Sacred Burial Site of Our African Ancestors

Sacred Burial Site of Our African Ancestors Jan. 1st - Imani meaning Faith - 7th principle of the Nguzo Saba. - Lowcountry Kwanzaa honors our Af

Who's ready for the 27th annual Charleston Middle Passage Remembrance ? Open Heart and Mind ✅White Clothes ✅Drums ✅ Shek...
06/03/2024

Who's ready for the 27th annual Charleston Middle Passage Remembrance ?

Open Heart and Mind ✅
White Clothes ✅
Drums ✅ Shekeres ✅ Bells ✅ Voices✅
Flowers ✅
Your list of Ancestors names ✅

See you 9am June 8th!

https://chsasalh.com/2024/05/26/27th-annual-charleston-middle-passage-remembrance-commemoration-june-8-2024-fort-moultrie-sullivans-island-sc/

UPDATE!! BRING A CHAIR!!

Also expect traffic ..5K run starts 8 am .. plan accordingly!!

Who's ready for the 27th annual Charleston Middle Passage Remembrance ?

Open Heart and Mind ✅
White Clothes ✅
Drums ✅ Shekeres ✅ Bells ✅ Voices✅
Flowers ✅
Your list of Ancestors names ✅

See you 9am June 8th!

https://chsasalh.com/2024/05/26/27th-annual-charleston-middle-passage-remembrance-commemoration-june-8-2024-fort-moultrie-sullivans-island-sc/

01/01/2024

1pm join us!! Observance of IMANI ..

In a wooded area at the corner of Maybank Highway and Folly Road lies a cemetery plot within the McLeod Plantation Histo...
05/23/2023

In a wooded area at the corner of Maybank Highway and Folly Road lies a cemetery plot within the McLeod Plantation Historic Site. Locally, it’s known as the Sankofa Memorial Garden.

A Charleston County agency is reaching out to descendants of those buried there and residents familiar with the site to compile written and oral histories.

“We’d like to start getting the word out to African American churches on James Island and solicit interest from family descendants so we can get feedback from them,” said Adam Ronan, the land resource planner for Charleston County Park and Recreation Commission (CCPRC).

CCPRC, which owns the 37-acre McLeod Plantation Historic Site, recently completed a study of the burial ground to determine its boundaries and the number of burial sites. An additional acre of burial sites owned by the City of Charleston was included in the study.

“We felt like we needed to be good stewards,” Ronan said.

The commission originally speculated there were about 60 to 70 unmarked graves based on previous surveying. Field work located about 400 unmarked graves in the Sankofa Memorial Garden by mid-July and determined the size of the site was larger than anticipated. The commission will gather and interpret written and oral histories of the site throughout fall and winter 2022-2023, Ronan said.

The McLeod Plantation Historic Site is a former sea island cotton plantation and current Gullah-Geechee heritage site. It opened in 2015 as a public county park and historic site. Sankofa Memorial Garden dates back to the mid-late 1700s, according to historical records, with its last recorded burial in 1965.

CCPRC’s site-specific study was completed after the commission organized a cemetery management preservation plan in August 2021 to guide a larger study of nine burial sites located within its 11,000 acre park system, Ronan said.

For the McLeod site study, the commission assembled an advisory group that includes family descendants, community members, the Charleston County Parks Foundation, the Historic Charleston Foundation and staff from the City of Charleston. The commission also hired cultural resource management firm New South to complete the overarching cemetery management preservation plan and carry out field work for the McLeod project.

If you are a descendant or know details about the cemetery at McLeod, you are asked to contact Matthew Rosebrock at [email protected], Toby Smith at [email protected] or phone (843) 762-9508.

A Charleston County agency is compiling written and oral histories from descendants and residents near the cemetery at McLeod Plantation.

June 10th, 2023 https://facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=6138702736236679&id=100002910413514&sfnsn=mo&mibextid=RUbZ1f
05/16/2023

June 10th, 2023 https://facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=6138702736236679&id=100002910413514&sfnsn=mo&mibextid=RUbZ1f

Charleston Branch of the Association for the Study of African American Life and

History (ASALH) REMEMBRANCE COMMITTEE
Honoring our ancestors who perished during the “Middle Passage”
Saturday, June 10, 2023 • 9:00am – 1:00pm
Fort Moultrie at Sullivan’s Island, South Carolina

“All those Africans in the briny deep. All those people who said ‘no’ and jumped ship. All those people who tried to figure a way to steer, to navigate amongst the sharks. We don’t call upon that power... upon those spirits. We don’t celebrate those ancestors. We don’t have a marker, an expression, a song that we use to acknowledge them. We have nothing to indicate that those are our people and they mattered ... we don’t tap into the ancestral presence in the waters.” ––Toni Cade Bambara (1987)
“Spirit of the Dead, rise up and claim your story” ––From the film Sankofa (1993)

On Saturday, June 10, 2023, The Charleston Branch ASALH Remembrance Committee will host the 26th Annual Remembrance Program on Sullivan’s Island, SC from 9:00am – 1:00pm.

