Sunday, July 22, 2018

All about the African Safaris that you thought you could not afford


New Post from The Kenya Chronicles:

As many years as I have been teaching African and African American history I have to confess that I did not know until recently that safaris come in all sizes and a variety of packages. These excursions to observe the animals of Africa in their natural environments are not at all exclusively for the rich.

This fact says so much about how the media shapes our perceptions. A few weeks ago, everyone to whom I mentioned that we were going to Kenya asked if we would be going on a safari.  What followed was often a conversation about the exorbitant costs of safaris.

Now I am in Kenya only to find out that thanks to a progressive government policy, there are national parks that everyone from schoolchildren to foreigners can access at an affordable cost. In fact, it is clear that Kenya as a part of their school curriculum regularly expose their young to these parks on field trips.  There seems to have been a longstanding commitment to encouraging young people to be good stewards of this incredible wildlife heritage.

I was happy to find out that one can enter a National Park for about $80 and stay overnight at a campsite from as little as $20.  (For comparison, Disneyland is about $90 a day.) Hotel prices also vary from the low end to the high.

The greatest challenge is the airfare, but these days, good old fashioned competition is driving down prices.  Many airlines fly there including Kenya Airways, Ethiopian Airways, British Airways, KLM, Qatar Airways and others.

So how do we explain the persistent perception that this is an experience primarily for the rich?

The reality is that Kenya became an independent nation in 1963 (having been colonized by the British) and many of these parks were set up only a few short years after.  Lake Nakuru National Park, for example, was set up only 4 years later at the height of independence fervor.

The good news is that the safaris of Kenya are accessible and affordable.  May many from around the world come and discover all they have to offer.

Here’s a peek of what you will see when you come.


Photos at Lake Nakuru by Mickias Bailey, All rights reserved.
mickias.bailey@gmail.com


Anne C. Bailey
Author of The Weeping Time: Memory and the Largest Slave auction in American History.
(Cambridge Univ Press, 2018)




Tuesday, July 17, 2018

The Kenya Chronicles and Travel Channel Appearance July 19

Today marks the beginning of The Kenya Chronicles—intermittent news and articles about the country of Kenya.  I am here on the African continent for three weeks having been invited by a local university to give a talk about the highs and lows of publishing works of history.  I was happy to to interface with their faculty and students and to donate copies of my books to their library.  It’s been a great time!
Beyond the university, I have been on somewhat of an adventure – from one day safaris to roaming around the Old Town of the coastal town of Mombasa.  I have even been to a church service in Swahili!   I am weaving in and out of the hustle and bustle of big city Nairobi while at the same time enjoying the lush countryside – particularly the farms with rows and rows of tea bushes and coffee trees. Kenya is number 2 in terms of exportation of coffee so this really is the place to be if you love coffee and tea.  Taking tea all day is  growing on me. The scent, the taste, the diversity of the tea offerings are nothing short of amazing. A lot of things are impressive here, but perhaps chief of all is the importance of family as we have been warmly embraced by families here as we move from town to country and country to town.
So there is much to say about this incredible country but for today, I share just a few pictures to whet your appetite for the other upcoming segments of The Kenya Chronicles.
Windrush Update
29 June 2018
The Joint Committee on Human Rights of the UK Parliament has  published Windrush generation detention report.
The Home Office provided ‘no credible explanation’ as to why two children of the Windrush generation, Paulette Wilson and Anthony Bryan, were wrongfully locked up twice, depriving them of their human right to liberty, according to a report by the Joint Committee on Human Rights published today.
The Committee, made up of MPs and Peers Chaired by Harriet Harman MP, took evidence in person from Ms Wilson and Mr Bryan, (who have been settled in the UK since childhood) and examined their Home Office cases files. From the outset, the files contained all the evidence that showed that the Home Office had no right to detain them. But the Home Office still wrongly detained them, twice. The analyses of the two case files are set out as appendices to the report.
In evidence to the Committee, the Home Secretary said that he was sorry for what had happened. A senior official from the Home Office called the handling of these cases a ‘mistake’ but could give the Committee no account of any action that had been taken at the department to address the very serious shortcomings in these cases.
For more see link below:
Other articles by the BBC
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-44807801

Travel Channel Appearance this coming Thursday, July 19
I am appearing on another episode of The Travel Channel’s Mysteries at the Museum series this Thursday at 9pm EST.
Should be fun. Check it out if you can.


Thursday, July 5, 2018

People over Profit

Edna Dean Proctor (1829-1923) was a poet originally from Henniker, NH.  She lived in Brooklyn, NY for 30 years but was buried in Framingham where a bridge is named in her honor. Here, she writes about The Weeping Time auction of 1859 –the story I tell in my book of the same name.  Thanks to reader LF for bringing this poem to my attention.  Her poem, “The Slave Sale,” was published in 1866.

The Slave Sale

Who would not be in Savannah to-day?

Out by the Race-course, — there is the Play, —

Tragedies, comedies, all together

Shaking hands in the wild March weather.

There are hundreds of actors, the programmes tell,

And some, at each scene are to say farewell;

Trust me, 't will be a marvellous Play,

For this is Pierce Butler's " Benefit " day.
Mark them. See with what eager eyes

They watch and wait till the curtain rise:

Some from the rice-fields broad and green

That stretch the swamp and the shore between;

And some from St. Simon's Isle, that lies

A league away where the land-breeze dies, —

St. Simon's Isle where the sea-wave flows,

And the fairest and finest cotton grows.

