Slave traders and their captives along the Ruvuma River
Liverpool, England was one of the major ports in The Slavery Triangle. Today it is home to the International Slavery Museum. Admission is free, to the permanent and temporary exhibits, but in Britain they celebrate Black History Month in October.
Credits:
Mystic Percussion – (D. Malherbe – Kosinus KOS 44
Bitake – (W. Diop / O. Delevingne) – Kosinus/K.Music – KA 350
Narrator:Blu Mankuma
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Black history in North America, unlike “white” history, must take into account the hundreds of thousands of Africans who were brought to this continent against their will. The experience of slavery, in Canada and the United States, wreaked havoc for generations. Canada played a role in the liberation and eventual return of some slaves to Africa, but for many others, their lives had already taken root here. Read more
“I am a Man”: Behind our logo
This image is from a famous photo taken in Memphis, Tennessee, at the height of the civil rights movement in the United States.
On March 29, 1968, a column of mostly Black men walked between the guns and bayonets of the National Guard on one side, and army tanks on the other, with their placards proclaiming, “I am a Man”.