Friday, February 23, 2007

On the Plane

Before I even landed in New York, the adventure began through a conversation with the man sitting next to me. He was about the same age as my father and was coming to the city for a Hip-Hop convention and to meet up with a woman who was helping him with a project in Mobile, AL. He works with HIV/AIDS prevention for youth and believes Hip-Hop can be a powerful tool if used for positive messages.

But, what really fascinated me was the project he was working on. He is the Executive Director of Africatown, a community based project in Mobile. THey have purchased land in Mobile and are building a replica of the former AfricaTown that kept its cultural heritage alive for many years. Here is the story of AfricaTown:

MOBILE COMMUNITY HOLDS ON TO UNIQUE AFRICAN HERITAGE

by Henry Willett

"In front of the Union Missionary Baptist Church, in the Magazine/Plateau community about three miles north of Mobile, there is a bust of Cudjoe Kazoola Lewis, the last survivor of a voyage on the slave ship, Clotilda, from the west coast of Africa in 1860. The monument is an enduring symbol of the community's pride in its African history and heritage, and is the focal point for annual celebrations of that heritage. Beneath the bust is a steel shaft sunk 100 feet into the earth, symbolizing the 100 years that this group of African Americans had inhabited Mobile County soil when the monument was dedicated in 1959.

Cudjoe Kazoola Lewis was born around 1840, a member of the Tarkbar tribe, which inhabited the interior region of the Gulf of Guinea on the west coast of Africa.

The Tarkbars were an agricultural people raising hogs, goats, sheep, chickens and cows. They planted beans and yams, and gathered bananas and pineapples. Their main trade item was the oil from palm trees, which was traded to other tribes, eventually reaching the coast for export abroad. In the late 1850s, West Africa was at war with itself. Defeated tribes were often sold into slavery. In November of 1858, the Mobile Register noted, "The King of Dahomey was driving a brisk trade in slaves at from fifty to sixty dollars apiece." And as secessionist fever was spreading through Alabama in the 1850s, there was much talk of reopening the African slave trade, which had been outlawed since 1808. It was in this setting that wealthy Mobile shipper Timothy Meaher and shipyard owner William Foster planned the Trans-Atlantic voyage of the Clotilda for the purpose of bringing an illegal cargo of slaves back to Mobile. Clotilda set sail from Mobile on March 4, 1860, arriving at the port of Whydah on the west coast of Africa on May 15.

Five weeks earlier, Cudjoe Kazoola Lewis and dozens of fellow tribesmen had been captured by Dahomean warriors and marched to the port of Whydah where Lewis and 114 others were sold to Captain Foster for one hundred dollars apiece.

By the time they arrived in Mobile, federal authorities, having heard about the scheme, were on the lookout for the Clotilda. Captain Foster entered Mobile Harbor on the night of July 9, 1860. He transferred his slave cargo to a riverboat and sent them up into the canebrake to hide them. He then burned his schooner and sunk it.

The Africans were distributed to those having an interest in the Clotilda expedition, with 32 settling on the Meaher property at Magazine Point, three miles north of Mobile. This formed the nucleus of what came to be known, and still is known, as Africatown. Lewis was among that group. After the Civil War, they were joined by a number of their fellow tribesmen. For decades they continued speaking their native tongue, had disputes arbitrated by their tribal chieftain, Charlie Poteete, and had their illnesses treated by the African doctor, Jabez. Up until World War II, Africatown remained a rather distinct community in Mobile County.

Africatown is unique in that it represents a group of Africans who were forcefully removed from their homeland, sold into slavery, and then formed their own, largely self-governing community, all the while maintaining a strong sense of African cultural heritage. This sense of heritage and sense of community continues to thrive today, more than 130 years after the landing of the Clotilda in Mobile Bay."

In 1868, Africatown was established in Mobile and Prichard, Alabama, by members of the last cargo of slaves brought to the United States. The community deserves recognition as a National Historic District because it is one of the few places in America where most residents can collectively trace their lineage to a group of pure Africans. In its earliest history, most of the Africatown men worked in the local lumber mills, and the women became fruit and vegetable vendors, cooks, or laundresses. These people were known as craftspeople, especially for woodworking and quiltmaking. Africatown is also well known for its folk medicine, and most residents continue to rely on traditional African herbal drugs. Like most African music, the music in Africatown is chiefly vocal. The area is rich in folktales, many of which need to be recorded and documented. Another cultural area in particular need of preservation efforts is architecture. Many of Africatown's older shotgun houses and bungalows should be restored and preserved as monuments to the unsung craftsmen who erected them. Formal efforts to preserve Africatown began with the founding of the Progressive League in 1957, and in 1981 Africatown was nominated to become a National Historic District. In 1985, the Alabama legislature officially recognized Africatown as an historic area and made provisions for its establishment as a State park. (KH)

2 comments:

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Anonymous said...

Hello.. I wanted to share the Press Release concerning the gentleman you sat next to on the plane. His name is Robert Battles.

Have a Great Day


AFRICATOWN, USA
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR & CEO
ROBERT BATTLE
PLAYS HOST TO 14 WEST AFRICAN DELEGATES
& AWARD WINNING AUTHOR
SYLVIANE DIOUF
MARCH 16, 17 & 18 2007


Mr. Robert Battles, CEO and Executive Director of the AfricaTown, USA Community Mobilization Project, Inc., an Alabama based non-profit organization, is gearing up for a grand three-day cultural symposium March 16, 17 and 18th. Expected to arrive is a 14 member West African delegation of Filmmakers, Artists, representatives from the African fashion and hair design industry and culinary specialist. Two of the members of the African delegation Mr. Thomas Akodjinou from Benin and Mr. Felix Eklu from Togo are returning to Alabama to continue the due diligence they began in November and December 2006 on their AfricaTown documentary project. Embarking on a 3 state tour, of South Carolina, Georgia and Alabama they gathered research and visited several African American & Civil Rights locations.

One of the key moments of the event is a special appearance by renowned and celebrated Senegalese author Sylviane Diouf. Dr. Diouf received a doctorate from the University of Paris and has taught at Libreville University in Gabon and New York University. She is the author of “Dreams of Africa in Alabama: The Slave Ship Clotilda and the Story of the Last Africans Brought to America”. As the CEO of AfricaTown, USA, “Dreams of Africa in Alabama” was especially interesting to Battles because it documents historically the work that he has been doing for over twenty years. He went to New York recently to meet with Dr. Diouf and to facilitate the planning of her Alabama visit.

On Friday, March 16th the City of Mobile Museum will host Dr. Sylviane Diouf in a Meet The Author and book signing of DREAMS OF AFRICA from 4:00pm to 6:00pm. At 7:00 pm the Mobile County Training School * 800 Whitley Avenue * Plateau, Alabama will also host a book signing for Dr. Diouf.

Saturday, March 17th kicks off with the Original AfricaTown Folk Festival Community Day from 10:00 am until 6:00 pm. Come out and meet Mr. Thomas Akodjinou, Mr. Felix Eklu and the other members of the African Delegation. Enjoy the music, fashions and cultural presentations.

On Sunday, March 18th the closing ceremony “Feast of Relatives and Friends” will be held at the Plateau Community Center * 850 Edward Street * Plateau, Alabama. Special African cuisine and other culinary delights will be available. Dr. Sylviane Diouf will be the guest speaker.

For More Information – Call 251-518-1262

Submitted by D. Cameron
usaartistobenin@aol.com