"It's a unique memorial, containing the last remaining vestiges of the slaves' arrival," said anthropologist Milton Guran.
Next week, the UN cultural body UNESCO will consider whether to award what's known as Valongo Wharf world heritage status, winning protection as a site of global importance.
The wharf, or what remains of it, would join sites like the Taj Mahal in India and the ruined Inca city of Machu Picchu. UNESCO, which is meeting between July 2-12 in Krakow, Poland, already chose Rio de Janeiro as a heritage site in 2012, recognizing the city's unique combination of landscapes between mountains and the sea.
Now on the other side of the Atlantic from Senegal, across the grim route known as the "middle passage," the stones of Valongo Wharf commemorate the slaves' arrival. \
Today the Valongo site is not on the water, but well inland, following expansion of the original city. The remains were only discovered by accident in 2011 during massive works to refurbish the port area for the 2016 Olympics.
Valongo is where the slaves, often emaciated and sick after the voyage, were taken to be quarantined, sorted and sold.
"Those who survived the crossing were taken straight to the slave market," historian Claudio Honorato said.
"The whole neighborhood lived on this business. There were even manufacturers of the chains and iron collars," Honorato, a researcher at the Institute of New Blacks, which curates the mass grave site, said.
With slavery only being abolished in 1888, the echoes of that traumatic history continue to sound today in a country where racism is deeply embedded.
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