“AMISTAD”
AMISTAD is a true story of the Spanish slave ship, La Amistad, whose “cargo” broke their chains in 1839 traveling towards the northwest coast of America. Much of the story involves the courtroom drama about the slave who led the revolt, Joseph Cinque (Djimon Hounsou). On July 2, 1839, La Amistad was sailing from Havana to Puerto Pricipe, Cuba, when the ship’s unwilling passengers, 53 slaves recently captured from Africa, revolted. Led by Cinque, they killed the captain and the cook but spared the life of a Spanish navigator so that he could sail them home to Sierra Leone. The film, however, portrayed that the slaves only killed the captain and left the cook and navigator alive. The navigator instead managed to sail to Amistad, generally northward. Two months later, the U.S. Navy captured the ship off Long Island, New York, and towed it into New London, Connecticut. The mutineers were held in a jail in New Haven, Connecticut, a state in which slavery was legal. The Spanish government demanded for the return of the Africans to Cuba as did Martin Van Buren, our then President of the United States. President Van Buren, along with many newspaper editors, favored extraditing the Africans to Cuba in the hopes of
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Some common words found in the essay are:
Africans Cinque, Supreme Court, Sierra Leone, Judge Judson, La Amistad, Steven Spielberg, Robert Madden, Matthew McConaughey, Van Buren, Led Cinque, van buren, judge judson, president van buren, president van, steven spielberg, federal district court, sierra leone, killed captain, home sierra, federal district, africans cuba, home sierra leone, district court,
Approximate Word count = 862
Approximate Pages = 3 (250 words per page double spaced)
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