Brotherhood Of The Kasus By Lasana M. Sekou

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In “Brotherhood of the Spurs” Lasana M Sekou explores the lives and impact of our African ancestors had in the Caribbean through memory and narratives. The book is divided into four short stories with the main character in each story being spoken of in the third person with periods of dialoguing by the main character.
In each of the stories Sekou explores the integration of Caribbean natives as they travel throughout the Caribbean and new world.
The first three stories are written from a historical perspective, while the fourth story has a futuristic, present day feel.
In the first story “A Salting” set in a historical background, the focus is on a young female child of African descent whose father appeared to be a noble man. She was also …show more content…

Her mother appears content and comfortable to allow her only child to leave on an unknown journey.
In the next scene, the child is awaking in the elder female’s home and relating to those in the house her dream of feasting travelers and the danger they faced on the angry river, everyone besides the elder female isn’t paying any attention to the …show more content…

Her fear came through as she screamed for the elder female.
There are questions that Mr. Sekou did not answer
Was the travelling party kidnapped and place aboard a slave ship heading to the new world? If so, where was the sentinel telling the child to run?
While in this state, the young girl realized she was bleeding and realized she was now becoming a woman.
As the story ends, the child is being coaxed by her mother to hurry and get ready for her journey. This would suggest that the child was dreaming or day dreaming about the trip, revealing both excitement and fear of the unknown.
The Wake and Brotherhood of the Spurs are the other two stories with a historical taste.
The Wake started out with a young man returning home from war to the welcoming arms of his mother. This young man apparently unable to find a job in his homeland left for the greener pastures of Cuba then on to New York. From New York, he went to Curacao, where he met, married, and started a family. His wife came with unanswered questions from her pass, particularly the death of her sister at the age of five

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