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Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History - Education - Nairaland

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Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by A001: 2:46am On Oct 13, 2021
The creation of the modern, interconnected world is generally credited to European pioneers. But Africa was the wellspring for almost everything they achieved – and African lives were the terrible cost.

It would be unusual for a story that begins in the wrong place to arrive at the right conclusions. And so it is with the history of how the modern world was made.

Traditional accounts have accorded a primacy to Europe’s 15th-century Age of Discovery, and to the maritime connection it established between west and east.

Paired with this historic feat is the momentous, if accidental, discovery of what came to be known as the New World.

Other explanations for the emergence of the modern world reside in the ethics and temperament that some associate with Judeo-Christian beliefs, or with the development and spread of the scientific method, or, more chauvinistically still, with Europeans’ often-professed belief in their unique ingenuity and inventiveness.

In the popular imagination, these ideas have become associated with the work ethic, individualism and entrepreneurial drive that supposedly flowed from the Protestant Reformation in places such as England and Holland.

Of course, there is no denying the significance of the voyages of mariners such as Vasco da Gama, who reached India via the Indian Ocean in 1498, Ferdinand Magellan, who travelled west to Asia, skirting the southern tip of South America, and Christopher Columbus.

As the author Marie Arana has elegantly said of Columbus, when he sailed west, “he had been a medieval man from a medieval world, surrounded by medieval notions about Cyclops, pygmies, Amazons, dog-faced natives, antipodeans who walk on their heads and think with their feet – about dark-skinned, giant-eared races who inhabit the lands where gold and precious gems grow.

When he stepped on to American soil, however, he did more than enter a new world: he stepped into a new age.”

Although these famous feats of discovery dominate the popular imagination, they obscure the true beginnings of the story of how the globe became permanently stitched together and thus became “modern”.

If we look more closely at the evidence, it will become clear that Africa played a central role in this history. By miscasting the role of Africa, generations have been taught a profoundly misleading story about the origins of modernity.

The first impetus for the Age of Discovery was not Europe’s yearning for ties with Asia, as so many of us learned in school, but rather its centuries-old desire to forge trading ties with legendarily rich Black societies hidden away in the heart of “darkest” west Africa.

Iberia’s most famous sailors cut their teeth not seeking routes to Asia, but rather plying the west African coastline.

This is where they perfected techniques of mapmaking and navigation, where Spain and Portugal experimented with improved ship designs, and where Columbus came to understand the Atlantic Ocean winds and currents well enough that he would later reach the western limits of the sea with a confidence that no European had previously had before him, of being able to return home.

Well before he mounted his expeditions on behalf of Spain, Columbus, an Italian from Genoa, had sailed to Europe’s first large, fortified overseas outpost, which was located in the tropics at Elmina, in modern-day Ghana. European expeditions to west Africa in the mid-15th century were bound up in a search for gold.

It was the trade in this precious metal, discovered in what is now Ghana by the Portuguese in 1471, and secured by the building of the fort at Elmina in 1482, that helped fund Vasco da Gama’s later mission of discovery to Asia.

This robust new supply of gold helped make it possible for Lisbon, until then the seat of a small and impecunious European crown, to steal a march on its neighbours and radically alter the course of world history.

Bartolomeu Dias, another Portuguese explorer who knew Elmina well, rounded Africa’s Cape of Good Hope in 1488, proving the existence of a sea route to what would become known as the Indian Ocean.

But no onward voyage to Asia would even be attempted for nearly a decade after that, when Da Gama finally sailed to Calicut (now known as Kozhikode in India).

The teaching of history about this era of iconic discoveries is confoundingly silent not only on that decade, but on the nearly three decades between the Portuguese arrival at Elmina in 1471 and their landing in India in 1498.

It was this moment, when Europe and what is nowadays styled sub-Saharan Africa came into permanent deep contact, that laid the foundations of the modern age.

The elision of these three pivotal decades is merely one example of a centuries-long process of diminishment, trivialisation and erasure of Africans and people of African descent from the story of the modern world.

It is not that the basic facts are unknown; it is that they have been siloed, overlooked or swept into dark corners.

It is essential to restore key chapters such as these to their proper place of prominence in our common narrative of modernity.

Starting in the 15th century, encounters between Africans and Europeans set the most Atlantic-oriented Europeans on a path that would eventually propel their continent past the great civilisational centres of Asia and the Islamic world in wealth and power.

