When the slave Esperança Garcia wrote a letter
(2015)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Groundwood Books : Made available through hoopla, 2015
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781554987306 (electronic bk.) MWT11489577, 155498730X (electronic bk.) 11489577
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

In 1770, the slave Esperanȧ Garcia bravely penned a letter to the governor of Piau̕ state, in Brazil, describing how she and her children were being mistreated and requesting permission to return to the farm where the rest of her family was living. Before she wrote her letter, Esperanȧ Garcia lived on a cotton farm run by Jesuit priests, where she learned to read and write - a rare opportunity for a woman, especially a slave. But one day she was separated from her husband and older children and taken with her two little ones to be a cook in the home of Captain Antonio Vieira de Couto, where she and the other slaves were beaten and denied even the freedom to attend church. In despair, Esperanȧ Garcia wrote to the governor about her terrible situation, asking if she and her young children could return to the farm. She waited each day for a reply, never giving up hope. And although she never received an answer, she is remembered today for being the courageous slave who wrote the first letter of appeal in Afro-Brazilian Brazil. Commemorating the date of the letter's discovery, September 6th has become Black Consciousness Day in Piau̕ state. Beautifully illustrated, this moving picture book provides a very personal look at the tragic history of slavery in the Americas

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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