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Sharon M. DraperA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
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Terrified and panicked, a mother and daughter leap from the lifeboats into the water, rather than be taken aboard the giant ship. They struggle to stay afloat as the chains and shackles are so heavy. Amari watch as they are eaten by sharks.
The women are stuffed into a large hole in the floor of the ship. They are not in the same quarters as the men. “Each row of shelves held men—human beings—chained like animals and stacked like logs for the fire, row after row, shelf after shelf” (43). The women’s quarters are less packed and have fresher air. Amari is surprised to see some children in the women’s quarters. As night moves in, Afi begins to sing an old Ewe song. “Close to a hundred women softly sang with her. It was the saddest sound Amari had ever heard” (44).
The women are unchained and brought up to the deck of the ship, where they are astonished at the sight of nothing but water. The sailors bring out a drum and order the women to dance, but they do not understand. The men watch the women jump around, sometimes touching them, and one man with red hair watches Amari’s face intently.
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By Sharon M. Draper