
Posted in reply to the post by geomancer:
I've been a bit out of the loop what with my spotty internet connections over here in England. I have something to say on the subject of slavery. Contrary to what was asserted, slavery is no more an "African" institution than is hunting or any other human activity.
Geomancer, what I've been explaining is that Slavery was legally instituted in the British Colonies in North America by a black African because it was the practice he knew as an African. His name was Anthony Johnson and he acquired some black indentured servants from a Portuguese trading ship, then fought in the court system to make them legally his permanent property. He won. That's why I say it was the African practice that was legally instituted in the British Colonies, later to be abolished by the USA. I'm trying to be accurate with my words.
Anthony Johnson, African indentured servant in Virginia, established African-style slavery in American Colonies
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Johnson_(American_Colonial)
Slavery was abolished in the USA in large part because of the deeply Christian faith of many of the nation's Founders. Thomas Jefferson tried to abolish the practice with his original draft of the Declaration of Independence but it was removed in the final draft because the others realized they needed the cooperation of all the colonies to fight off their own government troops. It was several decades before the newly created USA was stable enough to fulfill that vision.
I think Benjamin Rush said it best: “Domestic slavery is repugnant to the principles of Christianity… It is rebellion against the authority of a common Father. It is a practical denial of the extent and efficacy of the death of a common Savior. It is an usurpation of the prerogative of the great Sovereign of the universe who has solemnly claimed an exclusive property in the souls of men.”
Founding Fathers' Christian Faith and their anti-slavery movement
https://www.christiananswers.net/q-wall/wal-g003.html
And I must object to claims that the practice has been abolished elsewhere. It is still practiced in Islamic culture and is highly advocated by Islamic leaders, even within the last couple of months.
Egyptian Muslim cleric: 'When I want a sex-slave, I go to the market and buy her'
https://truthbeknown.com/freethought...d-buy-her.htmlAccording to Huwaini, after Muslims invade and conquer a non-Muslim nation—in the course of waging an offensive jihad—the properties and persons of those infidels who refuse to convert or pay jizya and live as subjugated dhimmis, are to be seized as ghanima or "spoils of war."
Huwaini cited the Koran as his authority—boasting that it has an entire chapter named "spoils"—and the sunna of Muhammad, specifically as recorded in the famous Sahih Muslim hadith wherein the prophet ordered the Muslim armies to offer non-Muslims three choices: conversion, subjugation, or death/enslavement.
Huwaini said that infidel captives, the "spoils of war," are to be distributed among the Muslim combatants (i.e., jihadists) and taken to "the slave market, where slave-girls and concubines are sold." He referred to these latter by their dehumanizing name in the Koran, ma malakat aymanukum—"what your right hands possess"—in this context, sex-slaves: "You go to the market and buy her, and she becomes like your legal mate—though without a contract, a guardian, or any of that stuff—and this is agreed upon by the ulema." [The ulema or ulama refers to "the educated class of Muslim legal scholars."]
"In other words," Huwaini concluded, "when I want a sex-slave, I go to the market and pick whichever female I desire and buy her."...
It is still a common practice in Africa.
Modern Slavery in Africa
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_in_modern_Africa
This is well stated: "We must work for the Bantu masters. We cannot refuse to do so because we are likely to be beaten or be victims of insults and threats. Even though we agree to work all day in the fields, we are still asked to work even more, for example, to fetch firewood or go hunting. Most of the time, they pay us in kind, a worn loincloth for 10 workdays. We cannot refuse because we do not have a choice.”.
— Antislavery Society, Interview with an indigenous man in the Congo