a woman named Redoshi
She
Survived a Slave Ship, the Civil War and the Depression. Her Name Was Redoshi.
Sandra E. Garcia, April 3, 2019, The New York Times
It
has long been believed that a man named Cudjo Lewis was the last
living survivor of the trans-Atlantic slave trade in the United States.
Now a researcher at Newcastle University in Britain says she has
discovered testimony from someone who may have lived even
longer — a woman named Redoshi.
The new findings, published last week in the journal Slavery &
Abolition, are likely to be subject to scholarly debate, because there
are few records documenting the lives of the last Africans to be
captured and brought to the United States on slave ships.
Regardless of Redoshi’s precise historical status, the researcher,
Hannah Durkin, has pieced together accounts from different sources and
census records to carve out the remarkable life of a woman who survived
the treacherous Middle Passage voyage at age 12,
was sold as a child bride, and lived through the Civil War and the
Great Depression. According to Dr. Durkin, Redoshi died in 1937; Lewis
died in 1935.
“It was thought that this woman was lost to history,” Dr. Durkin, a lecturer at Newcastle University, said in an interview.
continue
Think so?
absolute power depends on absolute control over knowledge, which in turn necessitates absolute corruption
Think about this
“Politicians, Priests, and psychiatrists often face the same problem: how to find the most rapid and permanent means of changing a man’s belief…The problem of the doctor and his nervously ill patient, and that of the religious leader who sets out to gain and hold new converts, has now become the problem of whole groups of nations, who wish not only to confirm certain political beliefs within their boundaries, but to proselytize the outside world.”
– William Sargant “Battle of the Mind”
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