Equiano was permitted to stay on the deck during the Middle Passage because he was treated as a cabin boy due to his previous experience working on ships. This allowed him to have slightly better living conditions and access to fresh air, as opposed to being confined below deck with the other enslaved Africans.
In The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African, Equiano is allowed to be kept on deck because he is so small and fragile.
To feed him pumpkins
So he could have fresh air nigas
So he could have fresh air nigas
Equiano was allowed to be kept on deck because he was serving as a personal servant to one of the ship's crew members. This gave him privileges not afforded to other enslaved individuals who were typically kept in the ship's hold during the Middle Passage journey across the Atlantic Ocean.
The ship's crew kept Equiano on deck most of the time because they believed it would help to prevent him and other captives from getting sick or dying during the Middle Passage. Fresh air and exposure to sunlight were thought to aid in maintaining their health and reduce the risk of disease spreading in the crowded, unsanitary conditions below deck.
Olaudah Equiano's sister's name was unknown. She is not mentioned by name in Equiano's autobiography.
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Teach
There are different ways that you can install rails to your deck. If you want to make sure that children stay inside the deck if they are small, then you should place rails on the bottom of the deck as well as on the top. You can get a fence look by making crosses in the wood on the bottom of your deck so that pets don't come on the deck, and people stay on the deck.
Olaudah Equiano
The cast of The Extraordinary Equiano - 2007 includes: Ayodeji Aloba as Olaudah equiano Ariyon Bakare as Olaudah Equiano Sam Hazeldine as Captain Pasqual Josette Simon as Narrator