The Star Malaysia - Star2

It’s like a pilgrimage

Ghana is a big draw for African-American tourists with ‘Year of Return’.

-

ROXANNE Caleb, a preacher from the United States, blinked away the tears as she emerged from a pitchdark dungeon where African slaves were once held before being shipped across the Atlantic to America.

“I wasn’t prepared for this. I’m heartbroke­n,” she said as she toured the Cape Coast slave fort on Ghana’s ocean shore.

“My mind still can’t wrap around the fact that a human being can treat another worse than a rat.”

Caleb is among the Africaname­rican visitors flocking to Ghana as it marks the “Year of Return” to remember the 400th anniversar­y of the first slave ship landing in Virginia.

The West African nation is banking on the commemorat­ions to give a major boost to the number of tourist arrivals as it encourages the descendant­s of slaves to “come home”.

Cape Coast Castle, 150km (90 miles) from the capital Accra, is a major magnet for those visiting.

The white-washed fort lined with cannons was one of dozens of prisons studding the Atlantic coast where slaves were held before their journey to the New World.

A string of prominent Africaname­ricans have headed to the site this year to mark the anniversar­y since the first slave landing in 1619.

Among them was a delegation of Congressio­nal Black Caucus led by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi that toured last month.

For those visiting it is an emotional rite of passage.

“This has been understand­ing my history and my roots where I came from,” said Caleb.

“I am very thankful I came here as part of the Year of Return.”

Sampson Nii Addy, a correction­s officer with the Montgomery police department in Alabama, said he and his family had found the tour an “education”.

“I think every black person needs to come around to learn history; how people were treated,” said the 52-year-old.

“We can’t forget history but we can always learn something from it.”

Ghana, one of the continent’s most stable democracie­s, has long pitched itself as a destinatio­n for African-americans to explore their heritage and even settle permanentl­y.

In 2009 President Barack Obama visited with his family and paid homage at the Cape Coast Castle.

The “Year of Return” has added fresh impetus and the country is hoping it will increase visitor numbers from 350,000 in 2018 to 500,000 this year, including 45,000 African-americans.

Kojo Keelson has spent nine years guiding tour groups around the Cape Coast Castle and says 2019 has seen a surge in interest as Ghana looks to rake in tourism revenue of Us$925mil (Rm3.8bil).

“It’s like a pilgrimage. This year we’ve a lot more Africaname­ricans coming through than the previous year,” he said.

“I’m urging all of them to come home and experience and reconnect to the motherland.”

Akwasi Awua Ababio, the official coordinati­ng “Year of Return” events, pointed to high hotel occupancy rates as he said “enthusiasm is very high and we’ve got huge numbers coming from the US and Caribbean”.

He insisted that beyond the major economic boost, Ghana was also looking to use the new connection­s it is forging to convince the descendant­s of slaves to resettle for good and help the country develop.

“Human resource is always an asset and we need to see how we can welcome them home to utilise their expertise and networks,” said the director for diaspora affairs at the presidency.

The African American Associatio­n of Ghana brings together those who have moved to West Africa and offers help to integrate them into their new surroundin­gs.

President Gail Nikoi praised the “Year of Return” initiative by Ghanaian leader Nana Akufo-addo and said the country was “setting the stage for future engagement­s and involvemen­t of Africaname­ricans and other Africans from the diaspora in the developmen­t of this country.”

But she said the authoritie­s could still be doing more to help attract arrivals and convince them to stay.

“Dialogue and engagement is the first step,” she said.

While most of those visiting Cape Coast were not thinking about settling back permanentl­y – they said the trip had opened their eyes to both their own history and what Ghana has to offer.

“It has broadened my horizons about how we came to be here and what our ancestors went through,” said William Shaw, 57, from Montgomery.

“I would love to come again. There is a lot more to see here in Ghana ... at least once in a year I’d advise African-americans to come back to their native land and learn about their history.”

 ??  ?? Visitors gather at Cape Coast Castle, outside the ‘door of No return’, through which enslaved africans were loaded as cargo onto the ships that took them across the atlantic to the americas. — Photos: AFP
Visitors gather at Cape Coast Castle, outside the ‘door of No return’, through which enslaved africans were loaded as cargo onto the ships that took them across the atlantic to the americas. — Photos: AFP
 ??  ?? a tourist takes a pictures of the dungeons at the Cape Coast Castle.
a tourist takes a pictures of the dungeons at the Cape Coast Castle.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia