Preserving Omar Ibn Said's Words: A Slave Narrative
The Library has preserved, digitized and made facsimile copies of "The Life of Omar Ibn Said," the only known extant narrative written in Arabic by an enslaved person in the United States. In 1831, Omar Ibn Said, a wealthy and highly educated man who was captured in West Africa and brought to the United States as a slave, wrote a 15-page autobiography describing his experiences. Visit the Omar Ibn Said Collection, https://www.loc.gov/collections/omar-.... Read about the conservation process, http://blogs.loc.gov/loc/2019/02/omar....

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In the Footsteps of Omar ibn Said, a Muslim Slave from Fuuta Tooro

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More Thrilling than Romance, More Terrible than Fiction: The Donner Party at the Library of Congress

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One Buddha, 15 Buddhas, 1,000 Buddhas

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"Kumbaya" and the Kronos Quartet's Three Bones

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Conversation on the Omar Ibn Said Collection

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Recovering the National Memory: The Quest for a Pre-Colonial Filipino Past

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The Appalachian Trail: A Printed Journey

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A Conversation with Randy Newman

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Racial Science in Nazi Germany

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The Original Black Elite: Daniel Murray & the Story of a Forgotten Era

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David McCullough on John Adams

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Liam O'Connor Oral History

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How the 1876 World's Fair Launched the Telephone Revolution

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We Play with Elizabeth Hargrave

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Washington National Opera's West Side Story: Behind the Scenes

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Doc Pomus and "Save the Last Dance for Me"

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2026 National Library Service for the Blind and Print Disabled Summer Reading Program

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Family Day: "Carlotta's Special Dress" in Civil Rights History

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How Sports Inspired Me to Become a Writer

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