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LataraSpeaksTruth

The Return of the Amistad Survivors

1841 marked a turning point that rarely gets the attention it deserves. After a long legal fight in the United States, 35 surviving Africans from the Amistad case finally prepared to leave American shores. Their story began two years earlier, when they were captured in West Africa, forced onto a Spanish ship, and pulled into the transatlantic trafficking system. But they refused to accept that fate, rising up, taking control of the vessel, and eventually ending up in the U.S., where their case climbed all the way to the Supreme Court. The Court ruled in their favor, declaring that they had been illegally taken and had the right to fight for their freedom. After months of delays and uncertainty, the survivors boarded a ship called the Gentleman in New York and set sail for West Africa. When they arrived in Sierra Leone, they stepped into a home that wasn’t the same as the one they were taken from. The people, the land, and the world around them had shifted. But returning still meant everything. It meant reclaiming their names, their futures, and a life stolen from them. It meant going home on their own terms. This moment remains one of the clearest examples of resistance meeting justice at a time when both were nearly impossible to find. #Amistad #BlackHistory #OnThisDay #LataraSpeaksTruth #LearnThePast

The Return of the Amistad Survivors
LataraSpeaksTruth

The Wanderer… 1858

On November 28, 1858, one of the last known illegal slave ships to reach the United States secretly landed on Jekyll Island, Georgia. The vessel, called the Wanderer, arrived with more than 400 kidnapped men, women, and children from West and Central Africa… all smuggled in defiance of the federal ban on the transatlantic slave trade that had been in place since 1808. The Wanderer was originally built as a luxury yacht, but was converted into a human trafficking vessel financed by wealthy Southern men determined to profit from an illegal trade. Survivors were quickly dispersed across Georgia and the Deep South, sold into forced labor. Only a fraction of the captives lived long after arrival. Though federal officials investigated, no one was punished. The Wanderer became a symbol of how far traffickers were willing to go to protect their wealth… and how little accountability existed for crimes committed against Africans even after the trade was outlawed. #LataraSpeaksTruth #HistoryMatters #AmericanHistory #UntoldStories #JekyllIsland #Wanderer1858 #LearnThePast

The Wanderer… 1858
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