The rise of Europe was not founded on any innate or permanent characteristics that produced superiority. To a degree that remains unrecognised, it was built on Europe’s economic and political relations with Africa.

The heart of the matter here, of course, was the massive, centuries-long transatlantic trade in enslaved people who were put to work growing sugar, tobacco, cotton and other cash crops on the plantations of the New World.

The long thread that leads us to the present began in those three decades at the end of the 15th century, when commerce blossomed between Portugal and Africa, sending a newfound prosperity washing over what had previously been a marginal European country.

It drove urbanisation in Portugal on an unprecedented scale, and created new identities that gradually freed many people from feudal ties to the land.

One of these novel identities was nationhood, whose origins were bound up in questing for wealth in faraway lands, and soon thereafter in emigration and colonisation in the tropics.

As Portugal started to venture out into the world in the 1400s – and for nearly a century this meant almost exclusively to Africa – its people were among the first to make another conceptual leap.

They began to think of discovery not merely as the simple act of stumbling upon assorted novelties or arriving wide-eyed in never-before-visited places, but rather as something new and more abstract. Discovery became a mindset, and this would become another cornerstone of modernity.

It meant understanding that the world was infinite in its social complexity, and this required a broadening of consciousness, even amid the colossal violence and horror that accompanied this process, and an ever more systematic unmooring from provincialism.

The fateful engagement between Europe and sub-Saharan Africa produced civilisational transformations in both regions, as well as in the wider world – ones that, looking back today, produced an exceptionally crisp division between “before” and “after”.

Back then, Europeans were mindful of this reality. As late as the 1530s, well after the start of Portugal’s more famous spice trade with Asia, Lisbon still recognised Africa as the leading driver of all that was new.

João de Barros, a counsellor to that country’s crown, wrote: “I do not know in this Kingdom a yoke of land, toll, tithe, excise or any other Royal tax more reliable … than the profits of commerce in Guinea.”

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/news/2021/oct/12/africa-slaves-erased-from-history-modern-world

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Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by A001: 2:48am On Oct 13, 2021
But as remarkable as Barros’s acknowledgment of African vitality was, his omission of slavery as a pillar of the relationship was equally notable.

It may have been the first time that the centrality of Black bondage was simply passed over in an informed account of modernity in the west. It would not be the last.

When Barros wrote, Portugal overwhelmingly dominated Europe’s trade in Africans, and slavery was beginning to rival gold as Portugal’s most lucrative source of African bounty.

By then, it was already on its way to becoming the foundation of a new economic system based on plantation agriculture. Over time, that system would generate far more wealth for Europe than African gold or Asian silks and spices.

Sounding like an updated Barros, Malachy Postlethwayt, a leading 18th-century British expert on commerce, called the rents and revenues of plantation slave labour “the fundamental prop and support” of his country’s prosperity.

He described the British empire as “a magnificent superstructure of American commerce and naval power [built] on an African foundation”.

Around the same time, an equally prominent French thinker, Guillaume-Thomas-François de Raynal, described Europe’s plantations worked by African enslaved people as “the principal cause of the rapid motion which now agitates the universe”.

Daniel Defoe, the English author of Robinson Crusoe, but also a trader, pamphleteer and spy, bested both when he wrote: “No African trade, no negroes; no negroes, no sugars, gingers, indicoes [sic] etc; no sugar etc, no islands, no continent; no continent, no trade.”

Postlethwayt, Raynal and Defoe were surely right, even if they did not comprehend all of the reasons why. More than any other part of the world, Africa has been the linchpin of the machine of modernity.

Without African peoples trafficked from its shores, the Americas would have counted for little in the ascendance of the west. African labour, in the form of enslaved people, was what made the very development of the Americas possible.

Without it, Europe’s colonial projects in the New World are unimaginable.

Through the development of plantation agriculture and a succession of history-altering commercial crops – tobacco, coffee, cacao, indigo, rice and, above all, sugar – Europe’s deep and often brutal ties with Africa drove the birth of a truly global capitalist economy.

Slave-grown sugar hastened the coming together of the processes we call industrialisation.

It radically transformed diets, making possible much higher worker productivity. And in doing so, sugar revolutionised European society.

