Culled from the edoworld.net
By Femi Akomolafe. 1994
Very often,
the embalmers of Western history have tried to gloss over the sordid
trade in African slaves by Europeans, for over four centuries, by
putting up the argument that lot of Africans also made a fortune in the
dealings. From these 'mythorians' we often hear the stories that slavery
was rampant in Africa before the Europeans came along. Not only is
slavery been argued away, the colonial oppression of Africa is also been
massaged to make it appear less cruel. We are told that the colonies
also enjoyed the fruits of colonization. Christianity and Western-styled
education are often cited as the 'benefits' Africans derived from
colonialism. These apologists then asked why must it be that all the
opprobrium are directed against Europeans alone?"
Even more unfortunate is the fact that some Africans, especially those in the diaspora, have bought into these pseudo-arguments.
In this
essay I shall try to put slavery in proper historical perspectives, and
show how the chattel slavery introduced by capitalism differs from all
other forms of slavery.
To those who
said Africans benefitted from slavery and colonialism, one can argue,
with the same [twisted] logic, that the countries conquered by Nazis
also enjoyed the fruits of Nazism. We can say that Holland, which was
conquered and oppressed by German Nazis, also benefitted from their
forced oppression. We can argue that the French, the Belgian, and the
Dutch people who were forced into labor camps also benefitted! This
manner of thinking is, of course, simply outrageous.
As any
student of history knows, it was not only in Africa that slavery was
rampant in ancient times. The Hebrew, Greek, Roman history tells of
slavery. Watching slaves butchered each other was a game enjoyed by the
decadent rulers of the Roman Empire. The institution of slavery got
mentioned several times in the Christian Bible: 'Moreover of the
children of the strangers that do sojourn among you, of them shall ye
buy, and of their that are with you, which they begat in your land: and
they shall be your possession.' (Leviticus, 25, 44-46). 'If thou buy an
Hebrew servant, six years he shall serve: and in the seventh year he
shall go out free for nothing. If he came in by himself, he shall go out
by himself: if he were married, then his wife shall go out with him. If
his master have given him a wife, and she have born him sons or
daughters; the wife and her children shall be her master's, and he shall
go out by himself. And if the servant shall plainly say, I love my
master, my wife, and my children; I will not go out free: Then his
master shall bring him unto the judges; he shall also bring him to the
door, or unto the door post; and his master shall bore his ear through
with an aul; and he shall serve him for ever.' (Exodus XXI, 2-6). These
are just two of the examples of the Hebrew god's opinion of slavery. The
quotations are from the Christian bible.
The Jews,
like many other people, have been enslaved several times. But does the
fact that they have been oppressed several times in the past lessen the
enormity of the holocaust? We should be careful. In middle-age Europe
almost everyone was a serf. And it is often conveniently forgotten, by
Western mythorians, that two out of every three Europeans that migrated
to the New World was a serf - until Africans were introduced as slaves.
The Atlantic
slave-trade was different from all these earlier slavery in several
respects. Most enormously important is that it was the first form of
slavery that was solely motivated by commercial incentives. In earlier
times slaves were used as domestic workers and soldiers, since there
were no plantations or industrial factories where millions of
slave-labor was needed. The African slave-trade was a capitalist
invention. Readers are directed toSlavery and Capitalism by Eric Williams.
It was the
large-scale capitalist mode of production which required cheap labors
that induced the slave trade. It was the Industrial Revolution in Europe
that made it necessary to traffic in human lives on a colossal scale.
Slaves in
earlier times enjoyed social and individual rights - like marriage,
freedom to raise a family, speak their language and worship their gods,
rights which were denied the African slaves exported to the Americas.
Africans captured and taken into the new world were stripped of all
their personality and humanity - they could not even bear their own
names.
It was
capitalism that introduced chattel-slavery. "In the welter of
philosophical arguments for and against the slave trade, the one cogent
and inescapable argument in favor of it is easily hidden: in spite of
its risks, illegality, and blighted social status, slave trading was
enormously profitable. Despite the popular assertion that free labor was
cheaper, the price of slaves continued to go up and to compensate for
the risks of the trade." - The Slaver's Log Book, original manuscript by Captain Theophilus Conneau, Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1976, p. iv.
