It takes about a week to settle into a new country – as I’ve mentioned there’s the currency and the culture, the roads, the distances and of course the camping. Tanzania spaces out her treasures; parks are at least a day’s drive apart. A full day driving here, say seven hours, is exhausting. Every few kilometers the speed drops and 2-lane-wide vicious speed humps announce the entrance to a village. Or maybe just a few food stalls, it does not matter. Tanzania loves its speed humps. Between the humps and the road conditions we average less than 50 clicks an hour (that’s 30 miles an hour, in case you don’t have Goggle open). And then there’s the police stops. Jim is amazing – he has apologized his way out of three (deserved) violations already. Our new routine is to move one day, stay in place two days. And so we have found ourselves on an Indian Ocean beach at the southern edge of Dar es Saleem, the capital city of Tanzania. I never imagined us here. But off the coast is Zanzibar Island – let’s go there.
Zanzibar does not deny its history of slavery and its slave market. There is an excellent tour and interpertive center; we went down into the dungeons where the captives were kept prior to the auctions. A more miserable place cannot be imagined. Sea water would come up with the tide to wash the sewage away, it could come up too high and drown the captives. Would a man be considered lucky to have made it this far on the deadly journey from the interior to the coast? Or would death on the road be preferable? Where would the will to live come from in this hell? It is so far from normal and yet was so normal at the time – and slavery continues, just in different formats these days. Zanzibar does not spare the details. An Anglican Church is built upon the former auction and whipping block. Guides give a just appraisal of the history – and if you were to come here to be informed and saddened, the tour goes on every day, all day.
The sobering experience of the slave market museum contrasts with Zanzibar Island, one of the most hospitable of places we’ve every been. Everyone is delightfully friendly and few are out to hustle you. We walked through dark and narrow alleys at night, lost on the way back to our hotel, and people would stop and ask, can we help you? Not your average dark-alley-late-night experience. Stone Town has the lazy island feel mixed with Indian and Arab architecture and along with the sordid history of slavery, they have preserved the birth place of Freddy Mercury – the Queen front man. All this makes for a culturally soaked four day visit and we got some good snorkeling in as well. The stunning blues of the Indian Ocean, the beaches of powered sugar sand, the fresh fish and dark coffee, the tour of the community spice plantation – it was a wonderful vacation from our “vacation”. And on we go.
ShareSome day you will return to Washington, DC, and visit the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture. Viewing the exhibits on the history of slavery is an incredibly moving experience.
So is the Zanzibar Beach the one you referred to in your post card? I LOVE getting the cards… even if I’m jealous of the beach experience. Miss you two a lot, so it’s great to “hear” your voice through your blog.
Love you!
Yes, the beaches of both the island of Zanzibar and the mainland at Dar es Saleem were delightful – the sand was so soft and the water so warm. Think of you guys often! Love you –
Zanzibar !!!! Wow. Culturally packed. I would just loVe to hear more about the undersea world where you snorkels. Where there any shells? How was the coral life? Was the bottom alive.were there many fish ??
Sorry…..just so curious.
Jims smooth talking is an excellent skill. So glad you haven’t meet with any bad drama!
Happy trails.
Lots of fish to be seen, Cat. The usual suspects and the coral was ok, not great. The area gets alot of use so you can imagine the condition. Plus it is in a small area. But the water was lovely, nice and clear and warm. Remarkable sand, too, powdered sugar soft. No beach glass anywhere, and few shells but you could find shells in the markets – not necessarily a good thing.
Wow!!! pretty amazing ~ The History of this slave trade is beyond comprehension.
Over here in ‘murikkka the monuments to slavery are camouflaged by statues of Confederate Generals. In Canada, the monuments to Cultural Genocide are masked with names of streets, bldgs, schools and yes the Art via sculptures and monuments named after the chief Genocider John Macdonald, an alcoholic racist, 1st Premier of Canada ~ ‘Savages’ he considered the native people. He had thousands of children taken from their homes and forced to be ‘Whitey’ .
I would and do appreciate these tributes to horrible carnage and subjugation be torn down, renamed (as Slavery agents) or at the least removed from public display entirely. Some private museum might take them and cloak them. But whatever, tributes to Slavery and honoring its benefactors (Confederate Civil War heroes/Plantation owners etc) should be taken down or at the least removed to private locations where Zero public monies are used to display such.
This would include all those “Founding Fathers” being outed as Slave holders There is some identification on/of guys like George Washington being major slave users. The original score in the constitution listed slaves as worth 3/5 of a human and taxed as such.
Tearing down these vestiges of slavery has reached a searing debate here which you may have heard about. I would prefer the knowledge of these inhuman acts be in text books but not in public tributes using public funds.
The Slave history of Zanzibar is of a ‘different nature’ and should be retained, and the history made crystal clear what happened and by whom.
I wonder if the historical data in the tours names the People and business corporations who traded in Slavery?
Anyways it must be the irony of ironies, the beauty of your surroundings and the tales of its past.
Thank you Colleen and Jim for sharing these adventures. i gotta wonder why not just park the adventure in Zanzibar for weeks ?
Love,
Will
Hi William,
I know. . . it was both moving and disgusting to read of the horrors. The museum had a brilliant interpretive display. The photos were exceptionally interesting, captives rescued at sea – little but skin and bones. But no, the lists of the many many people who profited from slavery, including westerners, is never going to be published. Much like the many people who profit from war I suppose. I remember reading about Canada taking the quintuplets from their parents because the government thought no one could raise that many children. Humans are a piece of work, that’s for sure.
I couldn’t stay on Zanzibar for weeks, island life is too laid back. Good for a break though. Getting ready to post more travels so stay tuned.
7 Comments