In sugar’s wake, cotton grown by enslaved people in the American south helped launch formal industrialisation, along with a second wave of consumerism. Abundant and varied clothing for the masses became a reality for the first time in human history.

The scale of the American antebellum cotton boom, which made this possible, was nothing short of astonishing.

The value derived from the trade and ownership of enslaved people in the US alone – as distinct from the cotton and other products they produced – was greater than that of all of the country’s factories, railroads and canals combined.

Now-forgotten European contests over control of the African bounty partly built the modern world, by strengthening fixed national allegiances. Spain and Portugal waged fierce naval battles in west Africa over access to gold. Holland and Portugal, then unified with Spain, fought something little short of a world war in the 17th century in present-day Congo and Angola, vying for control of trade in the richest sources of enslaved people in Africa. On the far side of the Atlantic, Brazil – the biggest producer of slave-grown sugar in the early 17th century – was caught up in this same struggle, and repeatedly changed hands. Later in that same century, England fought Spain over control of the Caribbean.

Why did faraway powers contend so fiercely over such things? Tiny Barbados provides an answer. By the mid-1660s, just three decades or so after England initiated an African slave-labour model for its plantations there – one that was first implemented in the Portuguese colony of São Tomé little more than a century earlier – sugar from Barbados was worth more than the metal exports of all of Spanish America.

Amid this story of military struggles for control of land and slaves, and of the economic miracles they produced, another kind of conflict is visible: a war on Black people themselves.

This involved the consistent pursuit of strategies for beating Africans into submission, for making them enslave one another, and for recruiting Black people as proxies and auxiliaries, whether to secure territories from native populations of the New World or joust with European rivals in the Americas.

To say this is not to deprive Africans of agency. The impact of this warfare on Africa’s subsequent development, however, has been immeasurable.

Nowadays, the consensus estimate on the numbers of Africans brought to the Americas hovers about 12 million.

Lost in this atrocious but far too neat accounting is the likelihood that another 6 million Africans were killed in or near their homelands during the hunt for slaves, before they could be placed in chains.

Estimates vary, but between 5% and 40% perished during brutal overland treks to the coast, or while being held, often for months, in barracoons, or holding pens, as they awaited embarkation on slave ships.

And another 10% of those who were taken aboard died at sea during an Atlantic transit that constituted an extreme physical and psychological test for all those who were subjected to it.

When one considers that Africa’s total population in the mid-19th century was probably about 100 million, one begins to gauge the enormity of the demographic assault that the slave trade represented.

This war on Black people raged just as fiercely on the western shores of the Atlantic, as did the resistance. Societies of runaways bent on freedom came together in many places, from Brazil and Jamaica to Florida.

It is often remarked that Africans themselves sold enslaved people to Europeans. What is less well known is that in many parts of Africa, such as the Kingdom of Kongo and Benin, Africans fought to end the trade in human beings once they understood its full impact on their own societies.

Enslaved people resisted in numerous shipboard revolts, or by simply taking their own lives at sea rather than submit to bondage.

In most of the New World plantation societies, the average remaining lifespan of trafficked Black people was reckoned at seven years or less.

In 1751, an English planter on Antigua summed up the prevailing slaveowner sentiment this way: “It was cheaper to work slaves to the utmost, and by the little fare and hard usage, to wear them out before they become useless, and unable to do service; and then to buy new ones to fill up their places.”

https://www.theguardian.com/news/2021/oct/12/africa-slaves-erased-from-history-modern-world
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by A001: 3:00am On Oct 13, 2021
I was lucky to be introduced to Africa while still a university student, first as an enthralled visitor during college breaks, and later living there for six years after graduation.

I cut my teeth as a journalist writing about Africa and travelling widely, and I married a woman who had grown up in Ivory Coast, but whose family was from a nearby part of Ghana.

I wasn’t at all aware of it at the time, but it was within a few miles of her ancestral village that Europeans first stumbled upon the abundant sources of west African gold that they had been searching for feverishly for several decades in the 15th century.

It was a discovery that changed the world.

I left west Africa to join the New York Times in 1986. Three years later, my first assignment as a foreign correspondent was to cover the Caribbean basin.

Here were gathered some of the most important staging areas for subsequent global transformations.

Specialists aside, few imagine that islands like Barbados and Jamaica were far more important in their day than were the English colonies that would become the United States.

