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Andrew Hawkins, 37, a youth worker from Liskeard, Cornwall, offered his apologies during an ethnic festival in the former West African British colony of The Gambia, as a gesture of reconciliation between Europeans and Africans. He was forgiven by Isatou Njie Saidy, Vice-President of the country, which remains a Commonwealth member and is now a popular tourist destination.
Sir John Hawkins was an Elizabethan privateer and cousin of Sir Francis Drake. He was the first to kidnap the native African population and sell them in Europe or America. He was knighted for his part in helping to defeat the Spanish Armada.
His descendant travelled to Africa under the auspices of the Lifeline Expedition, a Christian charity based in southeast London set up in 2000 to foster contacts between countries on the Greenwich Meridian. Seeking forgiveness for the slave trade has become one of its major aims, alongside attempts to set up Christian schools in post-communist Eastern Europe.
Mr Hawkins and a group of 20 friends locked themselves in chains of the type used to imprison slaves. At the festival they knelt down in front of a large crowd from across Africa and asked to be forgiven for past sins.
“There was a huge procession of people representing cultural groups from around Africa,” Mr Hawkins said on his return to England yesterday. “We came in last and the atmosphere changed as we walked up. We knelt down and everything went very quiet.
“We made our apology in French, English and German. I apologised on behalf of my family. I apologised for the adults and children taken. There was a long pause and we didn’t really know what to expect. They could have said: ‘We don’t accept your apology. Go away.’ ”
But the Vice-President was in a forgiving mood. “She came forward and accepted the apology very graciously. She offered her forgiveness and then came forward and took the chains off. That was entirely impromptu and very moving,” Mr Hawkins said. “It was one of the most memorable things I have ever done. You see just how deep the wounds left by the slave trade really are. As someone with family links to the slave traders, it was a very difficult thing to see the consequences of their actions.”
During their visit to The Gambia, Mr Hawkins and his party again wore chains and staged a “reconciliation walk” through the rural village of Juffureh. The local elders were not impressed by the gesture, Mr Hawkins admitted, although their attitude softened after talks with the vistors.
“I think they wanted to see an emotional connection from us, and to see that we had gone there in humility,” Mr Hawkins said. “All I could say was that we have got to do more listening and learning.”
He believes that not enough is taught about Britain’s participation in the slave trade and its effect on Africa. Next year he and colleagues plan to walk from London to Liverpool, Bristol and Plymouth, all major slaving ports, to mark the bicentenary of Britain’s abolition of the slave trade in 1807.
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One of the great benefits of the 20th C is an appreciation of history. A pity some have missed out on the latter.
Every student learns that you cannot judge those of the past by the standards of the present - using hindsight is the easiest and cheapest of tricks.
Hawkins (and many others) met what was seen at the time as a need, by taking the slaves from the West coast of Africa to America, where they were sold (to the Spanish, and later, Americans). Did they capture the slaves themselves?
For the most part, no. The taking and use of slaves was an African cultural artefact, practised as part of normal warfare between the various tribes. The winner took away with him as many of the losing tribe as he could manage, and those he could not use were sold to slavers.
And later, when the supply of slaves on the West coast dried up, where then did they originate? From further inland (even the East coast), taken to the West in caravans operated by Arabs - but that is another nest..
Grodon, Mel,
I am also a decendant of John Hawkyns. It is a very painful truth. My heart goes to Andrew and I appreciate his effort. Personally, I haven't been able to share this with others yet. My mother's family were proud to be decended from such a famous figure but I don't think they knew what he did to earn that fame.
Thanks for the story.
Kathy, Kalamazoo, Michigan, USA