preview

Olaudah Equiano Lessons

Good Essays

quality of a person (Truth 562). The lessons learned by Truth through her narrative continue to promote an end to discrimination, which was her ultimate goal. Sojourner Truth gave her reasoning and encouragement for her protest by saying, “It is hard for the old slaveholding spirit to die.” This not only applies to her specifically, but it also speaks volumes for all other slaves and why they chose to keep fighting (Truth 562). Truth fought hard with discrimination, but she learned to combine antislavery with feminist causes to promote equality throughout humanity in her speech at the Akron Women’s Rights Convention in 1851. Women’s rights and race issues both universally expressed that the persecution of any person or group of people was …show more content…

Equiano’s depictions of the harshness of slavery are very vivid and realistic, and the following ghastly scene from his time on the slave trade ship corroborates these ideas: “This wretched situation was again aggravated by the galling of the chains, now become insupportable, and the filth of the necessary tubs, into which the children often fell, and were almost suffocated. The shrieks of the women, and the groans of the dying, rendered the whole scene a horror almost inconceivable” (Equiano 161). Equiano wrote that he was pleased with his life before his was introduced to slavery. The merciless and inhumane ways the Europeans treated slaves consternated him ("Olaudah Equiano Publishes His Memoirs: 1789"). Equiano puts emphasis on the cruelty of slavery and everything it entitles: “Equiano’s description of his African childhood, his abduction, and his voyage in the Middle Passage is a rare and celebrated firsthand narrative of the life in an African village prior to European colonization, as well as an eyewitness account of the horrors of the slave trade” (Equiano, Olaudah). Equiano contributes to the emotional effectiveness of the narrative through becoming a slave and how he was treated. Equiano never explained the coincidence that …show more content…

His two masters were a goldsmith and a widow who saw Olaudah as a comrade for her son. Many readers find it disturbing that Olaudah was only ten years old when he was first kidnapped and forced into slavery (Anderson). Along with these components of his narrative, education and his ability to read provided Equiano beneficially: “His literacy and his maritime training protected him from the harshest forms of servitude, however, and by petty trading and hard saving, Equiano raised enough cash to buy his own freedom, which he did on July

Get Access