INSIDE GHANA'S ELMINA CASTLE IS A HAUNTING REMINDER OF ITS GRIM PAST
Ghana 🇬ðŸ‡, West AfricaIn Ghana, two of the country's most famous spectacles, Elmina Castle and Cape Coast Castle are truly imposing.
But their ancient walls were once home to one of the most
tragic and brutal periods in the history of humanity -- the transatlantic slave
trade.
The bigger of the two, Elmina Castle, is a white-washed
fortress on the coast of the small town of Elmina in what is now modern-day
Ghana.
First built in 1482 as a Portuguese trading settlement, the
91,000 sq foot behemoth was one of the principal slave depots in the
transatlantic slave trade for more than three centuries.
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This slave castle's
inner walls are a haunting reminder of its gruesome past 08:59
Some of them, like Ivor Bartels, are looking to reconnect
with their lost family's heritage and unwittingly, a lot more.
"My mother is Belizean, and I was born in the UK. I'm
Afro-Caribbean, British-Caribbean. My name took me to Ghana because I knew
there was Bartels here," he say in the halls of the old castle.
"I thought this was an ideal place for me to start my
journey; to search for my roots, for my past, and to find out really what
happened here within these walls."
'A dark history'
Alex Afful, a tour guide at the castle, says there are two
schools of thought on the inspiration behind the castle's name.
"One believed that the word 'Elmina' is an Arabic name,
which means 'harbor.' One also has it that it's a Portuguese word meaning, 'the
mine,' Afful says.
When the Portuguese first arrived, their main commodity was
gold, Afful explains.
"At the rate they were getting it, this made the
Portuguese to think or believe that a gold mine is found here," he says.
However, when European powers began to invade Africa for
slaves, Elmina became an essential stop on the slave route and a prison of
sorts for captives.
Today, Afful retraces the brutal journey that most captives
faced before being sold into slavery.
It often began by determining which prisoners were healthy
enough for the long, arduous course ahead.
"Normally they want the healthy captives, so first they
have to count. They have an instrument that they use to open their teeth, to
count the number of teeth that they had," Afful explains.
"In some cases, they have to be whipped for them to
jump, for them to see how strong that they are. So, that's the first phase.
Now, when they get in here, day after that has been done, they were then put in
the various dungeons."
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Cape Coast Castle - From
gold trade to slave trade 07:05
After being tested, the captives were confined to Elmina's
dungeons where conditions were shocking, even by the standards of the time.
"...There were no toilets. There were no bathrooms. In
some cases, they had straws on the floor, which they used as a mattress and so
on," Afful describes.
"In all these dungeons, they were given buckets, which
they were expected to ease themselves."
"But because of the conditions they were in, the chains
they had on their feet made it almost impossible for them to get to this
bucket," he tells CNN.
Captives could spend as long as three months in confinement,
awaiting their journey into a dark, and unknown future.
As Afful explains, negotiations were concluded before slave
ships would carry their human cargo.
But in a market where the seller had little control over how
each slave could be distinguished, the buyers often felt the need to label
their new property, in the most inhumane of ways.
"Now, with the branding, each merchant has its own
method of doing it. Some will use alphabet; some will use numbers on the form
of a metallic stamp," Afful describes.
"They put it in the fire, already they have some oil on
their body (to) prepare them for the journey. So they burn them on the
skin,"
Branded and subjugated, the captives were led aboard
awaiting ships through the Door of No Return.
"... when the ship came, they took them in batches
through the 'Door of No Return,' and they get to the ship, for the journey to
proceed from there," he says.
The 'Door of No Return' still swings, centuries after, a
menacing reminder of the captives' descent into a life of terror and relentless
servitude.
"Initially, this door was bigger. But when the slave
trade began, it was reduced this way. So that one person can come in at a
time," Afful says.
The Door, the dungeons where captives were restrained and
the walls through which these slaves walked all serve as cues of a story that
Africa seems to have confined to the past.
It is an approach that Edmund Abaka, Associate Producer of
History and International Studies at the University of Miami, believes we must
rethink.
"We have to move away from the perception that, 'oh,
history is about the past, history is about people who are dead and
gone,'" Abaka says.
"It is our story. If we don't tell our story, somebody
will tell their story," he adds.
For Bartels, the accounts of Elmina's past revive a
traumatizing story, yet the necessity of hearing these tales is not lost on
him.
"I can hear the wailing of my ancestors here. The souls
that have been lost. ... But it's good to be home," he says.
Today, the town of Elmina is a lively, bustling hub -- but
the castle towers above it, an essential, yet painful reminder of its past.
cnn.com
cnn.com
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