ARAB
MASTERSBLACK SLAVES
by Samuel Cotton
Prologue
African Americans have contended for decades with a rage
born of remembrance--a resentment fomented by poignant images of black 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 race began. At these places, the grandchildren of ancient
slaves--survivors of a holocaust--wrestle with a terrible mixture of emotions. The
passions produced by t he 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. 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 be
en cooled and soothed by a belief that African Americans hold. The comforting assurance
that the buying and selling of black African slaves ended in the distant past. Such a
belief is a myth.
It has become clear that the enslavement of black Africans
did not stop with the demise of the Atlantic Slave Trade. That on this very day and hour,
as you read this, black Africans are bought and sold in two North African countries. In
the Islamic R epublic of Mauritania, black 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. Slaves are given as wedding gifts, traded
for camels, g uns 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.
In Sudan, Africa's largest country, the Islamic Republic
of the Sudan, as a result of an Islamic-vs.-Christian civil war, black 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 commentthey did not return the calls.
MauritaniaA Legacy of Slave
Trading
The enslavement of black Africans has existed in
Mauritania for many centuries. It is a country that joins the descendants of Arabs and
Berbers from the North, known as beydanes [white men], and the black ethnic communities
living in the South. Blacks, mostly sedentary farmers, consisting of the Tukulor, the
Fulani, and the Wolof tribes were brought north after being captured by raiding
Arab/Berber tribes. This activity predates and postdates the Atlantic slave trade. Simply
put, the slave trade that brought black Africans to these shores never stopped in
Mauritania. "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 co nducting a yearlong, four-continent investigation
of slavery.
Differing only slightly with this estimate, the U.S. State
Department estimates that 90,000 blacks 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 interviewe d by The News Tribune. In addition, Newsweek states that
"Aside from the shantytowns and a strip of land along the Senegal River, virtually
all blacks are slaves, and they are more than half the population."
"Black 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 r eligious doctrine. . . Though they are Muslims, these
people are chattel: used for labor, sex and breeding."
Africa Watch reported that "Religion has been used by
masters as an important instrument to perpetuate slavery. 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.
People living as slaves in Mauritania long before the first abolition in 1905 were all
Moslems, but this d id 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."
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
have remained firmly in the h ands of beydanes.
The Sudanese government never passed any laws providing
punishment for enslaving black 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 juri st, 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."
These black 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. 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. 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 ins ane from the bugs running around in his
head. 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. A fter 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.
Slave Trade in Sudan
"Sudan is the Arabic word for "black" but
only the southern part of the country is populated by black Africans who practice
traditional religions or Christianity. In the southern Nile Basin the Dinka and Nuer
tribes practice a semi-nomadic economy base d on cattle raising.
The Sudan is formerly a parliamentary democracy. From 1899
through 1955 it was ruled jointly by the British and the Egyptians as the Anglo-Egyptian
Sudan. Sudanese nationalism gradually redeveloped, and on January 1, 1956, Sudan became
independent. Upon independence, civil war broke out between the black southerners and the
Arab northerners who now ruled the country. This war lasted until 1972 and ended with the
Addis Ababa accord.
In 1989, Lt. General Omar Hassan Bashir and the Sudanese
People's Armed Forces overthrew Sudan's democratic government and dissolved all political
institutions. This new government and it's Popular Defense Force (PDF), is said to be
controlled by a fund amentalist Islamic group called the National Islamic Front.
This action set the stage for the second civil war when
southerners, 6,000,000 people, saw their special constitutional status overthrown by the
Arab government in Khartoum. Previously, the black south had its own regional parliament
and government. Additional pressures were the Arabization and Islamization of the country,
particularly the imposition since 1983 of Islamic law in the South. The people of the
South, many of them Christians, feel this is oppressive and strongly resisted. Under the
lead ership of John Garang, the Sudanese People Liberation Army (SPLA) was formed. Garang,
a former colonel in the Presidential Guard, is a Dinka and his movement has splintered
along tribal lines.
