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Enthusiastically,
I started reading everything I could find on
slavery and especially the Middle
Passage.
I searched out and wrote down all of the
factual incidents in sequential order,
reading some personal accounts by former
slave-ship captains, slave traders, and
various European historians.
I expected the
descriptions of horror of the slave forts
and inhumane treatment on the journey aboard
the slave ships. But some of the writers'
overbearing opinions, even religious
rationalizations and arguments for the
continuance of the slave trade made me feel,
the more words I read, that I should try to
tell this story with as few words as
possible, if any.
Callous
indifference or outright brutal
characterizations of Africans are embedded
in the language of the Western World. It is
a language so infused with direct and
indirect racism that it would be difficult,
if not impossible, using this language in my
book, to project anything black as positive.
This gave me a
final reason for attempting to tell the
story through art alone. I believe strongly
that with a picture book any African in this
world could pick up and see and feel what
happened to us on those ships."
Tom Feelings |