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Kunta Kinte was a Gambian-born slave whose story was the basis for the show Roots. Kunta Kinte was not a free slave he tried several times to escape and finally half his right foot was cut off to keep him from running again.
kunta kinte
Kunta Kinte was apparently a real person, the subject of Harold Courlander's book, "The African".
In the miniseries Roots, Kunta Kinte is trapped by slave traders in Africa while foraging for food. They use a net.
The first black player to play for Manchester United was Tony Whelan in the 1960s.
Kunta Kinte was captured in 1767
Kunta Kinte married Bell Waller.
Kunta Kinte's father was Omoro Kinte. He was a Mandinka warrior and leader in the village of Juffure in The Gambia.
Kunta Kinte's mother's name Binta Kebba.
Yes, Kunta Kinte was married to a woman named Bell. She was his wife on the plantation where they were enslaved.
Kunta Kinte's mother's name was Binta Kinte.
Kunta Kinte was a Mandinka warrior who worked as a blacksmith in his village of Juffure in The Gambia.
Kunta Kinte's parents were Omoro and his wife Binta Kebba.
Kunta Kinte - album - was created on 2006-02-21.
Kunta Kinte's father's name was Omoro Kinte. He was a respected warrior in their village of Juffure in The Gambia.
The name Kunta Kinte is a West African name that means "to be strong" or "the wrestler." The character Kunta Kinte gained recognition through Alex Haley's book "Roots: The Saga of an American Family," which tells the story of Kunta Kinte's enslavement and his descendants.
kunta kinte was 50 years old when he died a slave in America