Thursday, June 4, 2015

Life After Slavery

Imagine that…


Imagine that when night falls, you have to make the risky decision to escape a plantation to have a better life. You would have to leave everything you have ever known and it was unclear if you were going to see it again. Your mother and father who gave everything they could to protect you, and raise you, you would not be able to talk to them for a long time, or maybe never again. Your siblings who you would have made fun memories with and were always laughing. Your aunts and uncles whom you would have seen on a daily basis. The friends and neighbors you could vent to about the harsh punishment you had endured earlier for not washing a plate correctly or slacking off on your work because you were exhausted. Imagine that if you were caught trying to escape you would be imprisoned and not given food or you could even be killed. If you managed to escape successfully, where were you going to go? What were you going to do for work? You would not have known people in the North and they might not have known what you suffered through. But what if you did not have to escape? What if you could have walked away free without being stripped of everything you had? Before this I-Search Paper, I knew that Abraham Lincoln liberated slaves, but I did not know that he only released slaves in states where there was rebellion. I generally had knowledge that they were treated in an inhumane order. I did not know that Abraham Lincoln had been neutral on the topic of slavery, and had changed his opinion during his presidency.  The question that I ended up creating was: How did slaves transition into becoming American citizens? My topic relates to class because the debate over slavery was one of the main causes as to why the country had gone to war with itself. Also, Abraham Lincoln was the first person to make a change in how African Americans in the United States were treated. The topic of slavery is interesting to me because for years I have wondered what purpose was there for the southerners to treat people the way they did, and how they could deal with themselves knowing that they had inflicted emotional and physical pain into the lives of so many human beings who did not deserve it.
Abraham Lincoln (pictured above) was the President of the United States during the Civil War.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1UtmGASVozN5_028zJd5bQt8Ix6B99Mj_pXnSIBJw2Vg/edit?usp=sharing

Wednesday, February 4, 2015

Who is Abdul Rahman, the Prince Among Slaves?

Living in Royalty
Abdul Rahman was a Prince from Futa Jallon, Africa. He had a wife, and one son. The place he came from was civilized. They had their own set of laws, houses, and government. When he was in Africa he ruled about 2,000 people. 

Ambushed
While Rahman, and his men were walking through the woods they  were attacked by a rival tribe. The attacking tribe was Rahman's father's enemy. He was the last man of his men standing, and he was dragged out to sea where he was forced to get on a ship. He was sold to a slave trader.

Gone
After Abdul was freed, he tried to raise money to buy his families freedom. He managed to free his wife, but not his children. On his journey to the Northern states, he tried everything to get his children back but nothing worked. Unfortunately, the voyage back home was dreadful for his wife and him. 

Return to Africa
Rahman's journey home included a road tip to Ohio, then Pennsylvania, then Washington D.C., and finally Boston. In DC, Rahman seeked help from the president John Quincy Adams, but lost the opportunity. Adams was informed that Rahman was a prince from Morocco, and when he found out that he wasn't, he quickly stopped helping.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fouta_Djallon
The above picture is an amazing view of a wooded area in Rahman's hometown of Futa Jallon, Africa.

Bibliography: Prince Among Slaves.  Dir. Bill Duke & Andrea Kalin.  Pbs.  2008.