Bimbia: One of Cameroon’s Slave Forts, a National Heritage Site, up for Sale?

Ruins of the slave fort in Bimbia

On January 13, 2025, the people of Limbe stood together against the alleged ceding of the historic slave trade site to a private company GilGal Tours for 50 year lease!!! Can you imagine that? It’s like the government is once again trying to erase the history of this place. One day, Cameroonians will wake up and find out that their government has sold the entire country away! How can one even fathom selling a national historic site? This site waseven been added to the UNESCO tentative list of World Heritage lists in 2020. How can one even wrap their minds around the ceding of Bimbia to a private company, after so many descendants of slaves taken from its shores have just started to reconcile with their history? After the whole country has reconnected with their history? A few years back, a friend visiting the site was told by her guide that a business man had come to level the place down, and had been stopped just in time; now this? Sure, Limbe, and the country as a whole needs development. Cameroon is full of beautiful places and tourist sites that are not being valued. It is no doubt that the site would benefit from the development in Limbe or simply the road to Bimbia which will open access to the area, and increase touristic benefits. The entire area should be honored !

Ruins of the slave prison in Bimbia, Cameroon

Below are excerpts of an interview of Pr. Lisa Aubrey by Dunia Magazine. For the full article, check out the website. Please, also find this interview of Pr. Lisa Aubrey and Bwemba Bong. Furthermore, please check out the story of William D. Holland, the descendant of a prosperous prince of the Kingdom of Oku in the Grassfields area of Cameroon, who was sold into slavery because the king feared to be overthrown by him. Lastly, check out the Bimbia Heritage Project.

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Names like Gorée (Senegal), Bunce Island (Sierra Leone), Elmina (Ghana) and Ouidah (Benin) are all synonymous to the Transatlantic Slave Trade, and have gained an iconic place in history as locations from whence millions of Africans (up to 15 million it is believed) were transported to Europe and the Americas to be sold as slaves. How about the island of Bimbia? Have you ever heard of her?

Dr. Lisa Aubrey is an associate professor of African American Studies and Political Science at Arizona State University. She is also a Fulbright scholar (2014-15) based at the University of Yaounde I.

Ruins at the Bimbia slave fort, in Cameroon

Since 2010, Dr Aubrey has been conducting research on Bimbia, a supposedly forgotten or not so often talked about slave trade port she refers to as “The Apertura”, located in the South West region of the central African nation of Cameroon. It is the site at which African ethnicities in Cameroon were forcibly and cruelly whisked away from their homeland, or killed,” says Dr Aubrey in a recent special edition of Villages D’Afrique magazine. She goes on to note that the Transatlantic Slave Trade on the coast of Cameroon took place between the mid-17th to late 19th century. Dr Aubrey’s research team (between September 2010 and July 2014) were able to locate and validate some 166 slave ship voyages that left Cameroon bound mostly for plantations in the Americas, sometimes via neighboring Equatorial Guinea. Bimbia is opening the door for broader research,” says the Louisiana, USA native.

Agriculture in the Kongo Kingdom in the 16th Century

“Quand l’Africain était l’or noir de l’Europe” de Bwemba Bong

I came across another gem in the book of Professor Bwemba Bong, “Quand l’Africain était l’or noir de l’Europe. L’Afrique: Actrice ou Victime de la Traite des Noirs? – Démontage des mensonges et de la falsification de l’histoire de l’hydre des razzias négrières transatlantiques” (When the African was the black gold of Europe. Africa: Actress or Victim of the Slave Trade ? – Dismantling the lies and falsification of the hydra history of the transatlantic Slave Raids).” After the textile industry, this time, it is about the fertility of the Kongo soil, its agriculture, and the different cultures in the 16th century. In the text, it is good to note the ancient grains used in Central Africa at the time: a grain called luco (could it be the finger millet?) from which a white flour similar to wheat, corn (introduced by Portuguese in Kongo, and which had no real value except to feed pigs, just like rice), nuts like palm nuts (from the description of its usage, one can see the beginning of the multi-million dollar palm oil industry), kola nuts, date nuts, and banana tree. As we read, we note the use of some of those grains to feed but also to heal. I wonder if some these native grains are still used today?

