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- ARAB
MASTERS, AFRICAN SLAVES?
- The
African holocaust continues!
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- Reported
- May, 2002
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- African Americans have
contended for decades with a rage born of remembrance, a resentment
fomented by poignant images of Africans captured, bound, and
sent into the horrors of slavery. Some have been driven to travel
to the continent of Africa, and stand on the shores of West Africa
to view the actual places where the degradation of a people began.
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- At these places, the
grandchildren of ancient slaves, survivors of a holocaust, wrestle
with a terrible mixture of emotions. The passions produced by
the realization that the forts before them housed their African
ancestors in their last days of freedom before a long voyage
delivered them
into the hands of cruel masters.
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- The white-hot anger
that rises slowly in African Americans as they recall these events
and the epithets that dance in the heads of these observers of
the past, sometimes escapes their lips as
curses and bitter mutterings. Occasionally, African Americans
simply fulminate. These bitter expressions of resentment and
grief have only been cooled and soothed by a belief that African
Americans hold.
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- The comforting assurance
that the buying and selling of African slaves ended in the distant
past.
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- Such a belief is a
myth.
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- It has become clear
that the enslavement of Africans did not stop with the demise
of the Atlantic Slave Trade. That on this very day and hour,
as you read this, Africans are bought and sold in two North African
countries. In the Islamic Republic of Mauritania, indigenous
Africans continue
to be enslaved by their Arab-Berber masters. Although slavery
was declared abolished three times since Mauritania's independence
in 1960, it persists.
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- Slaves are given as
wedding gifts, traded for camels, guns or trucks, and inherited.
The children of slaves belong to the master and slaves who displease
their masters or attempt escapes are tortured in the most brutal
manner imaginable.
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- In Sudan, Africa's
largest country, the Islamic Republic of the Sudan, as a result
of an Islamic-vs. -Christian civil war, African women and children
(mostly Christian) are captured in raids on their villages and
sold as chattel slaves, sometimes, according to the UN in "modern-day
slave markets."
- The Mauritanian Embassy
and the Sudanese Mission were contacted several times for comment
they did not return the calls.
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- Mauritania-A Legacy
of Slave Trading
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- The enslavement of
Africans has existed in Mauritania for many centuries. It is
a country that joins the descendants of admixed Arabs and admixed
Berbers from the North, known as beydanes [because of European
imperial influence, now call themselves so-called white men],
and the African ethnic communities living in the South. Africans,
mostly sedentary farmers, consisting of the Tukulor, the Fulani,
and the Wolof tribes were brought north after being captured
by raiding Arab/Berber tribes.
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- This activity predates
and postdates the Atlantic slave trade. Simply put, the slave
trade that brought Africans to these shores never stopped in
Mauritania.
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- "More than 100,000
descendants of Africans conquered by Arabs during the 12th century
are still thought to be living as old-fashioned chattel slaves
in Mauritania" says Newsweek after conducting a yearlong,
four-continent investigation of slavery.
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- Differing only slightly
with this estimate, the U.S. State Department estimates that
90,000 Africans still live as the property of Berbers, "and
that's a conservative estimate," said Dr. Jacobs, who puts
the actual figure closer to 300,000 when interviewed by The News
Tribune. In addition, Newsweek states that "Aside from the
shantytowns and a strip of land along the Senegal River, virtually
all Africans are slaves, and they are more than half the population."
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- "[Indigenous]
Africans in Mauritania were converted to Islam more than 100
years ago," says Mohamed Athie, Executive Director of the
American Anti-Slavery Group, [and] . . ."the Koran forbids
the enslavement of fellow Muslims, but in this country race outranks
religious doctrine . . . Though they are Muslims, these people
are chattel: used for labor, sex and breeding."
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- Africa Watch reported
"Religion has been used by masters as an important instrument
to perpetuate slavery.
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- Relying on the fact
that Islam recognizes the practice of slavery, they have misinterpreted
it to justify current practices. In truth, Islam only permits
treating as slaves, non-Islamic captives caught after holy wars,
on condition that they are released as soon as they convert to
Islam.
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- People living as slaves
in Mauritania long before the first abolition in 1905 were all
Moslems, but this did not lead to their emancipation. We received
numerous complaints about the extent of which qadis (judges in
Islamic courts) continue to exercise their judicial functions
to protect the institution of slavery, rather than to ensure
its eradication."
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- Successive regimes
outlawed slavery in 1905, at independence in 1960, and most recently
in 1980. These edicts were only lip service and window dressing.
The proof is that since independence all economic and political
power has remained firmly in the hands of beydanes.
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- The Sudanese government
never passed any laws providing punishment for enslaving indigenous
Africans and they never bothered to tell many of the slaves about
emancipation. In 1980, the government sought to have its ruling
ratified by a body of religious jurist, the ulema. The jurists
said that slavery is not wrong on religious grounds, but that
outlawing it would be within the government's competence--provided
that owners were compensated for the manumission of slaves. Nobody
has ever applied for compensation."
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- These African slaves
in Mauritania are subjected to mental and emotional torments
that have always been concomitant with slavery. "Routine
punishments for the slightest fault include beatings, denial
of food and prolonged exposure to the sun, with hands and feet
tied together. "Serious" infringement of the master's
rule can mean prolonged tortures, documented in a report by Africa
Watch.
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- These include 1. The
"camel treatment," where a human being is wrapped around
the belly of a dehydrated came l and tied there. The camel is
then given water and drinks until its belly expands enough to
tear apart the slave.
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- 2. The "insect
treatment," where insects are put in his ears. The ears
are waxed shut. The arms and legs are bound. The person goes
insane from the bugs running around in his head.
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- 3. The "burning
coals" where the victim is seated flat, with his legs spread
out. He is then buried in sand up to his waist, until he cannot
move. Coals are placed between his legs and are burnt slowly.
After a while, the legs, thighs and sex of the victim are burnt.
There are other gruesome tortures, none of which is fit to describe
in a family newspaper" states Africa Watch. Another report
states that some slaves caught fleeing are often castrated or
branded like cattle.
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- Give us your
thoughts and opinions!
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