Meet Ghanaian slave Quobna Ottobah Cugoano who fought to end slavery

Meet Ghanaian slave Quobna Ottobah Cugoano who fought to end slavery

At the age of 13, Quobna Ottobah Cugoano, a native Ghanaian sold into slavery, became notable for saving Henry Demane, an abducted slave from being shipped off to the West Indies in 1786.

Quobna Ottobah Cugoano, braved the odds at 13 and became famous for saving Henry Demane, a captive slave from being shipped off to the West Indies in 1786.

He immediately contacted Granville Sharp, a famed abolitionist who then arranged to have Demane removed from the slave ship minutes prior to its departure.

Cugoano was a prominent member of the Sons of Africa, an African abolitionist group in England.

The Fante boy was born in circa 1757 in Ajumako, in the Central region, Ghana.

Cugoano, 13, was captured and sold into slavery and was subsequently transported to Grenada to work on a plantation.

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In 1772, he was purchased by an English man and went to live in England.

It was at this time Cugoano’s name was changed to John Stuart and he was given the opportunity to learn how to read and write.

He was converted to Christianity and was later baptized.

While working for Richard Cosway and his wife Maria in 1784, Cugoano was able to meet premiere British political figures and cultural personalities.

He also joined the Sons of Africa alongside Olaudah Equiano.

His 1787 book, ''Thoughts and Sentiments on the Evil and Wicked Traffic''' of the Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species, Cugoano highlighted the effects of slavery.

He sent the book to key political persons in Britain but the abolition of slavery remained a notion.

Cugoano stated in his book: ''Is it not strange to think, that they who ought to be considered as the most learned and civilized people in the world, that they should carry on a traffic of the most barbarous cruelty and injustice, and that many think slavery, robbery and murder no crime?

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He also said: ''If any man should buy another man and compel him to his service and slavery without any agreement of that man to serve him, the enslaver is a robber.''

Cugoano explained that, ''It is as much the duty of a man who is robbed in that manner to get out of the hands of his enslaver, as it is for any honest community of men to get out of the hands of rogues and villains.”

In 1791, Cugoano revised his book and geared the new version to members of Sons of Africa.

This edition of the book addressed the British government’s lack of support towards London’s Poor Blacks, a group of freed Africans then residing in London.

He also cited how the Black Loyalists – freed African individuals in Nova Scotia who emigrated from Sierra Leone were not assisted as they needed to be.

Cugoano emphasized the viciousness of slavery and advocated for slave traders to be captured and confined.

Clearly outspoken, he also called William Wilberforce, an English politician, a hypocrite for not taking a stronger stance against slavery.

After 1791, Cugoano’s whereabouts, place and date of death remains unknown.

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Source: YEN.com.gh

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