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About the Book:
“I was a mixed-tribe child in a poverty-stricken
village, a child held in two sets of arms—one Kru and one Krahn—and
perhaps I knew even then that I was caught between two cultures.”
First named Gblayee, Gesue Gebrier Roberts is the grandson of a
Krahn couple who escaped the Liberian government tax collectors and
settled in Rockcess, in the Rivercess Territory of Grand Bassa County.
They gave their daughter in marriage to a Kru tribesman in exchange
for money to pay their taxes, and Gblayee was born. When Gblayee was a
year old, his maternal grandparents took him to Zammie Town, the town
where he spent his childhood, the town that nourished him and gave him
his earliest pleasures. Separated from his father and seldom seeing
his mother, Gblayee went to Zwedru to live with his aunt Krayonor and
his uncle Robert Gboe.
In Zwedru, he became intrigued by the Americo-Liberians,
the descendants of the freed American slaves who had founded the
Liberian nation, and by their elite status in Liberian society. In an
attempt to ensure his own future in that elite, he even adopted their
names as his own, but when that didn’t work, he was caught again, this
time among three cultures—one Krahn, one Kru, and one Americo-Liberian.
Zammie Town to Zwedru: A Memoir of a Village Childhood in Liberia
is a fascinating account about growing up in twentieth-century
Liberia.
About the Author:
After his elementary and junior high school
education in Zwedru, Gesue Gebrier Roberts traveled to the capital
city, Monrovia, where he completed his high school education and
earned a bachelor’s degree in economics from the University of
Liberia. He later immigrated to the United States and earned an MBA
from Brooklyn College of the City University of New York. Having
retired from Chase Manhattan Bank, NA, as a financial analyst in 1999,
Mr. Roberts now serves on the business office staff of the NYC Health
and Hospitals Corporation. He lives with his wife, Betty Gbarwea, in
Coney Island, Brooklyn, and they have three daughters and three
grandsons.
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