Princess Aina: Queen Victoria's Yoruba Godchild (U.K. Edition)
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Born to the chief of the Yoruba Egbado Tribe in Oke-Odan, Aina survived a raid by King Ghezo of Dahomey at a young age. Before the king could use her for a religious sacrifice, Captain Frederick E. Forbes negotiated her release. Aina spent most of her childhood in the company of Queen Victoria and her children. As an adult, she returned to Africa and became a teacher. Much has been written about her, but this is her story as we imagine she might have told it.
Wayne Goodman
Wayne Goodman has lived in the San Francisco Bay Area most of his life (with too many cats). He hosts Queer Words Podcast, conversations with queer-identified authors about their works and lives. When not writing, Goodman enjoys playing Gilded Age parlor music on the piano, with an emphasis on women, gay, and Black composers.
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Princess Aina - Wayne Goodman
Princess Aina:
Queen Victoria’s Yoruba Godchild
Written by Wayne Goodman
Illustrations by Ajuan Mance
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Purchase only authorized editions.
First paperback printing, October 2019
U.K. version
Library of Congress Control Number: 2019913951
Copyright © 2019,
Wayne Goodman, Ajuan Mance
Dedication
First, we must thank Aina, also known as Sarah Bonetta Forbes Davies, for her incredible life and the marvellous stories it has generated.
We also want to acknowledge our Readers who provided valuable feedback along the way: Richard May, Juanita Perryman, Gar McVey-Russell, Cass Sellars, Jill White, and Layla Wolfe.
Prelude
My Beginnings
The Point of No Return
A Sea Voyage
My First Home in England
Preparing To Meet the Queen
My First Visit with the Queen
Cut Off Head!
The Clouds Fall
Winter in England
A Visit with Prince Albert
The Crystal Palace
Returning to Africa
A Letter from the Queen
Life at Palm Cottage
A Royal Wedding
James Pinson Labulo Davies
In Limbo
The Queen’s Darkest Year
Two Weddings
My African Home
Epilogue
Prelude
I wrote this book so that you, my friend, could read about the extraordinary, amazing life I have lived. Very few people get to experience what I have seen and heard.
As an adult, my role has been to teach young people like you. At the Female Institution at Sierra Leone, I got to share my experience and knowledge with others every day, and that has made me very happy.
And now, my friend, I can share my remarkable life with you. There are very few things I remember about my early years. The beginnings of my story come from what others have told me. Indeed, most of what I know about my own childhood came from the man who rescued me, Royal British Navy Captain Frederick E. Forbes.
–Aina Sarah Forbes Bonetta Davies
My Beginnings
Africa: Dahomey
Some time during the Yam Harvest of the 9883 odun (our Yoruba word for ‘year’), I came into this world. My own mother and father named me Aina, but I do not remember much about them. The other tribeswomen told me my name meant the cord connecting me to my mother had wrapped around my neck when I was born.
Our family belonged to the Egbado clan of the Yoruba people. We lived in the village of Oke-Odan, which means above the meadow
in your English-tongue. I cannot recall when the priest marked my face to show others that I was the daughter of the chief. They say I was just a baby when I received my markings, called gombo.
When I was in my fifth year, King Ghezo of Dahomey captured our family. He killed my parents and my siblings, but he did not kill me. He told me I was to be used for a special religious ceremony.
I remember King Ghezo’s great palace of Dange-lah-cordeh in Abomey. Along the very high walls I could see old skulls. There were many tall huts and pavilions, but I lived in a small, dark barn with animals. The people who provided food called me, Omoba.
I told them my name was Aina, but they continued to say Omoba.
Without anyone I knew from my village, I felt very alone, and very scared. Some nights I would sing the songs I learned at home to comfort me until I finally fell asleep.
This was how my life was for many months. Back then, I did not yet have a grasp of how much time passed while I lay in captivity.
After a time unknown to me, perhaps a gloomy year or two, Captain Forbes arrived in Dahomey to speak with King Ghezo about trade matters. Before he got to meet with the King, the people of Dahomey celebrated with many days of feasts and parades. Each great man then presented gifts of greeting to the other.
During one of their meetings, King Ghezo displayed me to Captain Forbes. That was our first meeting. I had never seen such a pale person before. It seemed as if he had no skin at all. If he were a friend of King Ghezo, he might have wanted to cause destruction and death as well. I could not look at his face because I feared his wrath.
The Captain looked down at me, put his hand beneath my chin and lifted it. He turned my head gently one way and then the other. When he spoke, his tongue sounded unfamiliar, and I could not understand his words.
Somehow, I feared my fate rested in the hand of this fearsome, pale man. King Ghezo had kept me in a dark place, but I felt that the mysterious Captain who spoke strangely might be my new conqueror. His unusual appearance frightened me, but I feared the King even more. He had killed the rest of my family, and I knew he had others killed with great swords.
King Ghezo told Captain Forbes I had been his prisoner for two years. I would be part of a special religious