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Perhaps this is old news. My apology if so. 
When will Britain take a lead from France?-----------------------------------------------------------
 

http://www.france24.com/en/20150510-france-slavery-hollande-caribbean-museum-guadeloupe

 

French President
François Hollande inaugurated a museum and memorial site to honour the memory
of slaves and their struggles in the French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe on
Sunday.

Hollande, who is
on a tour of the Antillean islands that includes a scheduled trip to Cuba, paid homage to slaves and their sacrifices at the
memorial, which is the first of its kind by France to remember those who
suffered during the slave trade.

"The way I
see it, this monument will allow Guadeloupe, but also the entire Caribbean with
a deep link to Africa as many African leaders will be here, to tell the whole
world that the fight for human dignity is not over,” Hollande said on a trip to
the French Caribbean island of Martinique on Saturday.

“We have to
remember what happened, remember history of course, but also we must find hope,
and we must fight on," he said, to explain the significance of Sunday’s
inauguration.

Called
the Memorial ACTe, the site is described as “a Caribbean centre on the
expression and memory of slavery and the slave trade” and is housed in a former
sugar factory in the Guadeloupian city of Pointe-à-Pitre.

The museum holds hundreds of objects dating
back several centuries that bear witness to France’s turbulent history -- that
included slavery from the 17th to 19th centuries -- when black people were sold
to work on the islands’ sprawling sugar plantations.

Thierry Létang, an anthropologist, showed
whips and shackles in the museum to a film crew. “This type of lock is very
French. They were worn around the feet,” he said, holding the heavy rusted
shackles against his feet.

The
museum explains the history of slavery and the slave trade using archived
documents, images, artefacts, everyday objects plus visual and audio
testimonials, the museum’s website noted.

“We don't have museums or memorial sites
that allow us to understand this part of French history and especially places
that allow people to gather without courting controversy. But this memorial
site allows us to do so,” said Patrick Lozès, president and founder member of
the Council Representing the Associations of the Black People of France.

France abolished slavery in 1848 but only
recognised slavery as a crime against humanity since 2001.

 

The cost of the Memorial ACTe project,
however, has come under scrutiny. The 85 million euros spent on the
memorial could have been better used elsewhere, critics say, in a region where
60 percent of young people are unemployed.

Hollande’s
visit to the site has also put the spotlight on reparation claims made by
descendants of slaves in Guadeloupe.

 

In 2013, Hollande acknowledged the
country's "debt" to Africa because of slave trade and the
"baneful role played by France." But he also said that this history
"cannot be the subject of a transaction", AP reported.

The memorial, which hopes to welcome
300,000 people annually, is scheduled to open to the public in July.

May 10, 2015

 

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)