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  • The Kwakoe statue is a memorial honoring the end of slavery and is located in Paramaribo, the capital of Suriname, and is created by a sculptor, Jozef Klas. Wednesday is referred to as Kwakoe in the Maroon language of Surinam known as Kromanti. In other words, on Wednesday, July 1, 1863, slavery was abolished.
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  • His request for Surinamese citizenship remained unanswered. In February 1978, Klas started a hunger strike and chained himself to the Kwakoe statue.[5][6].
  • Surely, the statue of Kwakoe speaks to and continues to address the descendants of formerly enslaved Surinam-ese as a symbol that that informs an identity...
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    Bulunamadı: surinam
  • Kwakoe, Paramaribo: Se anmeldelser fra reisende, artikler, bilder og gode tilbud for Kwakoe i Paramaribo, Surinam på Tripadvisor.
  • haritasında Surinam

  • I took this at the Kwakoe festival in Amsterdam's Bijlmer, a predominantly Surinamese neighborhood. ... Suriname (or Surinam) is the smallest sovereign nation...
  • De naam Kwakoe werd voor dit beeld gekozen omdat vroeger alle kinderen die op een woensdag werden geboren, Kwakoe werden genoemd.
    Bulunamadı: surinam
  • Keti-Koti is an exuberant party with lots of music that can go on all night long. A Kwakoe party is organized annually in Amsterdam.
  • This is the statue of Kwakoe in downtown Paramaribo, Surinam. Kwakoe means Wednesday, as in Wednesday July 1st 1863.
  • Wednesday is referred to as Kwakoe in the Maroon language of Surinam known as Kromanti.
  • Het standbeeld van Kwakoe in de Surinaamse hoofdstad Paramaribo is een monument ter herdenking van de afschaffing van de slavernij.