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In this remarkable work,
Terry Alford tells the story of Abd al Rahman Ibrahima, a Muslim slave who, in
1807, was recognized by an Irish ship's surgeon as the son of an African king
who had saved his life many years earlier. "The Prince," as he had become known
to local Natchez, Mississippi residents, had been captured in war when he was 26
years old, sold to slave traders, and shipped to America. Slave though he was,
Ibrahima was an educated, aristocratic man, and he was made overseer of the
large cotton and tobacco plantation of his master, who refused to sell him to
the doctor for any price. After years of petitioning by Dr. Cox and others,
Ibrahima finally gained freedom in 1828 through the intercession of U.S.
Secretary of State Henry Clay. Sixty-six years old, Ibrahima sailed for Africa
the following year, with his wife, and died there of fever just five months
after his arrival.
The year 2007 marks the thirtieth anniversary of the publication of Prince Among
Slaves, the only full account of Ibrahima's life, pieced together from
first-person accounts and historical documents gathered on three continents. It
is not only a remarkable story, but also the story of a remarkable man, who
endured the humiliation of slavery without ever losing his dignity or his hope
for freedom. This thirtieth anniversary edition, which will be released to
coincide with a major documentary being aired on Ibrahima's life, has been
updated to include material discovered since the original printing, a fuller
presentation and appreciation of other African Muslims in American slavery-Ibrahima's
contemporaries-and a review of new and important literature and developments in
the field.
** About the Author: Terry
Alford, Professor of History, Northern Virginia Community College
"Alford writes
with a straightforward simplicity that nonetheless takes account of all sorts of
complexities, including racial attitudes in this country at that time, and class
attitudes as well>" - The New Yorker
"Absorbing
reading....The succession of events surrounding [the prince's] enslavement and
emancipation almost defy belief." - Library Journal
* ISBN: 9780195320459
* Publisher: Oxford University Press (August 2007)
* Format: Paperback, 352 pages
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