in his name or looks that feature Ibo roots. The man is not Ibo.

58 Likes 1 Share

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by BabaRamota1980: 4:44am On Oct 16, 2017
giftq:

Stop hating

Its the truth.

5 Likes

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by Nobody: 4:47am On Oct 16, 2017
BabaRamota1980:


Its the truth.
you are just another jealous Igbo-phobic Nairalander

cc Leez

63 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by conductorH1: 4:56am On Oct 16, 2017
BabaRamota1980:


He is Igala. His family settled and lived in Ibo country for commercial trade. When he was kidnapped by a yanminri he already spoke Ibo language.

There is nothing in his name or looks that feature Ibo roots. The man is not Ibo.
Stop chewing tramadol you won't hear. cheesy grin

73 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by Nobody: 5:02am On Oct 16, 2017
BabaRamota1980:


He is Igala. His family settled and lived in Ibo country for commercial trade. When he was kidnapped by a yanminri he already spoke Ibo language.

There is nothing in his name or looks that feature Ibo roots. The man is not Ibo.

"in one of the most remote and fertile of which, called Eboe, I was born, in the year 1745, in a charming fruitful vale, named Essaka. "

---- The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, page 2

46 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by kanayoNickel: 6:39am On Oct 16, 2017
I love Olaudia Equaino. .. Fight for freedom, no matter what

5 Likes

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by Alexgeneration(m): 6:41am On Oct 16, 2017
He deserves to be celebrated

8 Likes

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by QuotaSystem: 6:51am On Oct 16, 2017
I'm sure as hell Equiano did not negotiate and buy his freedom by calling his master's house a zoo or his family zoo animals, neither did he threaten to burn down his owners plantation if he was denied his freedom.

No master would have freed his slave if he approached him with aggression, no matter how much he was willing to pay. Equiano got his freedom through tactfully and diplomatically engaging his master and paying him off. An attribute lost in his descendants thanks to brainwashing by the Ohamma-dickhead.

Happy Post-humous Birthday Olaudah


CC: giftq conductorH1

14 Likes

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by kanayoNickel: 7:04am On Oct 16, 2017
BabaRamota1980:


He is Igala. His family settled and lived in Ibo country for commercial trade. When he was kidnapped by a yanminri he already spoke Ibo language.

There is nothing in his name or looks that feature Ibo roots. The man is not Ibo.

Are you really okay. You can't just rewrite history...

16 Likes

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by reality1010: 7:17am On Oct 16, 2017
He was d greatest man that ever came from our black world.His spirit lives on.Say no to slavery say no to injustice and say yes to freedom.For who support d murder of freedom fighters they should know that d blood spewed on d ground will breed millions who would continue d struggle.As for me I belong to that struggle.

9 Likes

Re: Google Clebrates Olaudah Equiano's 272nd Birthday With Image by blaqoracle: 7:27am On Oct 16, 2017
conductorH1:
An Igbo man who was sold to slavery in Britain, served out his time, earned money, bought his freedom from his master and started agitating for the abolishment of slave trade.

The current crop of lazy parasite One Neajeriya yoots will label him a terrorist for "challenging the Federal Government" and "brainwashing his gullible IPOD terrorist followers" because he demanded abolishment of slave trade.

"Our constitution does not support abolishment of slave trade" - Omenka

"You're calling for war by agitating freedom" - Sarrki

"The Nigerian soldiers should shoot him dead for demanding freedom" - Ngeneukwenu

"Lets join hands together and build this country. The British can't help you by giving you clothes and education and you want to repay them by demanding freedom" - Madridguy

"Olaudah is damanding for freedom because his master's party lost the presidential election" - Nairaland BMC/Zombie chapter cheesy
olauda equano never, in his narration claim Igbo. In fact he asserted his Edo origin. Equano only described the existence of Igbo, as a their person.
Chinua Achebe was the the one that invented fraudulent oluada-igbo propaganda.

9 Likes 1 Share

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