Friday, January 27, 2012

THE FORMER SLAVE MARKET IN ZANZIBAR

One of the most intresting sites we visited during our stay in Zanzibar was the former slave market.
Slavery was indeed one of the biggest incomes during the 18 century when Omans ruled on the island.

Caravans started out from Bagamoyo on the mainland coast, travelling as much as 1,000 miles on foot as far as Lake Tanganyika, buying slaves from local rulers on the way, or, more cheaply, simply capturing them. The slaves were chained together and used to carried ivory back to Bagamoyo. The name Bagamoyo means 'lay down your heart;' because it was here that slaves would abandon hope of freedom. Slaves who survived the long trek from the interior were crammed into dhows bound for Zanzibar, and paraded for sale like cattle in the Slave Market.
All of the main racial groups were involved in the slave trade in some way or other. Europeans used slaves in their plantations in the Indian Ocean islands, Arabs were the main traders, and African rulers sold prisoners taken in battle.




In this underground "room" 75 woman were kept captured with few to drink. In the middle there is a canal where the tied water came in twice a day taking and bringing in al sorts of things. Lot of people would become ill or die here.

















Being sold into slavery was not a prisoner's worst fate - if a prolonged conflict led to a glut, the Doe tribe north of Bagamoyo had the rather gruesome habit of eating 'excess supplies'.
Sultan Barghash was forced in 1873, under the threat of a British naval bombardment, to sign an edict which made the sea-borne slave trade illegal, and the slave market in Zanzibar was closed, with the Cathedral Church of Christ erected on the site.



































Dr. Livingstone was a very important part in that treaty. But the trade continued, particularly on the mainland. Slaving was illegal, but it existed openly until Britain took over the mainland following their defeat of the Germans in the First World War. Many former slaves found that their conditions had hardly changed - they were now simply employed as labourers at very low wage rates in the spice plantations.
This monument was made by a swedish woman called Clara Sörnäs in 1997 to honour all the slaves that died here or were transorted to a horrible life somewhere in Europe, America or Oman.

The church where once women and men were sold.
Woma were more expensive cause they could produce more slaves "of course"!!! :-(

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