The civil war also led to the resurgence of the slave
trade. The Sudan was once virtually rid of slavery, but "Time has spun backward since
rebel leader John Garang rallied the African tribes of the country's fertile south against
the country's Muslim e lite" says Newsweek. ". . .The government
counterinsurgency strategy has included arming the Arab tribespeople who live on the fault
line between the Muslim north and the animist south. Consequently, there has been a
resurgence of traditional raiding--i ncluding slave taking, human-rights organization
charge." Arab militias, armed by the Government, raid villages, mostly those of the
Dinka tribe, shoot the men and enslave the women and children. These are kept as personal
property or marched north and sold," wrote AASG's Jacobs and Athie in the New York
Times (July 13, 94.) [and] "Many of the children are auctioned off."
Corroborating this testimony is Gaspar Biro, a specially
appointed United Nations human rights monitor, who returned from the Sudan in March to
report that ". . .abducted children are often sent to camps that become 20th century
slave markets. The price varies with supply. According to the London Economist (January 6,
90) in 1989, a woman or child could be bought for $90. In 1990, as the raids increased,
the price fell to $15.
Jacobs and Athie explain that "Not only are their
bodies in bondage, but they are also stripped of their cultural, religious and personal
identities." A case in point is the life of Abuk Thuc Akwar, a 13-year-old girl, who
along with 24 other children, was captured by the militia, marched north and given to a
farmer. Interviewed by an investigator from Anti-Slavery International she states that
"Throughout the day she worked in his sorghum fields and at night in his bed. During
the march she was raped and called a black donkey," the investigator wrote in a 1990
report.
Some have asked why the Dinkas allow themselves to be
treated like this? The Reporter, a journal published in England, interviewed an educated
Dinka. He explained: "The people taken are usually ignorant, and unorganized. Though
many in number, they h ave no power or weapons. When displaced, they are frightened,
vulnerable and weak. People in the slave trade, by contrast, are part of the government
system -- army, police, militia -- and Government people have relatives who need labor;
they turn a blind eye to it.
Many officials living now in Khartoum, who have served in
the South, have slaves in their homes, though they deny this. The head of state, Omar
Hassan el Beshir, is reputed to have six or eight slaves in his home in Khartoum."
The Race Factor
There is a belief among African Americans about Arabs near
and far that may cause them to shrink in disbelief and doubt the credibility of these
reports. Many blacks feel that racism and racist attitudes do not exist among Arabs,
especially Muslims, and that there is a common bond between black people and Arabs, and
again, I must add--particularly Muslims. It is partly for this reason, that the Arab slave
trade has always been played down.
This perception was reinforced among African Americans by
the experiences of Malcolm X. His positive interactions with beydanes (white men) played a
significant part in his transformation from Black Muslim to Orthodox Muslim. Malcolm
stated quite elate dly, "America needs to understand Islam, because this is the one
religion that erases from its society the race problem. "Throughout my travels in the
Muslim world, I have met, talked to, and even eaten with people who in America would have
been consider ed 'white'--but the 'white' attitude was removed from their minds by the
religion of Islam. . . .We were truly all the same (brothers)--because their belief in one
God had removed the 'white' from their minds, the 'white' from their behavior, and the
'whi te' from their attitude." (The Autobiography of Malcolm X pg. 345, 346) Are
these perceptions true? Does racism along with economics drive slavery in these two
countries, and possibly other Arab nations, as was the case in the Judeo-Christian We st?
This question must be asked of other Arab nations because "The UN report suspects
that many blacks are sold into Libya."
In Mauritania, Newsweek spoke to Fahl Ould Saed Ahmed the
owner of two 10-year slave boys. He was asked if there was racism or slavery [in his
country]. He replied "There is no racism, thaere is no slavery." The truth is
that "In Mauritania, there is a Muslim ruling class made up of Berbers and Arabs,
whose base is in the north of the country. They enslave thousands of blacks, who are cut
off from their tribes in the south. from their language and culture.< P> They are
Islamicized and made slaves for life." said Dr. Jacobs who, along with Mohamed Athie
was featured on a PBS expose of modern day slavery that aired on Tony Brown's Journal, the
week of January 6 to the 12. "All the blacks of Mauritania converte d to Islam a
hundred years ago," Athie said. "The nation forbids it. The religion forbids it.
Yet slavery goes on. And it is clearly racial in nature. These people are slaves solely
because they are black. A non-black Muslim is not enslaved, a black one is."
