Slave Voices
STORY PREFACE
Photograph of William Still, a conductor of the underground railroad. Image online, courtesy ushistoryimages.com website.
Elie Wiesel, Holocaust survivor and Nobel Prize winner, has dedicated his career to one objective: making sure no one forgets what happened to his people during Hitler’s Third Reich. To that end, thousands of survivors have had their stories electronically recorded. We are able to see their anguished faces, and hear their breaking voices, as they describe their personal tragedies. But what of that other long-persecuted people - Africans - who were uprooted from their homes, transported to unknown lands and made to serve the needs of foreigners? Where are their stories? Thanks to people like William Still, slave narratives have been preserved in books and sketches. And thanks to the Library of Congress and the U.S. National Archives, some of their stories have been digitized and are available on-line. Here, then, are slave voices speaking (and singing) to us from the past.
Original Release Date: June, 2002 To cite this story, using MLA Guidelines: Bos, Carole D. "Slave Voices" AwesomeStories.com. Date of access IN OTHER WORDS: Author. Title of story. Name of web site. Date of access <URL>.
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Table of Contents
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Biographies
History
- American Colonies
- American Revolution - Highlights
- Assassination of Abraham Lincoln
- Assassination of John F. Kennedy
- Auschwitz: Place of Horrors
- Book Burning and Censorship
Disasters
- America Attacked: 9/11
- Black Death
- Challenger Disaster
- Columbia Space Shuttle Explosion
- Deepwater Horizon: Disaster in the Gulf
- Fatal Voyage: The Titanic
Philosophy
- Bagger Vance and and the Bhagavad Gita
- Bonhoeffer: Martyr of Faith
- C.S. Lewis
- Dead Sea Scrolls
- Easter Story
- Freedom of Religion




















