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New Orleans residents pay homage to enslaved African ancestors

As the crowd moves to exit Louis Armstrong Park, those leading the way stop, break out into quickened drumming and dance allowing time for the rear to catch up on Saturday, July 5, 2025.
Robert Stewart
/
Verite News
As the crowd moves to exit Louis Armstrong Park, those leading the way stop, break out into quickened drumming and dance allowing time for the rear to catch up on Saturday, July 5, 2025.

The Ashé Cultural Arts Center held a gathering at Congo Square and led a procession through Tremé Saturday morning (July 5) on the 25th anniversary of their MAAFA Commemoration, paying homage to enslaved ancestors.

The event is a yearly rememberance of the losses endured by Black people during the trans-Atlantic slave trade, aimed to promote healing.

It kicked off with speeches, prayers and offerings to community ancestors near an altar set up in the square. Organizers arranged fruit, flowers, candles and water near the altar, and members of the Congo Square Drum Circle drummed rhythms for the event’s speakers and dancers.

“We are celebrating, we are commemorating, we are honoring the steps, the oh-so-many steps that twelve generations of our ancestors took to get us here,” said Asali DeVan Ecclesiastes, the chief equity and executive officer of Ashé.

“Maafa” is a Swahili word that can be translated to mean disaster or tragedy. In the context of the commemoration, Ashé is referring to a “great tragedy” — the trans-Atlantic slave trade. The slave trade displaced roughly 12.5 million Africans, resulting in the loss of family, language and traditions, all of which the procession sought to highlight and honor.

From Congo Square, a procession of more than 100 people marched through Tremé, stopping at historic cultural sites including Saint Augustine Catholic Church, the Tomb of the Unknown Slave. The route continued on to Jackson Square and the Bienville Monument. At locations of particular pain to the community along the way, speakers stopped and condemned atrocities such as the torment of enslaved persons at the Lalaurie Mansion. Delphine MacCarthy Lalaurie lived in the mansion, and after a fire there, rescuers discovered tortured, chained and mutilated slaves inside.

The procession took roughly two hours from Congo Square to the Bienville Monument. From there, participants were driven to the Canal Street Ferry terminal for the official unveiling of the “Rivers Rhythms Mural,”created in partnership with the Regional Transit Authority, Arts New Orleans and GNO, Inc. That was followed by further speeches, music, dancing and a river offering.

Robert is a news and feature writer with Verite News focusing on criminal justice and immigration.

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