Parents and children, every one,

Have toiled for others since life begun;

But then each man at his cabin door

Could sit in peace when his work was o'er,

And the same roof covered them all, though slaves,

And the same moon rose on their fathers' graves,

And they laughed and sung and hoped to rest

One day in the soil which their young feet prest.
What does it mean that they tremble here,

Waiting the call of the auctioneer?

What does it mean! 'T is a common tale, —

Their master's funds were about to fail;

Mister Pierce Butler has debts to pay,

And this, good friends, is the only way.

Generous souls! For his lordly sake

They ought to be willing their hearts should break.

And rejoice to be anywhere, anyhow sold,

To fill his coffers with needful gold!

For what is the grief of such as these

Compared to a gentleman's moneyed ease?

And then, when the little arrangement's made.

And he feels quite sure 't was a gaining trade,

He 'll give them a dollar! — that will heal

Every sorrow a slave can feel.

Scores for the master and one for his tool, —

Thus he 'll follow the Golden Rule

That reads, " To others I 'll do what I see

Will bring the most money to mine and me. "
Eleven o'clock and the sale begins, —

Now the best man is the man who wins

Hand and brain at the lowest price

For his fields of cotton and cane and rice.

Buyers are there from the far Southwest

To the Georgian isles on the ocean's breast,

And from Florida jungles, gay with vines,

North to the woods of the Carolines;

And higher and higher the bidding goes,

And wilder, without, the March wind blows,

As one and another, faint with fear,

Are led to the block their doom to hear.

There is Elisha with children and wife,

O how anxiously watching the strife!
A mild-faced man in the crowd they spy, —

Can he not, will he not all of them buy?

And he weeps and pleads, but the man denies,

For he sees where a closer bargain lies,

And their courage sinks and their tears come fast;

But what of this? When the sale is past

They 'll have a dollar! and that will heal

Every sorrow a slave can feel.

Scores for the master and one for his tool, —

Thus is followed the Golden Rule

That reads, " To others I 'll do what I see

Will bring the most money to mine and me. "
The wind blew strong and the rain was cold,

And Daphney's babe was but two weeks old,

And to shield them both from the driving storm

A shawl is over her trembling form:

" Off with it! " " What is the matter? " they shout,

And the jest and the oath are passed about

Till she droops and shivers and wonders why

It was not hers and her child's to die.

But what of this? When the sale is done,

And the papers are signed and the profits won,

She 'll have a dollar! and that will heal

Every sorrow a slave can feel.

Scores for the master and one for his tool, —

Thus is followed the Golden Rule

That reads, " To others I 'll do what I see

Will bring the most money to mine and me. "
Jeffrey has neither father nor mother,

But Jeffrey and Dorcas love each other

With a love that never can change or fail,

And he tells his master the simple tale,

And begs him to buy her with earnest tone, —

But Dorcas cannot be sold alone;

He goes to the swamp-lands, drearily parted,

And she to the cotton-fields, broken-hearted!

But what of this? 'T is a trifling thing;

Did they not excellent prices bring?

Give them a dollar! — that will heal

Every sorrow a slave can feel.

Scores for the master and one for his tool, —

Thus is followed the Golden Rule

That reads, " To others I 'll do what I see

Will bring the most money to mine and me. "
Sadly they follow them, one and all,

Till none are left in the farthest stall.

The Play is over; the farewells said;

The curtain dropped and the actors fled;

And the stars shine out, and the breeze goes by,

Sweet with the bloom of the fruit-trees nigh.

A hundred cabins are dark and still,

And the wind and the moonlight may work their will,

For those who sat by the open door

Will never return to their shelter more,

Nor dance on the lawn when day is past,

Nor sleep by their fathers' graves at last.

But this is nothing; their master paid

For all the ruin and wreck he made;

Each had a dollar! and that will heal

Every sorrow a slave can feel.

Scores for the master and one for his tool, —

Thus he followed the Golden Rule

That reads, " To others I 'll do what I see

Will bring the most money to mine and me. "
God of the Weak and the Poor! how long

Shall their cries be drowned in the victor's song,

And body and brain and heart be sold

For the white man's ease and the white man's gold?

Hast Thou not heard them? Dost Thou not say

There shall come, at the last, a grander Play,

When Thy searching eye shall the actors see,

And Love the coin of the realm shall be?

Woe to those who 've but gold that day

When vengeance is Thine, and Thou wilt repay!

https://www.poetrynook.com/poem/slave-sale

Family Separation update…
Many parents at the border are still desperately waiting to be reunited with their children.
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/separated-parents-too-grief-stricken-to-seek-asylum-experts-say_us_5b379974e4b08c3a8f6ad5d9

BAILEYBLOG’s New look coming soon
I hope you will like the new look of Baileyblog which is now attached to my website.  I also hope you will continue to share it with friends. For those new to the blog, please JOIN the Baileyblog community by adding your email to the right.  We are also interested in contributors to the blog so if you have an interest in history and memory, let us know. You can reach us at freedomlives4@yahoo.com  We publish weekly.  As always, your comments are very welcome.
Thanks so much for your support!
Anne Bailey