Door of No Return #1068
$ 10.00
Caption from poster__
where native Africans viewed their homeland before being
transported to the New World as slaves. An estimated 20
million Africans passed through the port of Goree Island
in the mid-1500s and the mid-1800’s. Goree Island was a
slave-holding warehouse, a veritable center for the trade
of African men, women and children. Millions of West
African were taken away against their will.
“As man sows, so shall he
reap. In works of fiction,
such men are sometimes
converted. More often, in
real life, they do not
change their natures until
they are converted into dust.”
Charles W Chestnutt
1858 - 1932
"I am not ashamed of
my grandparents for
having been slaves.
I am only ashamed of
myself for having at
one time been ashamed."
Ralph Ellison
1914 -1994
The date remembers Goree Island. This land mass played an important part in the early days of African-American history. Goree Island is a small 45-acre island located off the coast of Senegal. Goree Island was developed as a center of the expanding European slave trade.
The first record of slave trading there dates back to 1536 and was conducted by Portuguese, the first Europeans to set foot on the Island in 1444. The house of slaves was built in 1776. Built by the Dutch, it is the last slave house still standing in Goree and now serves as a museum. The island is considered as a memorial to the Black Diaspora.
An estimated 20 million Africans passed through the Island between the mid-1500s and the mid-1800s. During the African slave trade, Goree Island was a slave-holding warehouse, an absolute center for the trade in African men, women and children. Millions of West Africans were taken against their will. These Africans were brought to Goree Island, sold into slavery, and held in the holding warehouse on the island until they were shipped across the Atlantic Ocean. They were sold in South America, the Caribbean, and North America to create a new world. The living conditions of the slaves were atrocious on Goree Island.
Human beings were chained and shackled. As many as 30 men would sit in an 8-square-foot cell with only a small slit of window facing outward. Once a day, they were fed and allowed to attend to their needs, but still the house was overrun with disease. They were naked, except for a piece of cloth around their waists. They were put in a long narrow cell used for them to lie on the floor, one against the other. The children were separated from their mothers. Their mothers were across the courtyard, likely unable to hear their children cry. The rebellious Africans were locked up in an oppressive, small cubicle under the stairs; while seawater was sipped through the holes to step up dehydration
Above their heads, in the dealer's apartments, balls and festivities were going on. But even more poignant and heart wrenching than the cells and the chains was the small "door of no return" through which every man, woman and child walked to the slave boat, catching a last glimpse of their homeland.
When the French abolished slavery in 1848, 6000 persons, 5000 of them former captives were living on the island. Designated by the United Nations Educational, Scientific Cultural Organization (UNESCO) to be a World Heritage Site, Goree Island in the 21st century retains and preserves all the traces of its terrible past. The main Slaves' House built in 1777 remains in tact with cells and shackles, the Historical Museum, the Maritime Museum, residential homes and forts are all standing too. The Island today has about 1000 residents.