25/07/2014

Kuti


Whelped 18 July 2014.
Full name: Funmilayo Ransome Kuti

A tribute to Funmilayo Ransome Kuti (1900-1978), a teacher, political campaigner, women's rights activist and traditional aristocrat, described as the doyen of female rights activists in Nigeria. She advocated for the Nigerian woman's right to vote. In 1947, she was described as the "Lioness of Lisabi" for her leadership of the women of the Egba clan that she belonged to on a campaign against their arbitrary taxation, which led to the abdication of the then Egba high king. She was also the mother of Fela Anikulapo Kuti, a musician, Beko Ransome-Kuti, a doctor, and Prof. Olikoye Ransome-Kuti, a doctor and former health minister of Nigeria.



Kuti has a very distinctive coat that looks like dark chocolate at 7 days old. I'm curious to see how it'll evolve.

Garuda


Whelped 18 July 2014
Full name: Garuda

Inspired from the Garuda, a large mythical bird, bird-like creature or humanoid bird that appears in both Hindu and Buddhist mythology. his name was chosen by my friend Catherine, who said: "his compact body will block the sunrays and his name will protect him from snakes and poisons". I also read it as a tribute to a puppy I had a few years ago, Kamo, who was poisoned by ill-intentioned passers-by (would-be burglars?), which shocked Catherine a lot.



Garuda may be the smallest of the litter, but he is healthy and his level of activity is not worrying. As we would say here: "all the fingers are not of equal size".

Amo

Whelped 18 July 2014.
Full name: Anton Wilhelm Amo

A tribute to Anton Wilhelm Amo (1703-1759), an African from the Nzema tribe of what is now Ghana, who became a respected philosopher and a university lecturer. Brought to Germany as a child, he was treated as a member of the family of Anthony Ulrich, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, and was the first African known to have attended a European university.


Amo is the fairest of all males, strong and healthy.


Olaudah


Whelped 18 July 2014.
Full name: Olaudah Equiano

A tribute to Olaudah Equiano, a/k/a Gustavus Vassa (1745-1797), a prominent African abolitionist and freed slave, who supported the British movement to end the slave trade. Enslaved as a child in his village of Essaka, in what is now southern Nigeria, he was shipped to the West Indies, and sold in Virginia. With his master, an officer in the Royal Navy, he moved to England, where he purchased his freedom. He wrote his autobiography, in which he depicts the horrors of slavery and which influenced the enactment of the British Slave Trade Act of 1807, abolishing the African slave trade.


Olaudah is the strongest of four males who look somewhat alike. He is quite greedy on the teat, and one of the most active too (hence the hand to keep him in place while I was taking the picture!).

Kazoola

Whelped 18 July 2014
Full name: Cudjoe Kazoola Lewis

A tribute to Cudjoe Kazoola Lewis, (1840-1935), considered the last person born on African soil to have been enslaved in the United States when slavery was unlawful and had been ceased. Born in current days Togo or Benin (the account is confused on this point), he was captured in Porto Novo, Benin, and taken to the port of Ouidah. Together with more than a hundred other captured Africans, he was brought on the ship Clotilde to Mobile, Alabama, in the United States in 1860 during an illegal slave-trading venture. He was the longest-lived survivor of all those who were brought aboard the Clotilde.


Although he is one of the smallest of the litter, Kazoola is growing well and is healthy and as active as a one-week old pup can be.

Frobenius


Whelped 18 July 2014
Full name: Leo Frobenius

A tribute to Leo Viktor Frobenius (1873-1938), an ethnologist and archaeologist, and a major figure in German ethnography. He influenced Léopold Sédar Senghor, one of the founders of Négritude, and was also quoted by Aimé Césaire for considering African people "civilized to the marrow of their bones", as opposed to the degrading vision encouraged by colonial propaganda. He was however also criticized by Wole Soyinka for his "schizophrenic" view of Yoruba art versus the people who made it.


Frobenius is easily recognized at his white collar. Although not as plump as Gannibal, he is also very active at the teat and his steadfastness of purpose is promising.

Wangari


Whelped 18 July 2014.
Full name: Wangari Maathai.

A tribute to Wangari Muta Maathai (1940-2011), a Kenyan environmental and political activist, who founded the Green Belt Movement, an environmental NGO focused on the planting of trees, environmental conservation, and women's rights. In 2004, she became the first African woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize for "her contribution to sustainable development, democracy and peace".


The fairest of the litter, Wangari is easily recognizable. She is smaller than most, but makes up for it by a level of activity that is remarkable even at the tender age of 7 days.

Gannibal


Whelped 18 July 2014.
Full name: Abram Petrovich Gannibal.

A tribute to Major-General Abram Petrovich Gannibal, 1696-1791, an African kidnapped and brought to Russia as a gift for Peter the Great. He became a major-general, military engineer, governor of Reval and nobleman of the Russian Empire. Perhaps best known today as the great-grandfather of Alexander Pushkin.


At 7 days old, Gannibal is the darkest of the litter and the most voracious of all. Unsurprisingly, he is visibly bigger than his littermates.

New litter


It is with great pleasure that I announce the birth of 8 puppies, safely and easily delivered by Friendy on July 18.


Individual posts on each pup will be published shortly.