In older
times, slaves were not regarded as properties of their masters,
manumission was possible and occurred frequently. Since slaves in those
days were generally captured soldiers, they're treated humanely, because
the possibility always existed that a military or spiritual giant could
arise from their tribe and turn the tide in their favor. Moses was such
a figure. We read about the account of his leading the Hebrews out of
Egypt in the Christian Bible. These are some of the qualitative
differences, between the Atlantic slavery and earlier forms of slavery.
They are important differences which the ideologists, masqeurading as
scientists and historians, want to gloss over.
"Slaves
became profitable after the discovery of the New World had established a
seemingly insatiable demand for workers on the plantations. Slavery was
not new to Africa, but it had existed primarily in its domestic
form-involving rights as well as duties. In Bornu the kings sent slaves
to govern their provinces and Hausa kings also often ruled through
slaves. In Yorubaland, slaves of the ALAFIN often attain great power. It
was the Europeans who turned slavery into an industry and introduced
such well-documented barbarities as the rigors of the 'middle passage'
(across the Atlantic)." Walter Schwarz, Nigeria, Pall Mall Press. p.69).
People have
asked why Africans themselves engaged in the slave trade. Given the
function of slavery in African societies, the origin of their
participation is not too difficult to understand.
First and
foremost, slavery was not confused with the notion of superiority and
inferiority, a notion later invoked as justification for black slavery
in America. On the contrary, it was not at all uncommon for African
owners to adopt slave children or to marry slave women, who then became
full members of the family. Slaves of talent accumulated property and in
some instances reached the status of kings; Jaja of Opobo (in Nigeria)
is a case in point. Lacking contact with American slavery, African
traders could be expected to assume that the lives of slaves overseas
would be as much as they were in Africa; they had no way of knowing that
whites in America associated dark colors with sub-human qualities and
status, or that they would treat slaves as chattels generation after
generation. When Nigeria's Madame Tinubu, herself a slave-trader,
discovered the difference between domestic and non-African slavery, she
became an abolitionist, actively rejecting what she saw as the
corruption of African slavery by the unjust and inhumane habits of its
foreign practitioners and by the motivation to make war for profit on
the sale of captives.
What these
imperialist mythorians are striving to achieve is a situation whereby
Black people will continue to blame themselves for all the enormous
crimes visited on them by the white people. While African chiefs who got
corrupted and sold their folks are bandied about with glee, no mention
is made of many great African Kings and Queens who died fighting the
slave-raids. Mani-Congo, the ruler of a Congo state wrote king John III
of Portugal entreating that, "... we need from your kingdom no other
than priests and people to teach in schools, and no other goods but wine
and flour for the holy sacrament: that is why we beg of Your Highness
to help and assist us in this matter, commanding the factors that they
should send here neither mercenaries nor wares, because it is our will
that in these kingdoms, there should not be any trade in slaves or
markets for slaves."
Slavery in
Africa was punishment; as even a barbarian like Conneau recognized, ". .
.it was meted out to violators of serious tabus, to criminals, and
especially to enemies captured in war. Muslims in particular used
slavery in lieu of death sentence. Bondage instead of death was the
punishment for truly heinous offenses, as well as a solution to the
problem of getting rid of one's captured enemies. . ." Conneau, op. cit.
p.viii.
Language,
they say, defines those that uses it. The fact that slavery in Africa
does not have all the negative connotations and brutalities associated
with the chattel slavery, could be seen from the Yorubas who have the
same word 'ERU' for both slaves and prisoners of war. To them both are
unfortunate victims of wars. They are kept to serve terms and there are
strict rules on how they should be treated. They are never engaged in
plantations (there were none) with their mouths padlocked, they are not
chained like cattle in pens.
And whereas
Africans who participated in slavery had been well-documented, those
who fought tenaciously against it remain unsung. Let's contrast this
with the interpretation given to Europeans slave-drivers. Every West
African student knows the name of William Wilberforce - the 'Great
Abolitionist,' the role of Queen Victoria and other European Royalties
and 'Noblemen' who built their wealth on African slaves remain
relatively unknown. How many Americans would like to know that the
'Great Libertarian,' Thomas Jefferson, was a slave-owner?
