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<p>Morgan Gray takes listeners aboard the infamous <em>Jesus of Lübeck</em>, tracing its transformation from a European warship built for monarchs and merchants to one of the earliest vessels in the Atlantic slave trade. Once a symbol of naval power, the ship became a floating prison—its decks witnessing the violent convergence of commerce, conquest, and human suffering.</p>
<p>Through vivid storytelling, the episode explores the ship’s ties to royal ambition and mercantile greed, mapping its perilous voyages that linked Europe, Africa, and the Americas. Morgan unpacks the potent symbolism of the <em>Jesus of Lübeck</em>, reimagining it as a distorted kind of “ark”—a vessel that carried not salvation, but the foundations of slavery and empire.</p>
<p>Expanding the lens to a global scale, the narrative positions the ship as both artifact and omen: a maritime emblem of Christian imperialism whose routes and logic would seed centuries of exploitation. By confronting its history, the episode challenges the myths that sanctified empire while obscuring the human cost at its core.</p>
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Afrocentric.

Morgan Gray

Freestyle 3: The Little Ship that Couldn't

JAN 8, 202668 MIN
Afrocentric.

Freestyle 3: The Little Ship that Couldn't

JAN 8, 202668 MIN

Description

<p> </p> <p>Morgan Gray takes listeners aboard the infamous <em>Jesus of Lübeck</em>, tracing its transformation from a European warship built for monarchs and merchants to one of the earliest vessels in the Atlantic slave trade. Once a symbol of naval power, the ship became a floating prison—its decks witnessing the violent convergence of commerce, conquest, and human suffering.</p> <p>Through vivid storytelling, the episode explores the ship’s ties to royal ambition and mercantile greed, mapping its perilous voyages that linked Europe, Africa, and the Americas. Morgan unpacks the potent symbolism of the <em>Jesus of Lübeck</em>, reimagining it as a distorted kind of “ark”—a vessel that carried not salvation, but the foundations of slavery and empire.</p> <p>Expanding the lens to a global scale, the narrative positions the ship as both artifact and omen: a maritime emblem of Christian imperialism whose routes and logic would seed centuries of exploitation. By confronting its history, the episode challenges the myths that sanctified empire while obscuring the human cost at its core.</p> <p> </p>