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Dear Dr. Scribblerbuck:
During the 1990s, I was a docent at James Buchananâs home, Wheatland. I was taught exactly what was the prescribed story of his life to tell to tourists. They especially stressed that Buchanan was never a slave owner and abhorred the institution. I repeated this story to many visitors.
I have recently read that he indeed bought two enslaved people and âkeptâ them for the years it took for them to work off the cost of buying them. Calling them indentured servants does not change that this was indeed slavery and I am so sorry that I was a part of the myth of James Buchanan at Wheatland.
Tony s said it was removed from Slave Free Chocolate list a few months ago
Tony s Chocolonely, the Netherlands-based firm making confectionery from ethically-sourced cocoa, has responded to the company s removal from the Slave Free Chocolate list because of its links to ingredients supplier Barry Callebaut.
Barry Callebaut is among seven confectionery and ingredients giants facing a lawsuit over alleged child labour infringements filed last Friday (12 February) by the Washington DC-based human rights organisation International Rights Advocates on behalf of eight former cocoa plantation workers in the west African country of Cote D Ivoire, who claim they were forced to work without pay when they were still children.
Guest Commentary - To achieve the real meaningful change you want to see in our world, and to see your causes come to fruition, embrace humanity and reject becoming the
PEORIA â If the world were just, the name of Nance Legins-Costley would resonate amid the likes of Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass and other abolitionist rebels.
But her story is hardly known. Not in Illinois, where â despite anti-slavery laws â she was born into bondage. Not in Pekin, where â despite anti-Black attitudes â she became a beloved community figure. And certainly not in Peoria, where â despite her impressive life â she is buried in ignominy.
Perhaps her story is more subtle than those of high-profile abolitionist leaders, yet her fortitude was astounding. Barely a teen, she first stood up for her civil rights in a court of law that was stacked against Black people. Even amid legal defeats, she kept seeking the most basic of rights: freedom.