
1734 portrait of Ayuba wearing his traditional African wardrobe
'Ayuba Suleiman Diallo' (1701–1773), also known as 'Job ben Solomon', was a famous
Muslim slave who was a victim of the
Atlantic slave trade. Born in
Bondu,
Senegal West Africa, Ayuba's memoirs were published as one of the earliest
slave narratives, that is, a first-person account of the slave trade, in Thomas Bluett's ''Some Memories of the Life of Job, the Son of the Solomon High Priest of Boonda in Africa; Who was a Slave about two Years in Maryland; and afterwards being brought to England, was set free, and sent to his native Land in the Year 1734''.
He came from the prominent Fulbe family of Muslim religious leaders. His grandfather had founded the town of Bondu, and he grew up with
Sambo the hier to the Kingdom of Futa. In 1730, while on a trip to the coast to buy paper, Ayuba was captured by a group of
Mandingoes.
[ Islam in the African-American Experience, , Richard Brent, Turner, Indiana University Press, , ] Ayuba became a victim of the ever-growing slave exploitation of the
Senegambia region. Before being boarded on his ship to the
New World, Ayuba attempted to bribe the captain into giving him his freedom. However, the word never got to his father in time, and Ayuba was taken aboard. Ayuba was transported to
Annapolis, Maryland and put to work. Unable to physically perform his work, he ran away. He was captured and imprisoned at the
Kent County Courthouse. It was there that he was discovered by a lawyer, Thomas Bluett, travelling through on business.
The lawyer was impressed by Ayuba's ability to write in
Arabic. When another African, who was able to speak Ayuba's native
Wolof, was able to translate for him, it was then discovered that he was no ordinary slave. Bluett purchased his freedom, and the two went to
England in 1733. He learned
English, and when he got to England, he was in the company of many prominent people, including the
royal family. In July 1734, Ayuba returned to
Gambia and later returned to his homeland. His homeland was ravished by war, but being a prosperous individual, he was able to regain his old lifestyle, which included owning his own household slaves. His memoirs were published by Bluett in English and
French. Ayuba was an extremely rare exception in the slave trade. Due to his intelligence and monetary prowess, he was able to legally escape the hardships of slavery and return back home to Africa.
References
★ Painter, N. ''Creating Black Americans: African-American History and its Meanings, 1619 to Present'',
Oxford, 2005. ISBN 978-0-19-513755-2
★ Bluett, Thomas.
Some Memoirs of the Life of Job, the Son of Solomon, London, 1734.
External links
★
MuslimWikipedia article on Job Ben Solomon Jallo