President Barack Obama has spent the afternoon touring a Senegalese island where Africans were shipped across the Atlantic into slavery and he called the visit a 'very powerful moment.
Obama
says visiting Goree Island Thursday with his family helps them fully
appreciate the magnitude of the slave trade. They toured the museum at
the Maison des Esclaves where slaves were gathered before going through
the 'Door of No Return' and being forced onto ships bound for North
America.
Obama
also said that, as an African American and an African-American
president, the trip gaves him even greater motivation to stand up for
human rights around the world, and the visit came just hours after he
clashed with his Senegalese hosts over gay rights.
He said the island is a reminder of what happens when civil rights are not protected.
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President
Obama said that the visit to the former slave trade hub was important
to him as an African American and an African American President tasked
with protecting human rights
The Obamas visited Goree Island's Door of No Return where the slaves would embark on their journeys across the Atlantic Ocean
President
Obama was accompanied to Goree Island by his wife Michelle, their
eldest daughter Malia, Michelle's mother Marian Robinson and their niece
Leslie
Obama peered out at the crashing waves through the island's 'Door of No Return,' at first by himself
Mrs
Obama joined him at the poignant doorway, and he said that the visit
helped remind them of the importance of protecting civil rights
President Obama has a sombre moment at the Door of No Return
Though
the Maison des Esclaves has become a popular tourist destination, it
was one of the more minor slave shipping ports in Senegal
Sources of news jestina-george.
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