The African Diaspora in the Indian Ocean World- Schomburg


 

Bilal al-Habashi. Bilal, of Ethiopian origin, was among the Prophet Muhammad’s earliest converts. He became the first muezzin of Islam, the man who calls to prayer from the mosque minaret.
Spencer Collection, Stephen A. Schwarzman Building, The New York Public Library.

 

Over the course of nearly 20 centuries, millions of East Africans crossed the Indian Ocean and its several seas and adjoining bodies of water in their journey to distant lands, from Arabia and Iraq to India and Sri Lanka.

 

Called Kaffir, Siddi, Habshi, or Zanji, these men, women and children from Sudan in the north to Mozambique in the south Africanized the Indian Ocean world and helped shape the societies they entered and made their own.

 

Free or enslaved, soldiers, servants, sailors, merchants, mystics, musicians, commanders, nurses, or founders of dynasties, they contributed their cultures, talents, skills and labor to their new world, as millions of their descendants continue to do. Yet, their heroic odyssey remains little known.

 

The African Diaspora in the Indian Ocean World traces a truly unique and fascinating story of struggles and achievements across a variety of societies, cultures, religions, languages and times.

 

 

Full link: http://exhibitions.nypl.org/africansindianocean/

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