With a spear in his right hand and a shield in his left, bending slightly forward, and his shoulders raised, the Negro of Banyoles was half-naked with just a raffia decoration and a coarse orange loincloth, an African warrior displayed at a European museum as a wild animal.
In 1831, Jules Verreaux, a French dealer, traveled to South Africa, where he witnessed the burial of a Tswana warrior in the African interior. Later that night, Verreaux returned to the grave and dug up the body.
He stole the corpse’s skin, skull, and a few bones.
With a metal wire as a spine and wooden boards as shoulder blades, the French dealer put together the stolen body parts and shipped them to Paris, France, along with a batch of wild animals,
Upon his arrival in Paris in 1831, Verreaux placed the warrior’s body in a showroom at No. 3, Rue Saint Fiacre.
At the time, Verreaux was widely praised for his bravery “amid natives who are as wild as they are Black,” and the African warrior
attracted more attention than the giraffes, hyenas, and ostriches on display at the showroom.
In the 20th century, the African warrior, now referred to as “El Negro,” was moved to Banyoles Museum in Spain, where his revealing loincloth was replaced with a more modest orange skirt and his skin treated with a layer of shoe polish to make him appear blacker than he was.
As years went by, the presence of El Negro in Europe brought to the fore serious questions about the darkest aspects of Europe’s colonial past and people increasingly became aware of the fact that his body and grave had been violated
In 1992, in the run-up to the Olympic Games in Barcelona, Dr. Alphonse Arcelin, a Spanish doctor of Haitian origin, wrote to El Pais suggesting that El Negro should be removed from the museum.
In his letter, Dr. Arcelin argued that the continued stay of the African warrior in Banyoles would rub visiting athletes the wrong way. But the Catalan people rejected the request, arguing that El Negro was a national “treasure.”
After protracted negotiations with the Organization of African Unity, Spain finally agreed to repatriate the African warrior back to Botswana for a ceremonial burial.
In October 2000, El Negro’s remains were buried in Gaborone, Botswana’s capital, in a ceremony attended by at least 10,000 people.
“We are prepared to forgive, but we must not forget the crimes of the past, so that we don’t repeat them,” the then-Minister for Foreign Affairs in Botswana Mompati Merafhe told mourners assembled at the funeral.
An autopsy done in 1995 revealed that the Tswana warrior was about 27 years old when he died; he probably died of pneumonia.
Necessity is of the mother of invention. When you are in trouble, that is when your creative powers are high. You would do things that would leave you in stitches when you later come to think of them.
Former Kenyan Prime Minister, Raila Odinga, is perhaps the right person who understands this better. He was once forced to dress like a woman to avoid being arrested by Moi' s government.
Meet The Man Who Killed Many People Than Adolf Hitler
#Africa_Archives#Thread
Whenever we hear about wicked people in history, we often think about Adolf Hitler, Saddam Hussein, Idi Amin and the rest.
But there is this man who was wicked than Adolf Hitler but he is not well known. Meet King Leopold II. He was born on April 9, 1835. He was a devil in human form and the most racist in human history. He succeeded his father to the Belgian throne in 1865 and
reigned for 44 years until his death. He was the founder and owner of the Congo free state " independent state of the Congo, it was a large state in Central Africa from 1885 to 1908
Amin Dada turned into recognized for his smile, however navy dictator Idi Amin Dada dominated Uganda with an iron fist for 8 lengthy years. Those who celebrated the general' s army coup that overthrew President Milton Obote in 1971 had no
concept how violent and tyrannical the subsequent decade might be. By the quit of his rule, Amin had ordered the killings of an expected 300, 000 human beings (a few estimates peg the variety as excessive as 500, 000) out of a populace of 12 million.
How The American Government Assassinated A Very Great African Leader #Threader
Patrice Emery Lumumba was the first Congolese Prime Minister to lead the Congolese independence struggle and was assassinated by the CIA.
He was born in 1925 in a Congolese village in the province of Kasai in the Belgian colony of Congo. Lumumba attended a local mission school and after graduation worked as a clerk at the colonial tax office and later in the postal service, where he served as assistant postmaster.
In the 1950s, Lumumba began writing and promoting, writing articles for anti- colonial publications on behalf of the Congolese anti- colonial movement, and in 1956 his book Congo, " My Country" , explored Congolese problems and conveyed people' s...
2 years ago archaeologists discovered an incredibly rare undiscovered burial with a 4,000-year-old coffin with an incompletely untouched mummy inside.
The coffin was covered in hieroglyphic markings immediately giving the archaeologists vital information about who the mummy was
They discovered that the person inside was a male called Shemay, they described him as a high priest member of the Elite Family who founded the cities of that region of Kemet.
The markings also identified his father as Kemay powerful governor of the region of Upper Kemet.
And his mother was Satethotep, daughter of the founder of that region of Upper Kemet, Sarenput I. A man who was known as the right arm of the pharaoh of Kemet during that period, Senusret I. All this happens more than a millennia before the so-called invasion of the
#Thread 1. Amina the Queen of Zaria Nigeria
Amina Mohamud was a Hausa warrior queen of the city-state Zazzau, presently in the North-West region of Nigeria.
Her leadership skills were discovered early by her grandfather who allowed her to attend state meetings. Historians described her as one of the real rulers born in the mid-sixteenth century. Born into a royal family, she chose to embrace her military skills and became one of the
greatest warriors in her kingdom. Through her wisdom and smart tactics, she increased Zazzau's borders and made the city a centre of trade in the West African and Saharan region. The beauty was also the brains behind Hausaland's fortified walls.