- Kunta Kinte
Kunta Kinte is the central character of the
novel , "" byAlex Haley , and of the television mini-series "Roots", [Citation
last = Bird
first = J.B.
title = ROOTS
url=http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/R/htmlR/roots/roots.htm
accessdate = 2007-11-21] based on the book. "Roots" is referred to by Haley as "faction" - a mixture of both fact and fiction, [Citation
last = Wynn
first = Linda T.
title = ALEX HALEY (1921-1992)
url=http://www.tnstate.edu/library/digital/Haley.htm
accessdate = 2007-11-21] and much of the book's material is borrowed from a book called "The African" byHarold Courlander . Kunta Kinte was a Muslim of the Mandinka tribe. Kunta was captured and brought as a slave toAnnapolis, Maryland , and later sold to a plantation owner inSpotsylvania County, Virginia near the present-day rural community of Partlow.In the miniseries, the young character was portrayed by
LeVar Burton , and the older byJohn Amos .Memorial
There is a memorial to Kunta Kinte in
Annapolis, Maryland . [Citation
last = The Kunta Kinte-Alex Haley Foundation, Inc.
first =
title = The Kunta Kinte-Alex Haley Memorial
url=http://www.kintehaley.org/memorial.html
accessdate = 2007-11-21] It is one of few monuments in the world to bear the name of an actual enslaved African; other examples include statues inBrazil ofZumbi from Palmares Quilombo (a black leader of rebellions against slavery) and the statue ofBussa inBarbados . In a set of four life size bronze statues, the Kunta Kinte memorial depicts Alex Haley, book on his lap, telling his family's story to children of three different ethnicities. Granite decorations and bronze plaques accompany the statue group.In a notorious incident, the original memorial, a bronze plaque, was stolen within forty-eight hours after its installation in
1981 . A card was left in its place which read "You have been patronized by theKu Klux Klan ." The plaque was never recovered and was replaced within two months with funds from local residents.Plot summary
Haley's novel begins with Kunta's birth in the village of Juffure in
The Gambia of West Africa in1750 . Kunta is the first of four sons of the Mandinka warrior Omoro and his wife Binta Kebba. Haley describes Kunta's strict upbringing and the rigors of manhood training he undergoes.One day in
1767 , when the young warrior left his village to find wood to make a drum, he was attacked by four men who surrounded him and took him captive. Kunta awakens to find himself blindfolded, gagged, bound and prisoner of the white men. Haley describes how they humiliate the young warrior by stripping him naked, probing him in everyorifice , and branding him with a hot iron. He and others are put on aslave ship for a nightmarish three month journey to America.Out of 140 Africans, Kunta is one of only 98 who survive the crossing. After arrival in Maryland he is sold to a Virginia plantation owner who renames him "Toby," much to his dismay. During the remainder of his life Kunta never completely gives up his dreams of freedom and trying to escape, even after part of his foot is chopped off. (He was running and the slave catchers caught him and he had a choice to be castrated or lose part of his foot.) He eventually marries another slave named Bell Waller and has a daughter named Kizzy (Keisa, in Mandinka/Mandingo), which in Kunta's native tongue means to "stay put". Unfortunately, when Kizzy is in her late teens, she is sold away to North Carolina when it was discovered that she had written a fake traveling pass for a young slave boy she was in love with (she had been taught to read and write secretly by Missy Anne, niece to the plantation owner). Her new owner rapes her and fathers her only child, George. In the novel, she never learns the fate of her father and mother. She spends the remainder of her life as a field hand on the Lea plantation in North Carolina.But in the movie series she is taken to the plantion and finds out her mother was sold to another plataion and four years later in 1810 her father died of a broken heart but he died speaking his native tounge ,she finds his grave and crosses out his slave name toby and put his real name kunta kinte. The rest of the book tells the story of the generations between Kizzy and Alex Haley, describing their suffering, losses and eventual triumphs in America. [cite web|url=http://www.kintehaley.org/rootskintebio.html|title=Kunta Kinte|work=
Alex Haley Foundation |accessdate=2007-11-11]Influence
There is an annual "Kunta Kinte Heritage Festival" held in Maryland. [cite web|url=http://www.kuntakinte.org/|title=Kunta Kinte Heritage Festival|accessdate=2007-12-12] Kunta Kinte also inspired a
reggae rhythm of the same name, performed by artists includingThe Revolutionaries , [cite web|url=http://www.pressure.co.uk/item/PSS015/|title=The Revolutionaries - Kunta Kinte|work=Pressure Sounds |accessdate=2007-12-12] andMad Professor , and an album, "Kunta Kinte Roots" byRanking Dread . [cite web|url=http://www.roots-archives.com/release/1807|title=Kunta Kinte Roots|work=Roots Archives|accessdate=2007-12-12] There is also a band of the same name. [cite web|url=http://www.the-mag.me.uk/?ArticleId=1986|title=British Sea Power - Live (Kunta Kinte)|work=The Mag|accessdate=2007-12-12] He is mentioned in theKanye West song, "Never Let Me Down. "He is also mentioned in Missy Elliot's 2002 hit 'Work it', the Bloodhound Gang's 2000 song 'A Lap Dance Is So Much Better When The Stripper Is Crying'. Rap artist Akir mentions him several times in the song named 'Kunta Kinte'. An opening scene of "Boyz in the Hood " has one of the characters telling Jason "Furious" Styles's son "Who's he think you is? Kunta Kinte??" after seeing the chores which the son must do. On an episode of the HBO drama "The Wire", Baltimore Police detectiveBunk Moreland deragatorily refers to a seaman as "Kunta Kinte" in an interrogation where the seaman refuses to speak English. In the filmComing to America withEddie Murphy , the main character is teased by the employees (also played by Eddie Murphy) of a hairdressing salon who welcome him as 'Kunta Kinte' as a joke.References
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