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Plumes engagées
Slavery No More
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Plumes engagées
Slavery No More
Dr Anitah Aujayeb.
À l’heure du tout à l’image et du buzz sans suite, «l’express» souhaite faire découvrir la plume de poètes, de chanteurs, d’écrivains et de tous ceux qui jettent leur âme sur le papier, et qui mettent en mots des réflexions profondes.
February first, year eighteen thirty five
Governor William Nicolay solemnly advertised;
all slaves; men, women and children
had to be immediately taken
by their Masters as apprentices.
Thus slaves kept providing their services,
To buy back their freedom
In servitude years went on.
That difficult period over,
Some became dockers at the only harbour,
boatmen, fishermen, all skilled manual labour.
Liberated Africans from holds of ships
filled villages, freed from further trips.
As they settled along regions of the coast,
of painful land farming they could boast.
They were free men by law
physically not harassed any more
but deep down their hearts
they carried years and years of their past
with pains and wounds filled
as for food, the soil they tilled.
To let free the black slaves,
to white ‘Colons’, huge sums were paid
not one cent aside was laid but
for the slave, whose bad luck
even in freedom continued;
no money, no reward, no gratitude.

Bio
Dr Anitah Aujayeb
A long-standing educator, now teaching at tertiary level, she has authored several books in all genres of literature, novels, stories, travelogues, poems and history. This poem is from her book entitled “Mauritius in Rhythms”.
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