Slavery still exist In Africa: Origins of the African slave trade
http://www.scaruffi.com/politics/slavetra
.html
Slavery has always been part of
Sudan's history, but in recent years it has become a new means in
Sudanese warfare. Since
1995 the
John Eibner of the
Swiss organisation
Christian Solidarity International (
CSI) has been buying the freedom of about 25,
000 slaves for only
U$ 50,- per person. These slaves are mainly women and children, captured as war-booty by armed forces of the
Government of Sudan.
The
Origins of the
African Slave Trade
Muslim Arabs hunted, enslaved, tortured and killed ethnic
Africans for a millennium.
Middle Eastern Muslim Arabs have a history of over 1400 years of human slavery, which even continues today in the
Middle East.
Arab Muslims controlled, maintained, initiated slavery of ethnic Africans. Islams
Arab prophet
Muhammad himself brought, kept and sold
African slaves.
Today it is politically correct to blame some
European empires and the
USA for slavery (forgetting that it was practiced by everybody since prehistoric times). But I rarely read the other side of the story: that these first abolish slavery were precisely those countries (especially Britain and the USA). In 1787 the
Society for Effecting the
Abolition of the Slave Trade was founded in
England: it was the first society anywhere in the world opposed to slavery. In 1792
English prime minister
William Pitt called publicly for the end of the slave trade: it was the first time in history (anywhere in the world) that the ruler of a country had called for the abolition of slavery. No
African king and emperor had ever done so.
The civil rights movement of the
1960's have left many people with the belief that the slave trade was exclusively a
European/USA phenomenon and only evil white people were to blame for it. This is a simplistic scenario that hardly reflects the facts.
In most instances, no violence was necessary to obtain those slaves.
Contrary to legends and novels and
Hollywood movies, the white traders did not need to savagely kill entire tribes in order to exact their tribute in slaves. The kings would gladly sell their own subjects.
This explains why slavery became "black". In the middle ages, all
European countries outlawed slavery (of course,
Western powers retained countless "civilized" ways to enslave their citizens, but that's another story), whereas the
African kingdoms happily continued in their trade. Therefore, only colored people could be slaves, and that is how the stereotype for African-American slavery was born. It was not based on an ancestral hatred of blacks by whites, but simply on the fact that blacks were the only ones selling slaves, and they were selling people of their own race. (To be precise, Christians were also selling Muslim slaves captured in war, and Muslims were selling
Christian slaves captured in war, but neither the Christians of
Europe nor the Muslims of
Africa and the Middle East were selling their own people).
Then the Muslim the trade of African slaves declined rapidly when Arab domination was reduced by the emerging
European powers. (
Note:
Arabs continued to capture and sell slaves, but mostly in the
Mediterranean. In fact,
Robert Davis estimates that 1.25 million European Christians were enslaved by the "barbary states" of northern Africa.The rate of mortality of those Christian slaves in the
Islamic world was roughly the same as the mortality rate in the
Atlantic slave trade of the same period.)
The slaves were "sold" more or less legally by their (black) owners. The legends of European mercenaries capturing free people in the jungle are mostly just that: legends. A few mercenaries certainly stormed peaceful tribes , but that was not the rule. There was no need to risk their lives, so most of them didn't: they simply purchased people.
Sub-Saharan Africans never felt like they were one people, they felt (and still feel) that they belonged to different tribes. The distinctions of tribe were far stronger than the distinctions of race.It is also fair to say that, while everybody tolerated it, very few whites practiced slavery: in 1860 there were 385,000 USA citizens who owned slaves, or about 1.4% of the white population (there were 27 million whites in the USA). That percentage was zero in the states that did not allow slavery.
Incidentally, in 1830 about 25% of the free Negro slave masters in
South Carolina owned 10 or more slaves: that is a much higher percentage (ten times more) than the number of white slave owners. Thus slave owners were a tiny minority (1.4%) and it was not only whites: it was just about anybody who could, including blacks themselves.
Slavery would have remained common in most African kingdoms until this day: what crushed slavery in Africa was that all those African kingdoms became colonies of western European countries
......