I recently had the opportunity to meet and talk briefly with Portuguese President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa -- all because of my next book project.
It was the last day of a journey with the Sousa Mendes Foundation that traced the route of WWII refugees from southern France into Portugal.
The Sousa Mendes foundation was created to honor former Portuguese diplomat Aristides de Sousa Mendes. Sousa Mendes was the consul in Bordeaux and, against orders, he signed visas for thousands of desperate refugees who needed them to travel into Portugal. The only passenger ships and planes leaving Europe at that time were departing from Lisbon. This diplomat, sometimes called the "Portuguese Schindler," is the subject of my next book.
President Rebelo de Sousa supports efforts to honor the diplomat, and hosted a reception in the Presidential Palace in Lisbon for this group, which included descendants of family members of several visa recipients, descendants of the diplomat, Holocaust educators, and me!
See more information at
Liberty Brought Us Here is now available for sale in the gift shop of Henry Clay’s estate, Ashland, in Lexington, Kentucky.
Henry Clay was a US senator, congressman, speaker of the House of Representatives, secretary of state, and presidential candidate. He was also a life member of the American Colonization Society and the organization’s president for several years.
Colonization, the relocation of freeborn and formerly enslaved Black people to Liberia, is a central part of my book. Clay was well-known as a supporter of colonization, and the town of Clay-Ashland in Liberia was named in his honor.
My article, "From the Bluegrass State to Africa: Kentucky and the Colonization Movement," appears in the latest issue of Kentucky Humanities magazine. The article examines the individuals and organizations in Kentucky involved in the "back to Africa" movement.
In Europe, Portugal Living magazine has recently published two of my articles, complete with many of my photos. The cover article for the spring issue, "Obidos: Town of Queens, City of Literature," explores a still lively walled mediaeval city. The summer issue includes "Conímbriga: Portugal’s Largest Roman Ruins." This incredible site has an intact section of a Roman road, intricate mosaics, working gravity-fed fountains that are centuries old, and much more.
I was pleased to be invited to attend the Kentucky book Festival on October 29, 2022. These events and the author reception the night before are always enjoyable. The 2022 festival included more than 150 authors, including Barbara Kingsolver, Silas House, Wendall Berry, Jon Meacham, and me. I was humbled to be in such company.
It was a wonderful event and I sold out of all my books that day.
Shortly after Liberty Brought Us Here was published, it rose to No. 1 on Amazon's catalog of books on the history of West Africa. The book, which has garnered numerous five-star reviews, is available on Amazon in print, e-book, and audio formats.
When I was researching the story behind Liberty Brought Us Here, I tracked down two sisters who were direct descendants of the man who freed some of enslaved people at the center of the book. One of the sisters shared this scrap of paper with me, a receipt from the colonization society for these newly freed individuals.
Copyright © 2023 Susan E. Lindsey Author Page - All Rights Reserved.
Powered by GoDaddy