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Into the Depths

Episode 5: Healing

Into the Depths

National Geographic

Science, History

4.6803 Ratings

🗓️ 24 February 2022

⏱️ 31 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

National Geographic Explorer Tara Roberts begins to understand the healing power of diving for shipwrecks from the slave trade when she learns of a ceremony that honored the 212 Africans lost aboard the Portuguese ship São José Paquete d’Africa. Diver Kamau Sadiki, Smithsonian Secretary Lonnie Bunch III, and South African luminary Albie Sachs take turns describing the ritual, held in both Mozambique and South Africa, which brought tears, reflection, and resolution. Tara invites fellow Explorer Alyea Pierce to help visualize the centuries-long disintegration of the São José, which sank off the coast of Cape Town in 1794. Want more? Check out our Into the Depths hub to learn more about Tara’s journey following Black scuba divers, find previous Nat Geo coverage on the search for slave shipwrecks, and read the March cover story. And download a tool kit for hosting an Into the Depths listening party to spark conversation and journey deeper into the material. Also explore: Find out more about the Slave Wrecks Project, the consortium of organizations working to uncover and document slave shipwrecks globally, hosted by the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture. The Iziko Museums of South Africa provides a closer look at the wreck of the São José through its exhibition, Unshackled History: the Wreck of the Slave Ship, São José, 1794, which includes online resources. Watch footage from a dive exploring the wreck of the São José off the coast of Cape Town’s Clifton Beach, and hear accounts from historians and the divers documenting the findings. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

On December 27, 17, 1974, the Portuguese ship Sao Jose wrecks off the coast of Cape Town, South Africa.

0:13.0

It takes maybe three hours to sink to the ocean floor.

0:18.0

A day goes by.

0:22.8

And the cold of the water takes the ship's breath away.

0:27.1

Sand still settling from the loud boom.

0:30.8

The current tears cloth from sails and sweeps ragged rope across ridges.

0:37.5

A month passes.

0:41.0

Since the Sao Jose became colonized by the sea,

0:45.4

the force of waves push and pull through the ship's broken body like a dance.

0:51.1

Marine life hide in their dens asking,

0:54.0

What is this? How did it get here?

1:00.8

A year goes by. Kelp Forest backbends around corroded iron ballasts, copper fastenings, andathings rust. A century.

1:12.6

Over 300 tons of vessel now bones, encrusted in coral, are merely fragments reminding us of the sea's feast.

1:22.6

200 years.

1:25.6

A window to the past. Replicas of memory encased by rock and time,

1:31.3

see creatures relax as this fossil,

1:34.3

invisible to the untrained eye, becomes home.

1:39.3

Until it was discovered by divers and later verified.

1:49.1

It was encrusted, it was concreted in the material, but the shape was, you had a loop

1:54.7

and a rod, another loop.

1:57.5

Kamal Siddiqui from diving with a purpose.

2:00.7

And yeah, it was a shackle.

...

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