In 1992, Newsweek spoke to a slave named Dada Ould Mbarek
in Mauritania: "He was asked: weren't Mauritania's slaves emancipated? 'I never heard
of it,' he said. 'And what's more, I don't believe it. Slaves free? Never here.' Isn't he
the same as hi s master? 'No, I'm different. A master is a master and a slave is a slave.
Masters are white, slaves are black.' Is this just? 'Naturally, we blacks should be the
slaves of the whites." Dada Ould Mbarek manifests the effects of physical and
psycholog ical slavery. He sadly has come to think that black men are inferior to whites.
Africa Watch spoke to Moussa Ndiaye (not his real name),
he was a teacher in Tagant region from 1984 until he was deported in May 1989. Moussa
Ndiaye sheds further light on the race factor when he explains that ". . .The center
of the social order is th e white master who has the right to do nothing while the blacks
do all the work.
When the master goes to the fields, he usually sits in the
shade of a tree and is served tea while the blacks do all the work. No white woman does
any domestic work. All household tasks are done by slave women who have grown up in the
household. Altho ugh she grows up together with the white children, she is made to
understand, from a tender age, that she is at the service of the master."
Slavery and the Medias
Silence
Since the existence of human bondage has been proved
undoubtely, there are two questions that must be answered. First, why has the media given
such little attention to this story, and second, who if anyone, is doing anything about
it.
Dr. Jacobs, Director of Research of AASG, claims that
slavery has been legitimately documented by any number of human rights groups around the
globe for many years now. So, why is there so little coverage?
Jacobs: "People have to understand that what is
called "the news" is primarily the account of the exploits of white people.
Blacks appear only in the context of white action, usually on the receiving end.
Non-whites are not portrayed as agents of histo ry, only as victims and responders to it.
Newscasters who are conservative show good white action to celebrate Western civilization.
Liberal newscasters show bad white action to scold and/or to improve whites.
In North Africa, there are no white actors, good or bad,
so the place is essentially invisible. Compare this to South Africa where the news went
wild, in my view, to show whites how they might become better people by abandoning
apartheid. The media doe sn't care that the slaves in Khartoum suffer more than the
disenfranchised in Johannesburg, no whites, no news."
Q: But some would say, it is hard for the media to get
into the closed societies of Mauritania and Sudan.
A: "They get everywhere else. If whites were made
slaves, they'd find a way to cover it. And besides, there are some pictures. Newsweek did
one story on it, but the media does not think it is important enough to follow up."
A Political Problem
Slavery is not the work solely of individuals--the
governments of Mauritania and the Sudan are involved. Gaspar Biro, the UN human rights
monitor reports that the government in Khartoum is complicit in these crimes, if not
committing them outright. Con sequently, this problem of slavery requires both the actions
of individuals and political action from the United States and other world governments.
There have been efforts from certain congressmen to pass
needed legislation. Congressman Barney Frank, in part as a response of the work of Athie
and Jacobs, introduced a House Resolution (#572) last year in the Congress that would
require the US to act against slaving nations. It was lost in the shuffle and died at the
end of a hectic session. Frank says he will soon re-introduce the item in this session of
Congress. In addition, Congressman Frank Torricelli (D-NJ) is calling for Congressional
Heari ngs on the slave trade.
Yet a peculiar silence is observed from those who would be
the most natural forces to fight for black slaves -- the coalition that fought apartheid
-- blacks and liberals. When asked on PBS who was helping their group to fight the slave
trade, Jacobs an d Athie cited Frank and Torricelli, but said no one from the Black Caucus
was being supportive.
When asked recently by a reporter, Rep. Donald Payne
(D-NJ) said he would support Barney Frank's Resolution. and, referring to the Black
Caucus, he said "We certainly have grave concerns about these reported cases, [and]
"I remember that we condemned th e treatment of black people in Mauritania in the
House about two years ago." Yet, it seems strange that in condemning the treatment of
Mauritanians, the Black Caucus frames the issue in Mauritania as one of human rights, and
does not speak of it as chatt el slavery. Torricelli has no such compunction.
Similarly, Payne went to Sudan last year, visited the
refugee camps, but again came back not mentioning the issue of slavery, yet UN special
investigator Gaspar Biro came back with stories of modern day slave markets. Has Payne not
read Biro's report?
Frank Kiehne, Payne's foreign affairs advisor responded,
"We're convinced that slavery still exists in Mauritnia. The congressman is one of
those sponsoring HR505, the bill to cut off foreign aid to Mauritania until they shape up.
