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English 12 AH

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Olaudah Equiano Abolitionist Leader English 12 AH JL Ilsley HS From your reading (Value 15) 1. Cite and reflect on a quotation that expresses the difficulties ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: English 12 AH


1
Olaudah EquianoAbolitionist Leader
  • English 12 AH
  • JL Ilsley HS

2
A young child in Africa
  • Olaudah Equiano was born in West Africa in 1745.
  • He was kidnapped by another tribe in 1755. He was
    11 years old.
  • Olaudah was next sold to white slave traders who
    put him on a ship for the Americas. This was the
    first time he saw the ocean.
  • The slave ship crossed the Atlantic Ocean and
    arrived in Barbados in the West Indies in 1756.
  • Equiano did not speak English. He did not know
    how to read or write.
  • He did not know where he was going or what was
    happening to him.

3
The Middle Passage
  • The first object I saw when I arrived on the
    coast of West Africa, was the sea, and a slave
    shipwaiting for its cargo. These filled me with
    astonishment, soon terror I wished for the
    last friend, death, to relieve meI would have
    jumped over the side, but I could notthe shrieks
    of the women, and the groans of the dying, made
    the whole a scene of horror almost
    inconceivable. (chapter 2)
  • Dilemma Olaudah saw other slaves throw
    themselves overboard to escape the horrors aboard
    the slave ship. The Middle Passage was so
    horrible, Olaudah wanted to kill himself
    sometimes.

4
Travels as a slave
  • The slave ship arrived in Barbados. Olaudah had
    survived the Middle Passage.
  • No one bought Olaudah in Barbados. He went on
    another ship to an English Colony in Virginia.
  • A British Navy officer, Michael Henry Pascal,
    bought Olaudah and was his master for 7 years. He
    brought him to England.
  • When in England, Olaudah learned to read and
    write. Olaudah also learned to speak English.
  • Later, Olaudah traveled all around the world with
    Lt. Pascal.
  • Lt. Pascal promised to give Olaudah his freedom,
    but he never did. In 1763, Lt. Pascal sold
    Olaudah to a new master, Mr. King. King taught
    Olaudah business.

5
How did events from 1756-1763 influence Olaudah?.
  • Important Events
  • He learned to read and write and speak in English
  • He traveled the world and saw many different
    people and places
  • He was promised freedom, but was not given it
  • He learned about trade and commerce
  • What did Olaudah gain from his situation as a
    slave with Lt. Pascal?
  • How might this have helped him eventually to
    become an abolitionist leader?
  • What did he gain from his situation as a slave
    with Mr. King?
  • How might this have helped him eventually to
    become an abolitionist leader?
  • How do you think the unfulfilled promise of
    freedom motivated Olaudah?

6
Freedom
  • In 1766, Olaudah bought his freedom and worked in
    the trade business
  • He lived in England and became an abolitionist
  • He lectured against the cruelty of British slave
    owners
  • He spoke out against the English slave trade
  • He worked to resettle freed slaves in Sierre
    Leone
  • Olaudah published a narrative about his life in
    1789
  • His narrative was a great influence on the
    abolition of slavery in England and in the United
    States
  • Olaudah Equiano died in 1797
  • In 1807, Great Britain abolished the slave trade

7
The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah
Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, The African (1789) by
Olaudah Equiano
  • Olaudahs principal reason for writing his
    narrative was to evoke compassion for the
    miseries suffered by Africans in the slave trade
  • An English abolitionist said that Olaudahs book
    was more use to the Cause Abolition than half
    the people of the country.
  • Olaudah said he hoped his book would promote the
    interests of humanity

8
Quotations
  • Slavery violates that first natural right of
    mankind, equality and freedom, and gives one man
    a dominion over his fellows which God could never
    intend! For it raises the owner to a state as far
    above man as it depresses the slave below it
    and, with all the presumption of human pride,
    sets a distinction between them, immeasurable in
    extend, and endless in duration!
  • When you make men slaves, you deprive them of
    half their virtue, you set them, in your own
    conduct, an example of fraud, rapine, and
    cruelty, and compel them to live with you in a
    state of war, and yet you complain that they are
    not honest or faithful!
  • As the inhuman traffic of slavery is to be taken
    into the consideration of the British
    legislature, I doubt not, if a system of commerce
    was established in Africa, the demand for
    manufactures would most rapidly augmenta
    commercial intercourse with Africa opens an
    inexhaustible source of wealth to the
    manufacturing interests of Great Britain, and to
    all which the slave trade is an objectionThe
    abolition of slavery would be in reality a
    universal good.

9
Olaudah Equiano
  • Olaudah was intelligent, quickly learned English,
    studied to read and write and learn about the
    laws and business of his enslavers
  • Olaudah converted to Christianity which may have
    influenced how he told his story and who became
    his friends and supporters
  • Olaudahs autobiography was the first slave
    narrative and the first book published in English
    by an African
  • His narrative was very effective in behalf of
    abolitionism
  • Olaudah knew how to convince his readers that
    slavery was inhumane
  • Olaudah survived horrible situations and overcame
    them
  • Olaudah was willing to work hard for what he
    wanted

10
From your reading (Value 15)
  • 1. Cite and reflect on a quotation that expresses
    the difficulties experienced by Equiano.
  • 2. Cite and reflect on a quotation that
    expresses how Equianos literacy and/or
    intelligence helped him to survive and thrive.
  • Explain why Equiano was an ideal spokesman for
    the Abolitionist movement.

11
Works Cited
  • PBS resource guide, Africans in America
    http//www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part1/1p276.html
  • University of Michigan http//wmich.edu/dialogues/
    texts/lifeofolaudahequiano.htm
  • Brycchan Careys website for Olaudah Equiano
    http//www.brycchancarey.com/equiano/index.htm
  • Equiano Foundation Online http//www.atomicage.com
    /equiano/index.html
  • University of North Carolina Documenting the
    American South http//docsouth.unc.edu/neh/neh.ht
    ml
  • Library of Congress The African American
    Odyssey, Slaves and the Courts
    http//memory.loc.gov/ammem/sthtml
  • Selections of Olaudah Equianos narrative
    http//wsu.edu/dee/Equiano.html
  • The Mariners Museum, Captive Passage
    http//wsu.edu/dee/Equiano.html
  • Understanding Slavery http//www.understandingslav
    ery.com/citizen/explore/activism/gallery/?id1376
  • African American Odyssey, Anti-Slavery Movements
    and the Rise of the Sectional Controversy
    http//memory.loc.gov/ammem/aaohtml/exhibit/aopart
    3.html
  • The African American Mosaic http//www.loc.gov/exh
    ibits/african/afam007.html
  • The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American Slavery
    http//www.gilderlehrman.org/collection/online/wil
    berforce/index.html
  • History Matters http//historymatters.gmu.edu/d/63
    72/
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