Tag Archives: Sierre Leone

“Ancient” Sierra Leone

Sierra Leone is a relatively young country, only forming after breaking away from the United Kingdom’s rule in 1961.  However, the area that Sierra Leone now occupies has been home to indigenous people for over 2500 years.  The people in this region were isolated from other indigenous people of Africa however, because of the dense surrounding tropical rainforests.  This created a unique civilization that was unexposed to outside forces unlike other African cultures, such as the spread of Islamic religion. Outside contacts did not interact with the people of Sierra Leone until 1462 when a Portuguese explorer landed near the area now known as Freetown, mapping the surrounding mountains giving them the name Serra Lyoa. At this time the area was inhabited by several groups of native people such as he Bulom, Loko, Temne and Limba.  These groups were politically independent from one another but would interact to trade goods and such.  The most powerful and well known of these groups are the Temne people. The most well known of the Temne was Farma Tami. He was a great warrior and is regarded by the Temne people as their founder. He is said to have organised the TemneFarma Tami into strong kingdoms and established their importance in the country. According to tradition, Farma Tami came from the east with a great army, conquering and destroying all opposition in his advance, until he reached the estuary of the Rokel River. He established his capital in what is now Koya Chiefdom at the town of Robaga, near modern Freetown. Temne elders say that Farma Tami ruled when there were still no guns or swords—only spears, shields, knives and bows and arrows.

The port at Freetown became very important later in history because it would serve as a large port for transporting and moving slaves from Africa to Europe and the Americas. Sierra Leone began to mold into the country it has become today when in 1787 a group of 331 people — made up mostly by freed slaves from Great Britain — were moved to Freetown to start a new civilization. However, the idea did not work out as planned as most of the voyagers died within the first year.  Several years later though,  a group of more than 1000 freed slaves from the Americas travel to Sierra Leone and begin new lives in what will become known as Freetown.  Over the next couple decades more and more freed slaves along with others will join in the new developing city and slowly turn Sierra Leone into what it is today.

When I was searching for info about Sierra Leone there was little to nothing about “ancient” Sierra Leone.  I think there are several factors that lead to this problem. One, there just were not many people living in the area that would come to be known as Sierra Leone.  There were not enough people to create substantial civilizations, just small tribes and villages scattered across the diverse landscape.  These people left behind little evidence of what their lives were like and this leads to my next point. Two, because the scarcity of people in these times and the even more scarce artifacts of their civilization that they left behind people just do not put the effort or money into researching about these people.  They would rather focus on things that are very well known and heavily researches such as the Egyptian pyramids.  These artifacts fascinate people because that’s what they grew up learning about and hearing about, not the small villages in the little rainforests of Sierra Leone.

 

Location, Location, Location

This article briefly discusses a discovery in a small part of Africa. Contrary to popular knowledge that the Middle East is the prime area to satisfy our petroleum needs, oil companies have made a discovery a little west of the continent– in Sierra Leone. This is not the first occasion in which oil has been discovered off the coast of Sierra Leone, the first time being a monumental find of 18,500 feet. This time international oil companies uncovered 135 feet. Sierra Leone’s location right on the west coast of Africa makes this a “high potential zone” for oil drilling, oil companies Repsol and its minor partners Anadarko and Tullow Oil announced.

One thing I enjoy about college courses is that somehow everything interconnects, everything is related to each other somehow. After reading this article, I was immediately reminded of a previous lesson in my Environment Protection and Energy Conservation class on sources of energy. “Energy is stored and available in different forms and sources (Pisupati).” These sources include renewable and non-renewable resources. Oil or petroleum would be classified as a non-renewable resource because it cannot be produced in a short period of time. This reminds me vaguely of a lesson in a high school class. However, one thing I did not recall and ironically, of course, is that we get most of our energy from these non-renewable resources.

How is this related to the 18,635 feet of oil found in Sierra Leone and parts of Liberia? Just a thought and for recap purposes for my upcoming EGEE102 exam: the middle is richest in petroleum while the U.S., Australia and China are richest in coal. This information is current, so if most of our oil comes from the Middle East, why were we drilling west of Africa two years ago? Are we running out of our natural resources faster than scientific experiments speculated or was this just a finding based on economic opportunity? The afrol News tone is stereotypical because it sounds like another party is benefiting from its resources instead of the country itself. I think that many news sources like to sugarcoat or at the other end exaggerate versions of the truth. This article gives the impression that drilling holes into the earth for the petroleum needs of others is beneficial for Sierra Leone. However, who is really benefiting from these harmful habits? The Sierra Leone people or the oil companies extracting the oil? Most likely the money making oil companies.  On a positive note, I believe if the government and these companies could create a system where this can benefit both parties including the citizens a bright future is ahead of the people of Sierra Leone. This can possibly create jobs and if handled accordingly all can benefit from this economic discovery.

wg-sierra-leone-2738-400x300

http://www.afrol.com/articles/36905