Times were tough ever since Amanita was
captured. As soon as a Negro was taken they were stripped of their clothes,
shoes, and possessions. Following instructions and walking the pace that the
men told them too was a Negroes way to avoid getting beaten. Amanita and others
was forced to walk all day for several months to get to a large ship crossing
to a new land. The ship was a very cruel place for the Negroes as the waters
were dark; they were chained below deck, and sat in their own feces. Food was
scarce and bathes where not usually given. A lot of Negroes didn't make it
across the ‘big river’ and the uprising by the Negroes made the white men very
angry which lead to consequences. The white men saw the Negroes as property
that they had to deliver to make a profit. The black population was looked
at with only dollar signs hanging over their heads.
Amanita was sold to a planation that
harvests indigo the owner; Appleby abused her for seeing a different man
because he claimed that he owned Amanita. Appleby publicly humiliated her in
front of the other slaves stripped Amanita of her clothes, burned them, and cut
all her hair off. Amanita saw herself as having lost her beauty and womanhood
(179). Slaves were treated cruel and unfair all because white people thought
that the colour of your skin measured how valuable you are.
Amanita's life brightened up a little
after she was sold to Solomon Lindo. Lindo and his wife liked to called their
two slaves as servants because they thought it to be more polite. Amanita and
Dolly were well fed, clothed, and had a good back house for themselves. Amanita
was treated better at the Lindo household but she was still owned and needed to
work for them because she was no equal to white people.
White people thought that this was a
normal way to live treating the black population like they had no freedom and
equality rights did not exist. Slavery is inhumane and should have never been allowed.
A white man did not own Amanita when the Brits control of America began to fall
but still her and the other Negroes were the first to be left with no work,
food, money, or clothes. Even as a free Negro with no owner, life was tough
because Amanita describes that she will never truly be free unless she is at
home in Africa.