The nation now known as Haiti most of all. In the 18th century it became the richest colony in history, and in the 19th, by dint of its slave population’s successful revolution, Haiti rivalled the US in terms of its influence on the world, notably in helping fulfil the most fundamental Enlightenment value of all: ending slavery.

Now and then during my time in the Caribbean, I could see glimmers of this region’s extraordinary role in our global narrative.

One one occasion, in the Dominican Republic, I stood knee-deep in seawater witnessing an archaeological dig that sought to identify a wreck from Columbus’s first voyage.

Another time, I hiked a verdant peak in northern Haiti where Henri Christophe, that country’s early Black leader, built a formidable fortress, the Citadelle Laferrière, arming it with 365 cannon to defend the country’s hard-won independence from France.

Other hints came when I wandered into the mountains and rainforests of Jamaica and Suriname, respectively, and was thrilled to be able to make myself understood speaking bits of Twi (the lingua franca of Ghana, which I had learned while courting my wife) as I spoke with the descendants of proud runaway slave communities known as maroons.

But back then, I still had no big picture in mind; like most correspondents, I was too busy following the news to pursue sweeping historical connections very far.

Even knowing the silence and enforced ignorance that surround the central contribution of Africa and Africans to the making of the modern world, I have often been surprised by just how difficult it can be to access some of the physical traces of this history, or to find local forms of remembrance that raise this African role to its proper dimension.

I have seen this in many places that have shaped our common history, such as Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where the publicly established sites of Atlantic memory are few.

I saw it in São Tomé, the island where the slave-plantation-complex model that would drive wealth creation in the North Atlantic for four centuries appeared for the first time, fully formed – a fact for which there is nary a plaque or commemoration.

My biggest surprise came in Barbados, whose slave-produced sugar, arguably more than any other place on earth, helped seal England’s ascension in the 17th century.

I visited the island not long ago, determined to find as many traces of this legacy as possible, only to discover how thoroughly they had been hidden or effaced.

Among my top priorities was to visit one of the largest slave cemeteries anywhere in the hemisphere, which included the excavated remains of nearly 600 people.

It took me several attempts just to find the cemetery, which had no signage from any public road. Few local residents seemed aware of its historical importance, or even of its existence.

All I discovered when I drove down a bumpy dirt road, proceeding as far as I could until instinct told me to get out and walk, was a modest clearing alongside an active plantation whose cane had grown as tall as I am.

There was a faded sign attached to a rusty iron post. It proclaimed the site to be part of something called “The Slave Route”, but it provided no further information.

With the sun racing downward in the western sky, I paced about, snapped a few photographs, and then finally collected myself as the wind whistled through the cane.

I tried mightily to conjure some sense of the horrors that had transpired nearby, and of the abundant wealth and pleasure that the sweat of the dead had procured for others.

But the most egregious forms of historical erasure do not involve an assortment of mostly small, former slave-trading or plantation societies scattered around the Atlantic Rim. The most important site of erasure, by far, has been the minds of people in the rich world.

As I write these words, the US and some other North Atlantic communities, from Richmond, Virginia, to Bristol, England, have recently experienced extraordinary moments of iconoclasm.

We have seen the pulling down of statues of people who were long perceived to be heroes of imperial and economic systems built on the violent exploitation of people extracted from Africa.

For these gestures to have more lasting meaning, an even bigger and more challenging task remains for us.

It requires that we transform how we understand the history of the last six centuries and, specifically, of Africa’s central role in making possible nearly everything that is today familiar to us.

This will involve rewriting school lessons about history just as much as it will require the reinvention of university curricula.

It will challenge journalists to rethink the way we describe and explain the world we all inhabit.

It will require all of us to re-examine what we know or think we know about how the present-day world was built, and to begin incorporating this new understanding into our everyday discussions.

In this task, we can no longer hide behind ignorance.

Nearly a century ago, WEB Du Bois had already affirmed much of what we needed to know on this topic. “It was black labour that established the modern world commerce, which began first as a commerce in the bodies of the slaves themselves,” he wrote. Now is the time to finally acknowledge this.

