Cuffy
Template:Short description {{#invoke:other uses|otheruses}} Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox person Cuffy,Template:Efn also known as Kofi Badu<ref name=Chronicle>Template:Cite news</ref> (died in 1763), was an African Akan man who was a slave in the Dutch colony of Berbice in present-day Guyana. In 1763, he led a major slave revolt of around 5,000 slaves against the Dutch. The slave revolt was eventually suppressed and Cuffy committed suicide. Today, he is a national hero in Guyana.<ref name=Ramsay>Template:Cite news</ref>
Early life
Cuffy was born in the 18th century in what is now southern Ghana (then part of the broad area known as Guinea (region). At some point he was captured into slavery and sent across the ocean as part of the Atlantic slave trade. He was sent to Guyana, where he and many other African slaves were made to work on Dutch plantations.
Berbice Rebellion
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Cuffy lived in Lilienburg, a plantation on the Berbice River, as a house-slave for a cooper (barrel maker). He was owned by the widow Berkey.Template:Sfn On 23 February 1763, slaves on plantation Magdalenenberg on the Canje River rebelled, protesting harsh and inhumane treatment. They torched the plantation house,<ref>Thompson, Alvin O., "The Berbice Revolt 1763-64", in Winston F. McGowan, James G. Rose and David A. Granger (eds), Themes in African-Guyanese History, London: Hansib, 2009. p. 80.</ref> and made for the Courantyne River where Caribs and troops commanded by Governor Template:Ill of Suriname attacked, and killed them.<ref name="stabroek">Template:Cite news</ref> On 27 February 1763, a revolt took place on the Hollandia plantation next to Lilienburg.<ref name="stabroek"/> Cuffy is said to have organized the slaves into a military unit, after which the revolt spread to neighbouring plantations.<ref name=Rodriguez>Scott, Cleve McD., "Berbice Slave Revolt (1763)", in Junius P. Rodriguez, Encyclopedia of Slave Resistance and Rebellion, Vol. 1, Westport, Ct: Greenwood Press, 2007, pp. 55–56.</ref> When Dutch Governor Wolfert Simon Van Hoogenheim sent military assistance to the region, the rebellion had reached the Berbice River and was moving steadily towards the Berbice capital, Fort Nassau. They took gunpowder and guns from the attacked plantations.<ref name="slavenhandel">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
By 3 March, the rebels were 600 in number. Led by Cossala,Template:Sfn they tried to take the brick house of Peerenboom.<ref name="slavenhandel"/> They agreed to allow the Dutch to leave the brick house, but as soon they left, the rebels killed many and took several prisoners, among them Sara George, the 19-year-old daughter of the Peerenboom Plantation owner,<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> whom Cuffy kept as his wife.Template:Sfn
Cuffy was soon accepted by the rebels as their leader and declared himself Governor of Berbice. Doing so he named Captain Accara as his deputy in charge of military affairs, and tried to establish discipline over the troops.<ref name="kars">Template:Cite journal</ref> Accara was skilful in military discipline. They organized the farms in order to provide food supplies.<ref name="sixth">Template:Cite news</ref>
Defeat of the rebellion
Wolfert Simon van Hoogenheim committed himself to retake the colony. Accara attacked the Dutch three times without permission from Cuffy, and eventually the colonists were driven back.<ref name="slavenhandel"/> Thus began a dispute among the two rebels. On 2 April 1763, Cuffy wrote to Van Hoogenheim saying that he did not want a war against the Dutch and proposed a partition of Berbice with the Dutch occupying the coastal areas and the blacks the interior.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="guyana_org">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>Template:Sfn Van Hoogenheim delayed his decision replying that the Society of Berbice in Amsterdam had to make that decision and that it would take three to four months.Template:Sfn He was waiting for support from neighboring colonies; a ship from Suriname had already arrived,<ref name="slavenhandel"/> and reinforcements from Barbados and Sint Eustatius soon followed.<ref name="sixth"/> Cuffy then ordered his forces to attack the Dutch in May 1763,Template:Sfn but in so doing had many losses. The defeat opened a division among the rebels and weakened their organization. Accara became the leader of a new faction opposed to Cuffy and led to a civil war among themselves. On 19 October 1763, it was reported to the governor that Captains Atta had revolted against Cuffy, and that Cuffy had committed suicide.<ref name="slavenhandel"/>Template:Sfn In the meantime, the colonists had already been strengthened by the arrival of soldiers. On 15 April 1764 Captain Accabre, the last of the insurgents, was captured.<ref name="slavenhandel"/>
National hero
The anniversary of the Berbice Rebellion, 23 February, has been Republic Day in Guyana since 1970. Cuffy is commemorated in the 1763 Monument in the Square of the Revolution in the capital Georgetown.<ref name=Ramsay />
This statue is called the 1763 Monument or the Cuffy Monument. The statue was designed by the Guyanese sculptor Philip Moore. It stands at 15 feet tall and weighs two and a half tons.
The figure of Cuffy standing on top has many symbols. His pouting mouth symbolizes his defiance, the face on his chest forms a symbolic breastplate that gives protection during battle, and the honed faces on his thighs represent revolutionaries from Guyanese history. He holds in his hands a dog and a pig, both being throttled with the dog representing covetousness and greed while the pig represents ignorance. <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>