Trudeau visits former slave trading post in Senegal

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau today visited one of the most notorious entrepôts of the African transatlantic slave trade.

Gorée Island, a rocky outcrop of just 28 hectares off the coast of Dakar, Senegal, operated as a slave trading post from the 15th century until the 19th century.

Trudeau toured the Maison des Esclaves, a notorious last stop for captives before they were boarded onto vessels for a one-way journey to the New World, accompanied by Minister of Family Services Ahmed Hussen and Masai Ujiri, president of the Toronto Raptors.

The ochre-coloured, two-storey stone building was built in 1776, when the Senegal slave trade was dominated by France. Prior to that the island had also been used by Portuguese, Dutch, and British slave traders.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau looks out from the ‘Door of No Return’ at the slave house on Goree Island, Dakar, Senegal on Wednesday. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

Trudeau and his companions viewed cells where slaves were separated by gender, as well as a cell for children and a punishment cell for «recalcitrants.»

They also stood at the «door of no return,» where slaves were forced to walk a gangplank onto waiting ships where they were packed into crowded and unsanitary holds. Many did not survive the crossing.

After the visit, a sombre Trudeau said the world has yet to learn all of the lessons of human rights abuses of the past.