The annual commemoration, held the second Saturday of every June, provides an opportunity for members of African Diaspora communities to collectively remember the countless Africans -- men, women, and
children -- who were kidnapped, sold, shipped and died along the route from Africa to the Americas.

We believe that by remembering, we honor and restore the humanity of those nameless, faceless Africans. We continue the process of healing from the fear, pain, guilt and shame of the experience that continues to traumatize the African descended community today. After all, If we don’t remember them, who will?!

We also honor and commemorate those who survived the Transatlantic trafficking of African people and we stand upon their strength, courage and determination to overcome obstacles of enormous magnitude.

The program begins promptly at 9:15am in the Fort Moultrie Auditorium with greetings from The Charleston Remembrance Committee. Dr Felice Knight, History Professor at the Citadel, will speak on “Remembrance as Resistance.”

The program includes a drum procession to the Beach and back to the “Bench by the Road” for remarks by community members.

At 12:00pm EST, the Libation Ceremony conducted by Yoruba Priestess OsunWonuola EfunLayo, will be held simultaneously in conjunction with various locations, including: Brooklyn, NY; Washington, DC; Georgetown, SC; Hampton, VA; New Orleans, LA; Houston, TX; Los Angeles, San Francisco and Oakland, CA; Montgomery, AL; Miami, FL; Detroit, MI. Tributes are also held internationally in locations in West Africa, The Caribbean and South and Central America.

The program and gathering is free and open to the public; all who wish to attend are welcome.

Attendees are encouraged to bring fresh flowers as an offering and to be dressed in white.

For those unable to attend a scheduled Remembrance/Tribute to the Ancestors program, we encourage you to gather with friends and family and reflect upon the occasion.

For additional information, visit Charleston Middle Passage Remembrance on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and Youtube.
https://www.youtube.com/

The Charleston Remembrance Program is a member of the International Coalition to Commemorate the African Ancestors of the Middle Passage (ICCAAMP). For ICCAAMP info: www.remembertheancestors.com

On Tuesday, June 27, the International African American Museum will officially open its doors to the public.We’re honore...
02/28/2023

On Tuesday, June 27, the International African American Museum will officially open its doors to the public.

We’re honored to welcome you to Charleston to celebrate the richness of our ancestors' stories.

In the words of President and CEO Dr. Tonya M. Matthews, we aim “not only to provide a space for all visitors to celebrate and connect to this history, to these stories, and to this art, but also to find meaning within their own stories.”

For more information on how you can make your reservation to visit IAAM, check out the link in bio. https://iaamuseum.org/faq/

01/01/2023

Sunday, New year, celebrating with the ancestors. Modupe O!!!!

Join our Charleston partners for The 160th Emancipation Celebration on January 1, 2023 on Gadsdenboro Park, 303 Concord ...
12/27/2022

Join our Charleston partners for The 160th Emancipation Celebration on January 1, 2023 on Gadsdenboro Park, 303 Concord Street, from 2:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.

This celebration marks the 160th signing of the Emancipation Proclamation, marking the beginning of the end of slavery in the United States!

This year’s Emancipation Proclamation Parade, sponsored by the Emancipation Proclamation Association, will begin at 2:00 p.m. at Burke High School, through Downtown Charleston, ending at Gadsdenboro Park, with music, food vendors, and jubilee!

Come see us at our Adinkra Stamping Workshops and take part in a live cooking demonstration by Gullah Chef BJ Dennis!

This event is free and open to the public

  To learn more about the AFRICA RECONNECT Series visit DHF.ORG.THE DJIMON HOUNSOU FOUNDATION IS HELPING BLACK PEOPLE DI...
10/20/2022



To learn more about the AFRICA RECONNECT Series visit DHF.ORG.

