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Gambia: Family Implores Govt to Revive Legacy of Kinteh Compound in Juffureh


The Family of Kunta Kinteh has implored the Ministry of Tourism and Culture to help them improve and revive the once vibrant tourist attraction compound of their great grandfather Kunta Kinteh at Jufereh in the North Bank Region of the Gambia, which is currently in a dilapidated condition.

The family made the call during the ongoing nationwide tour of the tourism minister, Hamat Bah, to visit tourism and culture facilities across the country.

The tour aims to assess the state of progress and standard in all tourism and cultural establishments and facilities so as to help carve out a strategy for the development of tourism and culture, most especially in the upcountry.

Kaddy Taal, who is among the 8th generation of the Kinteh family, said the Kinteh house is the worst compound today in Jufureh when it comes to history. She therefore urged minister Hamat Bah to help them in improving the once vibrant tourist attraction site.

“The place is in a very poor state and the structures are dilapidated that is why tourists are no more interested in visiting the place,” she said.

Kunta Kinteh was captured, tortured, chained, and restrained by white slave captors, before he was taken to James Island where he awaited passage to the New World. Hailed from Jufereh, North of the Coast, the severe inhumane treatment followed him up to the plantation, thousands of miles away from home, where he was forced to work for his masters as a slave.