It's easier not to think about it really
One of the big draws for me on this adventure was to better understand the origins of the Trans- Atlantic Slave Trade. Barry was well on board with this historical "Journey of Discovery" so we planned on visiting both Elmina and Cape Coast Castles which were more aptly referred to as "warehouses" for slaves bound for the West Indies and America mostly. Ahhh the new world!!!


Here are some numbers: while records are hard to find and verify it's generally agreed that 12 million slaves left Africa on ships built for that purpose. Now that does seem like a lot given the population of Africa at the time and various other realities.
BUT - this went on for over 300 years. In our modern era of zip zip this and that - we can barely conceive of something continuing for that amount of time. The Portuguese did it for 100 years and then the Dutch another 200 after that....so 12 million is a possibility.

So those are some of the numbers but let me say - that when you see it, smell it, feel it -- it makes the numbers meaningless compared to the moments of clarity when you connect with the absolute suffering inflicted on these people.
A thousand slaves were kept at Cape Coast at any given time for up to 3 months. Standing room only. Most horrifying were the consequences of those who dared challenges the guards or refused to be raped.They were simply put in a room (shown here on the left) with out food, water, light or ventilation. They died quickly and then were simply pushed into the sea beyond.
It was in imagining this and standing in the very space that I was overwhelmed. They didn't die all at once of course - so you sat amongst the dead waiting and hoping to expire sooner rather than later all the while wondering what you did to deserve such a horrible fate.

In the picture on the right with yours truly is the famous "door of no return". The slaves were funneled down long dark and narrow corridors to this door where they boarded a ship to either die at sea, at the merciless hands of their new owners or the diseases of the new world for which they were completely unprepared.
It's a terrible chapter in human history, perhaps the worst given both the sheer numbers and the complete absence of humanity in our treatment of one another. We should never forget what we are capable of....

Thnaks for reading...... Layno!!!