Adapted from Born in Blackness: Africa, Africans, and the Making of the Modern World, 1471 to the Second World War, by Howard W French, published by WW Norton & Co and available at guardianbookshop.com

https://www.theguardian.com/news/2021/oct/12/africa-slaves-erased-from-history-modern-world

2 Likes

Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by A001: 3:00am On Oct 13, 2021
Cc: musicwriter, macof, et al.
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by Babaetsu1(m): 3:04am On Oct 13, 2021
Who wan read am finish?
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by VeeVeeMyLuv(m): 3:04am On Oct 13, 2021
For how long are we going to keep shifting blame & responsibility.

Okay what of the present Blackman? What is stopping them from creating heaven on earth like the white man has done?

Okay even if the blackman intellect is not developed to conceive and design a highly organised egalitarian flourishing and prosperous society, can't he atleast copy the good things the white has established and replicate it for his own betterment?

Yes it (the slave trade) perpetrated by the colonialists was a very painful British horrible experience.

But must we now revisit repeat these nasty ugly events upon ourselves
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by A001: 3:14am On Oct 13, 2021
VeeVeeMyLuv:
For how long are we going to keep shifting blame & responsibility.

Okay what of the present Blackman? What is stopping them from creating heaven on earth like the white man has done?

Okay even if the blackman intellect is not developed to conceive and design a highly organised egalitarian flourishing and prosperous society, can't he atleast copy the good things the white has established and replicate it for his own betterment?
A nation whose citizens don't know their history but worship the god introduced to and enforced on them by their slavemasters can't develop.

If you're a Nigerian Christian or a Muslim, you're a major part of the problem because religious people like you don't know jack about Nigeria's history but put too much focus and attention on a fictitious character like Jesus.

Because they're (willfully) ignorant of history, such religious people dislike the native culture, religion, and traditions as they're in chains mentally due to the ingenuity of their slavemasters and colonizers — the whites and Arabs.

A country with such people as the majority can't grow and develop.

At the fundamental level, something is terribly wrong with the average Nigerian: That's what this post summarizes.

4 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by Ever8090: 3:24am On Oct 13, 2021
Babaetsu1:
Who wan read am finish?
.

Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by VeeVeeMyLuv(m): 3:25am On Oct 13, 2021
Well in this country which supposed to be a great country, the wrong things,actions, speech, words continue to be thought, done, said over and over and over again across every level of society. With the wrong things being reinforced by wrongest individual in high places.

Therefore we expect nothing But multilevel FAILURE.

If Only we can employ scientific rational approach to various aspects of national Life, I think we can make a huge difference.
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by 1Sharon(f): 7:42am On Oct 13, 2021
The guardian! LOL
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by DropsMic(m): 7:48am On Oct 13, 2021
A001:

A nation whose citizens don't know their history but worship the god introduced to and enforced on them by their slavemasters can't develop.

If you're a Nigerian Christian or a Muslim, you're a major part of the problem because religious people like you don't know jack about Nigeria's history but put too much focus and attention on a fictitious character like Jesus.

Because they're (willfully) ignorant of history, such religious people dislike the native culture, religion, and traditions as they're in chains mentally due to the ingenuity of their slavemasters and colonizers — the whites and Arabs.

A country with such people as the majority can't grow and develop.

At the fundamental level, something is terribly wrong with the average Nigerian: That's what this post summarizes.


Africans are not yet ready for this conversation



...
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by McStoic(m): 8:10am On Oct 13, 2021
A001:
I was lucky to be introduced to Africa while still a university student, first as an enthralled visitor during college breaks, and later living there for six years after graduation.

I cut my teeth as a journalist writing about Africa and travelling widely, and I married a woman who had grown up in Ivory Coast, but whose family was from a nearby part of Ghana.

I wasn’t at all aware of it at the time, but it was within a few miles of her ancestral village that Europeans first stumbled upon the abundant sources of west African gold that they had been searching for feverishly for several decades in the 15th century.

It was a discovery that changed the world.

I left west Africa to join the New York Times in 1986. Three years later, my first assignment as a foreign correspondent was to cover the Caribbean basin.

Here were gathered some of the most important staging areas for subsequent global transformations.

Specialists aside, few imagine that islands like Barbados and Jamaica were far more important in their day than were the English colonies that would become the United States.

The nation now known as Haiti most of all. In the 18th century it became the richest colony in history, and in the 19th, by dint of its slave population’s successful revolution, Haiti rivalled the US in terms of its influence on the world, notably in helping fulfil the most fundamental Enlightenment value of all: ending slavery.