We know that slavery exists in the Sudan but it's pretty hard to pin down, because it's
mainly in the south and it's hard to get in and out of there."
The Black Caucus was criticized last March, when 25 relief
groups met to call for stepped-up pressures on the Sudanese government. Washington Post
staff writer Ken Ringle reported that "the black caucus was noticeably absent."
The only black Congressman to attend was Floyd Flake (D-N.Y.) who stated clearly that he
was there on his own and not as a representative of the Caucus.
One of the conference arrangers, Nina Shea, of the Puebla
Institute, a Washington-based human rights group focusing on religio us freedom,
speculated that the caucus didn't want to be involved in the criticism of an Islamic
government.
Ringle himself guessed that the issue of black slaves
serving Arab Islamic masters was "discomfiting to those in this country promoting the
idea of African unity, in part because it reawakens the image of the Arab slave trade in
Africa that long pre-date d and post-dated that in the New World." He went on to say
that the slave issue could "further exacerbate the tensions between black Christian
ministers and followers of Louis Farrakan's National of Islam."
On the TV program, Tony Brown's Journal, Jacobs and Athie
said they had written and called members of the caucus with their documentation of the
slave trade, but were ignored. When asked specifically if he thought there was a fear on
the part of the cau cus to criticize an Islamic country or if the caucus had Farrakan in
mind when they thought about black slaves serving Arab Islamic masters, Jacobs replied,
"I can't imagine any member of the Black Caucus who would place his relationship with
anybody or a nything in front of what he must feel is a sacred duty to black women and
children who are now slaves. I am sure that when they finally become aware of this issue,
they will act with dispatch."
Mohamed Athie, as the keynote speaker on Martin Luther
King Day at the University of Chicago said, "We need people to support the
legislative proposals of Barney Frank and Robert Toricelli,"
Jacobs said . "We need to get the word out that these
things are going on. We are trying to form a grass-roots organization to combat this
horror. To my mind, the largest pressure brought upon South Africa to end apartheid came
from the United States and especially from the organized blacks of the United States. We
need the Congressional Black Caucus and other black organizations to really pay attention
to this issue of slavery. We can end slavery like we ended apartheid."
Despite overwhelming evidence of the slave trade, the
silence and apathy persist. Despite the powerful evidence presented by Dr. Jacobs --
evidence strong enough in June, to get the beleaguered American branch of Amnesty
International to decide it was time to abolish slavery.
When presented with evidence of human bondage in North
Africa, the members voted to add to an already crowded mandate the emancipation of chattel
slaves. What more do black and white political officials need to know to shatter t heir
apathy and strange silence?
Perhaps fear of incurring the wrath of the Islamic
governments of Mauritania and the Sudan lies at the heart of the issue. It is dangerous
business to expose corrupt regimes in Islamic countries.
Examine the experiences of Gaspar Biro. Gaspar Biro is a
36-year-old Romanian-born lawyer, who was dispatched by the U.N. a year ago to investigate
allegations of human rights abuses so widespread and so flagrant they have drawn
denunciations from around the globe says the Washington Post. Biro produced a 4 2-page
report to the U.N.'s Commission on Human Rights in Geneva. He pointed to slave
trafficking, and that the Sudanese criminal law provides routinely for flogging,
amputation, death by stoning, and in special cases, for the execution and crucifixion of
children as young as 7. The Sudanese called his report a "flagr ant blasphemy and a
deliberate insult to the Islamic Religion" on which it says Sudanese law is based. In
the press they compared him to Salman Rushdie in affronts to the Koran "for which Mr.
Biro should bear the responsibility."
The Washington Post states that Biro said it would be out
of his mandate as a monitor or "Special Rapporteur" for the U.N. to question the
wisdom of any religious ordinance or belief. He said provisions of Sudanese law providing
for things like the ston ing of adulterers or the crucifixion of children were brought
into effect not by religious authorities but by the secular machinery of a secular
government organized in many respects like a Western-style state. "It's a very
schizoid situation over there. They didn't have to join these U.N. conventions on human
rights," he said. "Saudi Arabia, for example, has not. But since they did they
must be held accountable. That was my mission to examine this sort of thing." Despite
this logic, an official rep ly from the Sudanese government called it "a prejudiced
report against Muslim beliefs all over the world, demeaning the source of their
inspiration and faith."
