Olaudah Equiano was born in 1745 in Eboe, in what is now Nigeria.
When he was about eleven, Equiano was kidnapped and sold to slave
traders headed to the West Indies. Though he spent a brief period in the
state of Virginia, much of Equiano's time in slavery was spent serving
the captains of slave ships and British navy vessels. One of his
masters, Henry Pascal, the captain of a British trading vessel, gave
Equiano the name Gustavas Vassa, which he used throughout his life,
though he published his autobiography under his African name. In service
to Captain Pascal and subsequent merchant masters, Equiano traveled
extensively, visiting England, Holland, Scotland, Gibraltar, Nova
Scotia, the Caribbean, Pennsylvania, Georgia, and South Carolina. He was
purchased in 1763 by Robert King, a Quaker merchant from Philadelphia,
for whom he served as a clerk. He also worked on King's trading sloops.
Equiano, who was allowed to engage in his own minor trade exchanges,
was able to save enough money to purchase his freedom in 1766. He
settled in England in 1767, attending school and working as an assistant
to scientist Dr. Charles Irving. Equiano continued to travel, making
several voyages aboard trading vessels to Turkey, Portugal, Italy,
Jamaica, Grenada, and North America. In 1773 he accompanied Irving on a
polar expedition in search of a northeast passage from Europe to Asia.
Equiano published his autobiography, The Interesting Narrative of the
Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African, in 1789 as a
two-volume work. It went through one American and eight British
editions during his lifetime. Following the publication of his
Interesting Narrative, Equiano traveled throughout Great Britain as an
abolitionist and author. He married Susanna Cullen in 1792, with whom he
had two daughters. Equiano died in London in 1797.
Volume I opens with a description of Equiano's native African
culture, including customs associated with clothing, food, and religious
practices. He likens the inhabitants of Eboe to the early Jews, and
offers a theory that dark African skin is a result of exposure to the
hot, tropical climates. In so doing, Equiano hints that Africans may be
the indirect relatives of Christian Europeans through their Jewish
ancestry and argues against slavery as an affront to all humans: "Let
the polished and haughty European recollect that his ancestors were
once, like the Africans, uncivilized, and even barbarous. Did Nature
make them inferior to their sons? and should they too have been made
slaves? Every rational mind answers, No" (p. 43).
Equiano's journey begins when he is kidnapped from his village with
his sister, from whom he is eventually separated. He describes a long
voyage through various African regions, marked by brief tenures as a
slave to "a chieftain, in a very pleasant country" and a wealthy widow
who resides in "a town called Tinmah, in the most beautiful country I
had yet seen in Africa" (pp. 51, 62).
Ultimately, Equiano is sold back to traders who bring him "sometimes by
land, sometimes by water, through different countries and various
nations, till . . . [he] arrive[s] at the sea coast" (p. 69).
Equiano is sold to the owner of a slave ship bound for the West Indies,
and he goes on to describe the "Middle Passage"—"the journey across the
Atlantic Ocean that brought enslaved Africans to North America. His
descriptions of extreme hardships and desperate conditions are
punctuated by his astonishment at new sights and experiences. The
narration occasionally reflects the childish wonder of the young Equiano
at the time of his journey, but it also highlights his culture shock at
his introduction to European culture and European treatment of slaves.
Though he witnesses the sale of slaves in the West Indies, Equiano
himself is not purchased, and he stays with the Dutch ship, traveling
from the West Indies to North America. There he is purchased and put to
work on a Virginia plantation, doing light field work and household
chores. He is not in Virginia long before Michael Henry Pascal, a
lieutenant in the British royal navy and captain of a merchant ship,
purchases him as "a present to some of his friends in England" (p. 94).
During their spring 1757 voyage to England, Pascal renames the
eleven-year-old Equiano Gustavus Vassa, and Equiano forges a friendship
with a white American boy named Robert Baker, which lasts until Baker's
death two years later. After the ship's arrival in England, Equiano is
exposed to Christianity. When he asks questions about his first
encounter with snow, he is told it is made by "a great man in the
heavens, called God." He attends church, and receives instruction from
his new friend, Robert (p. 105).
Equiano describes the various battles and ship transfers that take
place after his return to sea with Pascal. He also expresses his growing
ease with the European culture he initially found so strange and
frightening: "I ceased to feel those apprehensions and alarms which had
taken such strong possession of me when I first came among the
Europeans" (p. 111).
Indeed I agree with your findings Lelethu,because if Equiano was brought up in America then clearly he would not account for the fright he had towards the English. His encounter with them would have been natural.
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