Saturday, June 1, 2019
Slave Narratives :: American America History
Slave NarrativesThe snapper Passage was almost impossible. Hundreds upon hundreds of Africans were abducted from their homes to go on boats to America. They were stacked like books on shelves in order to bring large Negros for a profitable hard worker trade. The life on the boats on the way to the New World was so bad that the Africans preferred death to their gruesome future. The conditions on the boats were hellish. The slaves on the ships were packed like sardines and chained together. Among the gripping words that Olaudah Equiano, a slave abducted when he was respectable eleven years old, used to describe the Middle passage are hopeless, low, brutal, and wretched. The temperature in the disease- infested rooms was inconceivable. There was no fresh air for the Negro inhabitants. The feeling of shock and isolation only added to the sorrow and villainy of the situation. Alexander Falconbridge, a surgeon aboard these slave ships, recalled that the hot floor was covered with blo od and mucus. It was like a slaughter-house. The sickening stench was great due(p) to the loathsome filth from the pestilential heat. As Olaudah Equiano said, sleep was the only temporary refuge. The dejection and despair of the circumstances caused many people to bitterly cry, shriek, and groan in inconceivable horror and fear. The savage cruelty of the slave traders and boat crew was terrifying. The Negros were deprived of food and health treatments, and due to the crammed conditions this caused great waves of sickness and disease. These ships created an absolute hellish origination for the abandoned Africans aboard them. Although describable, the anguish of these people cannot be fully understood.The Africans, due to these excruciating conditions, were completely and utterly terrified. During the slave trades, the noise and clamor was so terrorization that many slaves attempted at running away in the tumult. On the boats, many people tried to jump overboard. Attempted suicide u sually just increased the despair of the situation. Negros were punished for any attempt at escape or purposeful personal harm. If one did not eat, they were flogged until they ate the disgusting food. The slave traders expressed brutal cruelty to the slaves aboard the ships. They treated the Negros as if they were imported typical goods. They spent the least amount of effort and money in reservation the conditions aboard the boats tolerable in order to ensure a higher profitable outcome.
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