It is
natural for the guilty to look for parallels, so as to diminished the
enormity of his crime, so it is with the Europeans. They are busy
collecting bogus anthropological findings and presenting same as
historical fact to lessen their culpability in the greatest crime ever
committed against a people, in the history of the world. Their assault
on history should not be allow to go unanswered.
I do not
write this to exonerate the African chiefs who sold slaves to the
Europeans. The fact we all have to bear in mind is that the Europeans
never launched a direct, frontal attack on Africa. In all the places
they conquered, they first divided the people by looking for a Judas
among them. With the promise of material benefits, such Judas' are
always the instrument used to destroy their own societies. For those who
would like to know more about this, I strongly recommend The destruction of Black Civilization,
by Chancellor Williams - published by Third World Press. We can see
this trend continuing today in Angola, where Savimbi is serving the
purpose of destroying his fatherland, in the interests of those who make
their living from the misfortunes of other people.
We should
excuse our fathers if they appeared to have been swindled by the
Europeans. Many of us, especially the immigrants from Africa, are also
victims of Euro-American propaganda. We were swayed by the images of a
paradisiacal Europe where streets are paved with gold and every white
man is a god. We believed the smiling missionaries who told us tales
about European hearts being filled with brotherly love and compassion.
How many of us would have believed that we are going to a society where
human beings are only as important as their bank accounts? How many of
us would have believed that in the European paradise, there are jobless,
homeless, copeless and hopeless people? How many of us would have
believed that Cecil Rhodes was not a philantropist but a pirate? How
many of us would have believed that in Euro-America exist homophobes,
parading the streets with lynching intentions? How many of us would have
believed that Europeans, after all, are capable of lying?
I shall end
this piece with the following quotation: "When someone removes the
cataracts of whiteness from our eyes, and when we look with unclouded
vision on the bloody shadows of the American past, we will recognize for
the first time that the Afro-American, who was so often second in
freedom, was also second in slavery.
Indeed, it
will be revealed that the Afro-American was third in slavery. For he
inherited his chains, in a manner of speaking, from the pioneer
bondsmen, who were red and white.
The story of
this succession, of how the red bondsmen and of how white men created a
system of white servitude which lasted in America for more than two
hundred years, the story of how this system was created and why, of how
white men and white women and white children were brought and sold like
cattle and transported across the seas in foul 'slave' ships, the story
of how all this happened, of how the white planter reduced white people
to temporary and lifetime servitude before stretching out his hands to
Ethiopia, has never been told before in all its dimensions. As a matter
of fact, the traditional embalmers of American experience seem to find
servitude enormously embarrassing, and prefer to dwell at length on
black bondage in America. But this maneuver distorts both black bondage
and the American experience. ...In the first place, white bondage lasted
for more than two centuries and involved a majority of the white
immigrants to the American colonies. It has been estimated that at least
two out of every three white colonists worked for a term of years in
the fields or kitchens as semi-slaves. A second point of immense
importance in this whole equation is the fact that white servitude was
the historical foundation upon which the system of black slavery was
conducted.
In other
words, white servitude was the historic proving ground for the
mechanisms of control and subordination used in Afro-American slavery.
The plantation pass, the fugitive slave law, the use of the overseer and
the house servant and the Uncle Tom, the forced separation of parents
and children on the auction block and the sexual exploitation of servant
women, the whipping post, the slave chains, the branding iron; all
these mechanism were tried out and perfected first on white men and
white women. Masters also developed a theory of internal white racism
and used the traditional Sambo and minstrel stereotypes to characterize
white servants who were said to be good natured and faithful but
biologically inferior and subject to laziness, immorality, and crime.
And all of this would seem to suggest that nothing substantial can be
said about the mechanisms of black bondage in America except against the
background and within the perspective of the system of white bondage in
America." - Lerone Bennet, quoted by John Henrik Clarke in Introduction
to World's Great Men of Color, Collier Books
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