Champs Africains
African fields

In his book, Pr. Bong shows that traditional African agriculture was good, and fed correctly its populations from rich and fertile plateaus, until the arrival of the Europeans who collapsed their agriculture so as to turn the economy entirely toward the trade of humans which was the only commodity of interest to them. This led to cycles of famine on a continent full of arable lands and strong agricultural knowledge. The cycle has not changed today on the African continent, with the cash crops cultures destined for consumption in the West and now East, once again leaving streaks of famine on its wake; thus the constant news about famine in Africa in countries rich with arable lands, but which are cultivating say, coffee or cocoa or others for western consumption.

Filippo Pigafetta et Duarte Lopes, Le royaume de Congo et les contrees environnantes (1591), Chandeigne/Unesco, 2002, p. 133-136 (trad. Willy Bal, présentation et notes Willy Bal); Bwemba Bong, Quand l’Africain était l’or noir de l’Europe. L’Afrique: Actrice ou Victime de la Traite des Noirs?, MedouNeter 2022, p. 175-177 (translated to English by Dr. Y, Afrolegends.com). Enjoy!

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The entire plateau is fertile and cultivated. It has grassy meadows and the trees are always green. It produces grains of various kinds; the main and best one is called luco. It resembles mustard see, although a little larger. It is crushed with hand mills; a while flour comes out from which we make a white bread, healthy, pleasant to the taste and which is in no way inferior to wheat bread, except that with it we celebrate mass. Such grains are found in abundance throughout the kingdom of Congo where they have been growing for a short time; the seed comes from the banks of the Nile, in the region where this river fills the second lake.

There is also white millet called mazza di Congo, that is to say “Congo grain,” and corn, which is the least esteemed and which is fed to pigs; rice doesn’t have much value either. Corn is called mazza Manputo, that is to say “grain of Portugal,” Portugal in fact bearing the name Manputo. [could this be another origin of the name Maputo in Mozambique?].

Régime de banane plantain
A plantain bunch

There are also various species of trees which produce an enormous amount of fruits, to the point that most inhabitants feed on the fruits of the country, such as citrons, limes, and particularly oranges, which are very tasty, neither sweet nor bitter and which do not in any way inconvenience those who eat them. Mister Duarte recounted (to show the fertility of the country) that he had seen a citron seed, preserved in the pulp and in the citron itself, germinate in four days.

Other fruits are those called banana. We think that they are musa from Egypt and Syria, with the difference that in Congo the banana tree reaches the size of a tree; it is pruned every year so as to produce better. The banana is a very fragrant and very nourishing fruit.

Different species of palm trees also grow on these plateaus : one of them is the date palm, the other is the one which bears Indian nuts called coccos, because inside there is a head that resembles a monkey. Hence the custom in Spain of shouting “coccola” to frighten children.

Tapper harvesting palm wine
Tapper harvesting palm wine

There is another species of palm tree, similar to the previous ones and from which oil, wine, vinegar, fruits and bread are obtained. The oil is made from fruit pulp; its color and consistency are those of butter, although it is more greenish; it has the same uses as olive oil and butter; it bursts into flames; it can be used to anoint the body; it is excellent for cooking; we get it from the fruit, as we get oil from olives; we cook it to preserve it. Bread is made with the stone of the fruit, which resembles an almond, although harder; inside, we find a marrow that is good to eat, healthy, nourishing. All this fruit is green, including the pulp and is eaten raw and roasted. Wine is obtained by perforating the top of the tree : a liquor oozes out, similar to milk ; sweet the first days, it becomes sour and over time turns into vinegar, which is used in salad. But the wine is drunk chilled, it is diuretic, to the point that in this country no one offers from grit or stones in the bladder; it intoxicates the one who drinks it in excess; it is very nourishing.

Kola nut
Kola nut

Other trees produce fruits called kola, the size of a pine cone and inside of which are other chestnut-shaped fruits, themselves containing four separate pulps, red and crimson in color. These fruits are kept in the mouth, chewed and eaten to quench thirst and add flavor to the water; they preserve and restore the stomach and are especially effective in liver ailments. Lopes said that a liver of a chicken or other bird, already in putrefaction, sprinkled with the juice of these fruits, became fresh again and almost resumed its previous state. Everyone uses this food commonly, in very large quantities; also it is a good commodity.

We find other wild species of palm trees which bear various edible fruits and whose leaves are used to make mats, to cover houses, to weave baskets, baskets and other objects of the same kind, which we need each day.

