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- As observed
- By
- Netiva Caftori
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- The Portuguese began trading African slaves in Europe in the 1440s, and
by the early 1500s ships filled with slaves captured in Africa began
sailing across the Atlantic to the New World.
- During the four centuries of the trans-Atlantic slave trade, an
estimated 12 million Africans were taken from their continent and
brought to the New World and Europe.
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- Allada,
- Abomey,
- Porto-Novo,
- Kétou,
- Tchabê,
- Nikki,
- Kouandé, and
- Djougou
- They thrived on the commerce of slavery till its abolition in 1807, then on palm oil.
- England, Denmark, Portugal and France
- 1704-Ouidah-French
- 1752-Porto-Novo-Portuguese
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7
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8
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- The old slave route to the spot on the beach where it is believed the
terrified captives boarded ships for the "Middle Passage" --
the route across the ocean to the New World.
- Many would not survive the trip, cut down by disease, malnutrition,
abuse or neglect.
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- African-Americans came from an uncivilized continent (arrived in North
America in 1619)
- Africans came to the Americas only as slaves
- Only 10 Million African slaves
- Africans enslaved their own ethnic groups
- Slavery was coercive but not brutal
- Slavery does not affect African-Americans today (abolished in 1865 in
US)
- African-Americans have contributed little to America
- Slavery destroyed African culture
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- "The kings of Dahomey -- located in Abomey, in present-day Benin --
aggressively captured and sold neighboring tribespeople to the slavers.
- The practice was quite developed, and went on for some three centuries.“
- The story of the slave trade is kept alive in the songs of village griots,
or tribal storytellers, who sing the history of the slave-conquering
kings of Dahomey.
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- "The slave trade could not have endured for four centuries and
carried nearly 12 million people out of Africa without the cooperation
of a huge network of African rulers and merchants,"
- Prof. Harms of Yale is the author of The Diligent: A Voyage Through the
Worlds of the Slave Trade, an award-winning book detailing the
day-to-day routine on a French slave vessel in the 1700s.
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- Benin is a source, transit, and destination country for children (seven
to 18) trafficked for the purposes of forced domestic and commercial
labor, including child prostitution. Estimates on the numbers of
trafficking victims range between a few hundred and several thousand
each year. Beninese children are trafficked to oil-rich Nigeria, Ghana,
Gabon, Cote d’Ivoire, and Cameroon into forced labor situations,
including agricultural labor, quarries, domestic service, and
prostitution .
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- Fon (35%),
- Adja,
- Yoruba,
- Goun,
- Bariba,
- Dendi,
- Somba,
- Peuhl, etc..
- Languages:
- Fongbé, Gengné or Mina, Yoruba,
- Baatonu, Dendi, Bariba, Adja-gbe, Ayizo-gbe,
Ditammari, Tem, Peul
- 6.2 M Beninese:
- Cotonou: 850,000
- Porto-Novo: 200,000
- Parakou: 110,000
- Abomey: 70,000
- Natitengou: 60,000
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- 80% of the people in agricultureà 40% gnp
- Corn, manioc, beans, pineapples, rice
- Export cotton (80%), palm oil & peanuts
- Industry is poor: textile, cement, mines, alimentation.
- Commerce: Cotonou is between Lome and Lagos & closest to Mali &
Burkina Faso.
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63
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65
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66
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