Just the name evokes thoughts of an exotic magical land of
unknown whereabouts. You have heard the
name before but aren’t quite sure where it’s located. Is it an island in the south pacific? Or a city in India? Maybe a town in Morocco? Zanzibar is an island off the east coast of
Tanzania in East Africa. Combined with
Tanganyika in 1964 to create Tanzania, Zanzibar Island is part of an ancient
Arab and Portuguese trading route. Known
worldwide for spices and slaves; it was the location of the last legal slave
market in the world and continues to be a producer of cloves, cinnamon and
vanilla bean.
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I arrived on what felt like the hottest most humid day of
the year. The heat and humidity were
oppressive and I climbed into a van that had been sitting in the sun with all
the windows closed and had an A/C that felt like a very light, hot West Texas
breeze. That was the longest, hottest
60 to 70 minute ride of my life and to make it worse we were stopped three
times by police at permanent road check stations. Each time we were inspected by a very tall,
very dark black man dressed in an all-white polyester uniform. He carefully inspected all the different
registration stickers on the car, looked in all the windows and then talked
briefly to the driver before waving us on.
It was intimidating; if I were driving in a car by myself I would have
been so nervous he would have assumed I was guilty of something. Finally we turned onto what felt like a
washed out river bed that led to a large metal gate, it was opened for us and
we drove into a high porte-cochere with white plaster pillars and a very steep
and tall thatch roof. It opened to a
lobby of the same style; welcome to the Ras Nungwi Beach Hotel located on the
northern tip of Zanzibar Island. The
property is located on a white sugar sand beach laden with palm trees and fancy
“grass huts” with thatched roofs, air-conditioning and lots of teak and
mahogany furniture inside.
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Roof over the slave cave |
Not far from Nungwi are the slave caves. They are places where slaves were hidden
during the illegal slave trade times between 1876 and 1907. It was very emotional to see the “holding
tanks” carved straight down into the ancient solid coral reef that makes up
this island. They were covered with
concrete roofs and had very steep steps down into the two level caves. There were very small openings toward the top
but not sufficient to allow any air flow.
The heat was stifling with just two people standing down there. I can’t imagine how stuffy, hot, sweaty, and
stinky it would be with 50 or 60 people crammed in. We then walked the trail used to scurry the
slaves to the beach where boats were waiting in the dark of night. The beach was so serene and beautiful that it
was hard to imagine the evil that took place here. I can’t begin to imagine the terror one would
feel having been stolen from your home and family, stuffed into a cave,
smuggled from the cave to a waiting ship, chained into the cargo hold where you
vomited and defecated in place and then, if you survived the journey, you were
auctioned off to a stranger for a life of hard labor. How does one human do this to another?
On the way back to Stone Town we took a spice tour. It’s a tour of a government owned farm with
many different spices and fruits that are commercially grown by local farmers. We saw clove trees, black pepper vines, a
lipstick tree, chili peppers, a cotton tree, mango trees, banana trees, vanilla
vines and jack fruit trees. It was
fascinating to see the tree or vine that grows the spices we buy in jars at the
grocery store.
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Stone Town, officially known as Zanzibar City, is exactly
what you imagine; an old town with narrow stone streets that snake in and out
without logic that are lined by two and three story stone buildings on each
side. You will find old palaces and
homes of the sultans who ruled Zanzibar before the British arrived, one of the
largest is a museum you can tour; The House of Wonders. Near the center of the old town is an ornate
Anglican Church that is located on the exact site where the last legal slave
market in the world used to be. The
market was closed in 1873 and the church, construction started later that year,
was specifically built on this site to help heal the evil of slavery. Two of the slave storage chambers were kept
as a reminder of how terrible conditions were.
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There was a large and small chamber, each only about three feet in
height. The large chamber held 75 slaves
and the small chamber held 50 but they were terribly small spaces. No slave could have stood; they would have
had to sit with knees drawn up. There
was a trench down the middle that was used as a toilet and the ocean would wash
it out at high tide. Interspersed in the
old Arab town are many colonial style buildings built when the British arrived
in the late 1800’s. Some evenings you
will find a huge open market along the coast.
It is packed with people, both locals and tourists. There are many individual stalls cooking and
selling different types of food each with a small table and chairs so the
patrons can sit and eat. I saw a lot of
seafood (shrimp, lobsters, and fish) plus chicken and mystery meat. We joked about the mystery meat being
cat. I did not try any of the food that
night and I wish I would have, there were a lot of things that were clearly
cooked well and would have been safe to try.
I also took no photos and I am not sure why.
Today Zanzibar is known for the export of fine raffia and
seaweed but the tourist dollars are its main industry. The newer parts of Zanzibar City are similar
to every other third world city and not worth a visit but I recommend a visit
to the beach, Stone Town and the forest area to the south where the colobus
monkeys live. If you go see the monkeys please send me photos, I was not able to get to that part of the island....yet.
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