Other trees are called ogheghe, the fruits they bear resemble yellow plums, they are excellent to eat and fragrant. We cut branches from these trees, they are planted so closely that they touch each other; they take root and, growing and growing, form palisades and walls around the houses. By then laying mats, we create a fence, a courtyard and these kinds of trellises also serve to provide shade and protect from the heat of the sun.

The Textile Industry in Kongo in the 16th Century

“Quand l’Africain était l’or noir de l’Europe” de Bwemba Bong

I came across a gem in the book of Professor Bwemba Bong, “Quand l’Africain était l’or noir de l’Europe. L’Afrique: Actrice ou Victime de la Traite des Noirs? – Démontage des mensonges et de la falsification de l’histoire de l’hydre des razzias négrières transatlantiques” (When the African was the black gold of Europe. Africa: Actress or Victim of the Slave Trade ? – Dismantling the lies and falsification of the hydra history of the transatlantic Slave Raids).” This text talks about the advanced textile industry in the Kingdom of Kongo in the 16th century. We had previously discussed the History of African Fabrics and Textiles and the falsification of history by Western media who are always trying to pretend that African textile industry started with the Dutch company Vlisco! We had also shared a description by Italian explorer Alvise Cadamosto, of clothing worn by Africans in the 15th century (Description of African Dressing in 1400s).

Nzingha's Kingdom
The Kingdom of Kongo with Queen Nzingha’s Kingdom in the south and east

In the 16th century, the Portuguese Filippo Pigafetta et Duarte Lopez wrote about the Kingdom of Kongo describing the economic situation of precolonial Africa, and reported that Africa had nothing to envy to Europe. Some of the fabrics described then, resemble fabrics weaved today by the Kuba people of the Democratic Republic of Congo, who use raffia and make some of the most beautiful hand-woven blankets, clothing, and sculptures. In the text, Lopez described not only the quality of the fabric, but the entire industry needed to create this type of fabric: the kind of tree used, the way the tree was pruned, and the value of the fabric. Another important point is that everyone was dressed within his/her means… thus the idea that Africans were walking naked, as we have previously seen, is another falsification of history!

Filippo Pigafetta et Duarte Lopes, Le royaume de Congo et les contrees environnantes (1591), Chandeigne/Unesco, 2002, p.112-113 (trad. Willy Bal, présentation et notes Willy Bal); Bwemba Bong, Quand l’Africain était l’or noir de l’Europe. L’Afrique: Actrice ou Victime de la Traite des Noirs?, MedouNeter 2022, p.180 (translated to English by Dr. Y, Afrolegends.com). Enjoy!

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Women’s ceremonial overskirt from the 20th century, made by the Bushongo people. Image courtesy of The Textile Museum and The George Washington University Museum.

“And since we are here, I must decry the extraordinary art with which the inhabitants of this country and neighboring regions weave various kinds of fabrics, such as velvets with pile and without pile, brocades, satins, taffetas, damask, armoisins and other similar fabrics, which are certainly not made of silk, since we do not know the silkworm; if some people dress in silk, it is silk imported from our regions. But these fabrics that we have just listed are taken from the leaf of the palm tree; it is therefore necessary to keep the trees low, and to do this, prune and prune them each year, so that in the new season the leaves will grow more tender.

Le palmier de raphia
le palmier de raphia/ Raffia palm tree

After having treated these leaves in their own way, they draw threads from them, all equally fine and delicate; the longer the thread, the more it is valued because it allows larger pieces to be weaved. In different ways, they make fabrics with pile, resembling velvets, on each side, and sheets called damask with decorative patterns and varied textures, as well as brocades that are called high and those that are called low, which are worth more than our brocade. Only the king and those whom he deems good to do this favor can wear this fabric. The largest pieces are of brocade: they reach four or five palms in length, and three or four in width. The brocade is called incorimbas (named after the region where it is made, which is located around the Vumba river [in northern Congo]). Velvets have the same width: they are called enzacas, damasks are called infutas, satins are called maricas, taffetas are tangas and Anziques are the largest pieces which reach six palms in length and five in width. It is out of these fabrics that we commonly dress, each according to their means. Furthermore, they are light and very robust in water. The Portuguese began to use them as tent canvases: they wonderfully resist to water and wind.”