The British explorer Sir Samuel White Baker (1821-1893),
was known as an expert on Egypt and Sudan chiefly through his two books, The
Albert N'yanza, Great Basin of the Nile (1866) and The Nile
Tributaries of Abyssinia (1867).
In 1869, Ismail Pasha, the ruler of Egypt, appointed him
as governor general of Sudan, which was then governed by Egypt. Ismail
wanted Baker to defeat the slave trade and open routes for commerce.
The supreme command of this expedition is confided to
Sir Samuel White Baker for four years ... to whom we also confer the
most absolute and supreme power, even that of death, over all those who
may compose the expedition.
Baker is surprised by the authority given to him, but he
knew what was in store:
It was obvious to all observers that an attack upon
the slave-dealing and slave-hunting establishments of Egypt by a
foreigner--an Englishman--would be equal to a raid upon a hornets' nest,
that all efforts to suppress the old-established traffic in negro slaves
would be encountered with a determined opposition…
And it was. Entering one town, there was not a single human visible, but
the din of very many thousands continued, yelling and
shrieking as though maniacs; I should imagine that at least a thousand
drums were beating, innumerable horns were blowing, with whistles,
fifes, and every instrument that would add to the horrible uproar.
At last, one of the slave traders appeared.
Mohammed, the dragoman, appeared, together with
Umbogo. In reply to my question as to the cause of such a sudden
irruption of noise, Umbogo laughed, and said it was TO MAKE ME AFRAID.
In the tradition of Stanley, Livingstone, and Burton,
Baker weaves a powerful tale, all the more incredible because he lived it.
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