#YearOfReturn: Pikworo Slave camp in Paga Nania

Source; Mark Boldkid Kubuga

The Pikworo Slave camp was established in 1704 and is situated in Paga Nania, around 3 kilometers west of Paga in the Upper East Region of Ghana. It was initially created as a slave travel focus where slaves were sold and later exchanged in the Salaga Slave market.

The Pikworo Slave Camp in Paga was made as a holding place for slaves brought down from the north until they had to proceed with their trek 150 km south to the slave market at Salaga and afterward on to the coast for shipment.

Narrative:

The site highlighted the trees where the slaves we shackled, where they ate from bowls dove into the stones, and where they were engaged by drumming on what seemed like empty rocks. It likewise highlighted the slave burial ground and discipline rock. It was discouraging to envision what went on there. It was allowing.

History has it that Slaves who attempted to escape were put stripped on that rock in the sun without nourishment or water as a discipline.

Pikworo filled in as a slave assortment station by Ghanaian dealers who offered captives to the French, the English, and the Dutch. A normal of 200 slaves were at Pikworo at some random time. These slaves would be housed until the time had come to ship them toward the Southern Coast for the Trans-Atlantic deal. The voyage could take a few months by walking with no footwear, with slaves being practically bare while going through various climate conditions while the slave aces rode on ponies.

The camp itself leaves little proof of its history from the start however guided by a proficient eye, the past can turn out to be all the more clear. There are looks at fully open field sees, however, look anyplace and your view makes certain to be hindered by a stone arrangement, or a rock that looks just as it has stopped mid-tumble. On a group of rocks, there is a cut in perhaps the biggest stone where the slave aces used to draw water. Around it, there is a sort of field of artificial scoops in the stone. These scoops are bowls removed by slaves who attempted to get away and were pursued down.

For more insight of this history, Visit the Paga Slave Camp. @ Pikworo Slave Camp, Paga, Upper East Region

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