THE DJIMON HOUNSOU FOUNDATION IS HELPING BLACK PEOPLE DISCOVER FAMILY ROOTS LOST DURING SLAVERY

17th October 2022 by BOTWC Staff

He’s looking to educate and reconnect!

The West-African actor is launching a new initiative to keep African-Americans connected to their roots, Yahoo News reports.

Djimon Hounsou is best known for his work in films like Blood Diamond and Guardians of the Galaxy. His home country, Benin, West Africa, is where you can find the infamous Gate of No Return located on the Atlantic shores. This monumental arch is a UNESCO World Heritage site that marks the place where 1.2 Million Africans were shipped into slavery.

In an interview with The Washington Post, Hounsou reflected on when he played in the 1997 Steven Speilberg film Amistad, claiming to have learned more about the history of African people during that time and the extent the slave trade had on people losing their ancestral roots. On December 2, 2019, the actor launched his own foundation, the Djimon Hounsou Foundation, which is also International Day for the Abolition of Slavery. The organization is intended to keep African-Americans in touch with their roots through building a pan-africanist network, sponsoring cultural trips to Africa, and fighting against human trafficking and modern-day slavery. The foundation hosts an annual 16.19 marathon that has taken place in Virginia, Liverpool, England, and Ouidah, Benin. The most recent one in September was called Run Richmond 16.19. “Our vision for Run Richmond 16.19 is to commemorate the sacrifices and achieve­ments our African-Americans brothers & sisters have made to our nation and celebrate Unity in Diversity through symbolic courses of 16.19 km and 6.19 mi,” Hounsou explained. All of these locations are the host cities for the Reconciliation Triangle; when connected through straight lines, the trio of sculptures replicate the Triangle of the Transatlantic Slave Trade and the Triangle of Hope.

The Dijmon Hounsou Foundation’s latest initiative in the AFRICA RECONNECT Series, which aims to “symbolically reverse the direction of the slave trade and celebrate homecoming,” is accompanying the running events with a two-day festival to celebrate African culture and identity. Through this event, they plan to achieve a cultural movement to preserve Africa’s intergenerational identity and reconnect the countries of the diaspora with their motherland, help people discover their own family roots, and celebrate pluralism, freedom and equality in an attempt to heal the wounds that slavery caused. The events will be made up of locals to commemorate 400 years of the transatlantic slave trade.

Hounsou hopes this “will bring a certain journey of experiencing 400 years of Black history you can touch and feel.”

Hounsou has had a journey of his own. Moving to France at 13 to pursue his studies, fashion designer Thierry Mugler discovered him and started his career as a model in Paris and London when things got too difficult for him. Soon after, Hounsou transitioned into acting and now his acting is calling him to help the people that look like him! To learn more about the AFRICA RECONNECT Series visit DHF.ORG.

THE PLEDGE
I WILL HONOR
the sacrifices of my ancestors.

I WILL BELIEVE
in me.

I WILL PURSUE
my dreams.

I WILL HELP
others along the way.

BECAUSE OF THEM WE CAN
ABOUT
PRESS
PARTNER WITH US
TERMS
PRIVACY
SUBMIT A STORY

©copyright 2022

https://www.becauseofthemwecan.com/blogs/news/djimon-hounsou

He’s looking to educate and reconnect! The West-African actor is launching a new initiative to keep African-Americans connected to their roots, Yahoo News reports. Djimon Hounsou is best known for his work in films like Blood Diamond and Guardians of the Galaxy. His home country, Benin, West Afric...

05/08/2022

CONGRATULATIONS on your 12th anniversary.

The Slave Dwelling Project Endeavors to Retell American History by Spotlighting Spaces Where Enslaved People Lived. For the past 12 years, Joseph McGill, Jr. has been reframing American history using former slave quarters.

"Now that I have the attention of the public by sleeping in extant slave dwellings, it is time to wake up and deliver the message that the people who lived in these structures were not a footnote in American history."

– Joseph McGill, Founder of the slavedwellingproject.org

2022 Slave Dwelling Project Conference: The Stono Rebellion and the Atlantic World

The 2022 Slave Dwelling Project Conference will take place September 8-10, 2022, at the College of Charleston in Charleston, SC. Concurrent with The Stono Legacy Project, a month-long commemoration of the 1739 Stono Rebellion. Details coming soon!

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lessons are invaluable.
I got to document & during their live fire cooking session.

very tender lamb!

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Maybank And Folly
Charleston, SC
29412

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