Bonaire Slave Huts: Uncommon Attraction
Bonaire rarely springs to mind when one thinks of Caribbean islands whose history bears the deep stains of slavery. The “B” of the “ABC Islands,” Bonaire is as arid as its Aruba and Curacao neighbors. None of them are ideal for the type of large-scale agricultural production that made slavery so common elsewhere across the region hundreds of years ago. This, then, makes the Bonaire slave huts all the more curious.
Originally built in the 1850s, the huts are located astride the coastal EEG Boulevard in the island’s southwest corner.
The slaves that lived here weren’t made to work the types of sprawling sugarcane fields that predominated Caribbean plantation society under colonial rule. Their burden centered on Bonaire’s expansive salt flats. Other slaves forcibly brought to the island were made to cultivate maize or cut dyewood. Salt, though, was the primary cash cow here.
Built of stone, the interior headroom of the slave huts measure to a height equal to a typical man’s waist. The oppression, it seems, extended from the flats to the slaves’ quarters.
Restored to their original state, with just the traditionally thatched roofs replaced by a more durable marine plywood, these huts serve as a poignant reminder of the darkest period in our region’s history and the long shadow it cast over every corner of the Caribbean.
*Lead photo credit: BrianBoardman via Flickr.