In addition, to veiled threats against his life, Biro has
received very clear threats. On March 25, 1994 Biro had breakfast at the Puebla Institute,
located in Washington, with about 10 members of groups making up the coalition for Peace
in the Horn of Africa. In walks Safwat Siddiq of the Sudanese embassy who had not been
invited. Safwat Siddiq then proceeded to tape the proceedings and warn Biro about offenses
to Islam. "He was very polite," said Puebla's Nina Shea, who witnessed and
reported the e ncounter. "But the point was made."
When asked about these threats, Biro said "I was
aware from the first day of this situation, and that it would come to this state if I
described things as they are," he said softly. "This, you see, is nothing new
for me." Biro was raised amid the repre ssive Romania of the late dictator Nicolae
Ceausescu, "I lived always with one foot in prison. I know well how totalitarian
governments operate, how they think they can hide things and what they try to do. I think
perhaps the Sudanese overlooked that possibility when they let me in the country."
On this subject of attacking Islam, Rep. Barney Frank said
in the Washington Post: "But this is not an indictment of all Arabs, just a few
Arabs. When abuses occur it is much better to identify them than to ignore them because of
fear or possible reper cussions. That way the abuse continues and the situation
worsens." Frank is correct. This is not an indictment of the tenets of Islam, but of
those men who claim to be Muslim but are not following its teachings.
This should cause Arabs to rise up in indignation--not at
those exposing this injustice, but at those disrespecting the word of Allah. And Muslims
have done just that. Courageous Arabs have risked there lives to get this information out.
Men who kno w and actually live the law of Allah. Men like
Dr. Ushari Ahmad Mahmud, a lecturer at Khartoum University, and Dr. Suleyman Ali Baldo who
drew the attention of the international community to the re-emergence of slavery in Sudan.
In July 1987 they wrote Al Diein Massacre: Slavery in the Sudan, which detailed the
massacre of over 1,000 Dinka men women and children, some of whom were burnt to death, in
El Diein, the main town in the province of Southern Darfur. Bravely these two men reported
that hundred s of Dinka children and women have been kidnapped from Diein and other
villages by government-supported Rizeigat militias and are now living in slavery.
The two Muslims stated that "We believe it is the
role of Sudanese intellectuals to squarely address instances of the violation of human
right[s] in the country. And it was this belief which prompted us to investigate the Diein
massacre and the re-emergence of slavery in the Sudan.. . .We present the results of our
investigations into the massacre and t he practice of slavery in this report. We hope that
it will encourage others to work to expose publicly all violations of human rights in the
Sudan so that we may work together to change the conditions that make such violations
possible.
Epilogue
When that which was done in the dark is brought into the
light. When evils are exposed, such as the evils of slavery, invariably the characters of
those who grasp the revelation are ineluctably tested. For, it is easy to rant and rage
against horrors lost in antiquity, to express bitterness and anger for those tortured
souls now asleep in death, or to shake our fists at ghosts. The difficulty lies in
opposing a living adversary whose rapacious appetites have devastated all that one holds
dear.
It is a profound experience when an adversary stops
running and turns to meet you in battle. When a plunderer points to his spoils and hurls a
challenge that finds its mark in the very center of your being -- " Yes, I did
it--now what are you going to do about it?" Yes, what will be done about the question
of slavery?
It must be remembered that this present curse is also a
blessing--an opportunity. History rarely gives one a chance to confront a tormentor lost
to time and place. Have we not, one and all, fantasized and conjured up visions of
arriving in time to prevent the rape of mother Africa, or fighting our way to the main
deck of the slave ship Zion to free its terrified cargo. Well, a window in time has
reopened, but what will we do about it?
Ultimately, each African American must examine the
evidence with their heart and conscience, and decide where they will stand on this issue
of slavery. Whether they choose to close their eyes and ignore the enslavement of black
Africanspreferring to shake their fist at the ghosts of the distant past. Or whether
they decide to join the ranks of the newly formed abolitionist movements to raise a
unified voice in protest. One thing is clear: Until the enslavement of Black African men,
women, and chil dren vanishes from this earth, this discussion will go on--and on, and on.