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A couple of years ago....
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I bought the ROOTS dvd series. Never got to watch it at the time. We started watching it over the weekend. I cannot believe the inhumanity to the black people. Still got two episodes to go. Mrs MM had tears in her eyes when Kizzy was sold.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I have to admit I've never seen it MM - but I thoroughly recommend the book Black Like Me by John Howard Griffin who conducted his own 'social experiment' in the late fifties in the US. Basically he took medication which turned his skin black and learned what it was like to live as a black man during those times. What he found was truly shocking.
I watched it when serialised on TV, too. And just over the weekend I heard Kwame Kwei Amah (forgive any misspelling!) interviewed over the radio. He said he'd watched it aged about twelve and was very affected by the young lad Kunte Kinte being teased about 'really' being called Toby. Toby of course being his 'slave name', given to him by his 'owners'.
Kwame told his mother there and then that he'd change to an African name once he was older.
He didn't do it lightly, because he was aware that for a child to change almost the first thing given by a mother - a name - is a very emotional thing which might hurt his mother. Thus, the young Ian Roberts became Kwame Kwei Amah. He descrbed this most movingly.
Kwame told his mother there and then that he'd change to an African name once he was older.
He didn't do it lightly, because he was aware that for a child to change almost the first thing given by a mother - a name - is a very emotional thing which might hurt his mother. Thus, the young Ian Roberts became Kwame Kwei Amah. He descrbed this most movingly.