Now and then during my time in the Caribbean, I could see glimmers of this region’s extraordinary role in our global narrative.

One one occasion, in the Dominican Republic, I stood knee-deep in seawater witnessing an archaeological dig that sought to identify a wreck from Columbus’s first voyage.

Another time, I hiked a verdant peak in northern Haiti where Henri Christophe, that country’s early Black leader, built a formidable fortress, the Citadelle Laferrière, arming it with 365 cannon to defend the country’s hard-won independence from France.

Other hints came when I wandered into the mountains and rainforests of Jamaica and Suriname, respectively, and was thrilled to be able to make myself understood speaking bits of Twi (the lingua franca of Ghana, which I had learned while courting my wife) as I spoke with the descendants of proud runaway slave communities known as maroons.

But back then, I still had no big picture in mind; like most correspondents, I was too busy following the news to pursue sweeping historical connections very far.

Even knowing the silence and enforced ignorance that surround the central contribution of Africa and Africans to the making of the modern world, I have often been surprised by just how difficult it can be to access some of the physical traces of this history, or to find local forms of remembrance that raise this African role to its proper dimension.

I have seen this in many places that have shaped our common history, such as Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where the publicly established sites of Atlantic memory are few.

I saw it in São Tomé, the island where the slave-plantation-complex model that would drive wealth creation in the North Atlantic for four centuries appeared for the first time, fully formed – a fact for which there is nary a plaque or commemoration.

My biggest surprise came in Barbados, whose slave-produced sugar, arguably more than any other place on earth, helped seal England’s ascension in the 17th century.

I visited the island not long ago, determined to find as many traces of this legacy as possible, only to discover how thoroughly they had been hidden or effaced.

Among my top priorities was to visit one of the largest slave cemeteries anywhere in the hemisphere, which included the excavated remains of nearly 600 people.

It took me several attempts just to find the cemetery, which had no signage from any public road. Few local residents seemed aware of its historical importance, or even of its existence.

All I discovered when I drove down a bumpy dirt road, proceeding as far as I could until instinct told me to get out and walk, was a modest clearing alongside an active plantation whose cane had grown as tall as I am.

There was a faded sign attached to a rusty iron post. It proclaimed the site to be part of something called “The Slave Route”, but it provided no further information.

With the sun racing downward in the western sky, I paced about, snapped a few photographs, and then finally collected myself as the wind whistled through the cane.

I tried mightily to conjure some sense of the horrors that had transpired nearby, and of the abundant wealth and pleasure that the sweat of the dead had procured for others.

But the most egregious forms of historical erasure do not involve an assortment of mostly small, former slave-trading or plantation societies scattered around the Atlantic Rim. The most important site of erasure, by far, has been the minds of people in the rich world.

As I write these words, the US and some other North Atlantic communities, from Richmond, Virginia, to Bristol, England, have recently experienced extraordinary moments of iconoclasm.

We have seen the pulling down of statues of people who were long perceived to be heroes of imperial and economic systems built on the violent exploitation of people extracted from Africa.

For these gestures to have more lasting meaning, an even bigger and more challenging task remains for us.

It requires that we transform how we understand the history of the last six centuries and, specifically, of Africa’s central role in making possible nearly everything that is today familiar to us.

This will involve rewriting school lessons about history just as much as it will require the reinvention of university curricula.

It will challenge journalists to rethink the way we describe and explain the world we all inhabit.

It will require all of us to re-examine what we know or think we know about how the present-day world was built, and to begin incorporating this new understanding into our everyday discussions.

In this task, we can no longer hide behind ignorance.

Nearly a century ago, WEB Du Bois had already affirmed much of what we needed to know on this topic. “It was black labour that established the modern world commerce, which began first as a commerce in the bodies of the slaves themselves,” he wrote. Now is the time to finally acknowledge this.

Adapted from Born in Blackness: Africa, Africans, and the Making of the Modern World, 1471 to the Second World War, by Howard W French, published by WW Norton & Co and available at guardianbookshop.com

https://www.theguardian.com/news/2021/oct/12/africa-slaves-erased-from-history-modern-world

Nice read
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by A001: 8:41am On Oct 13, 2021
1Sharon:
The guardian! LOL
Why did you lol?
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by Taiwx(m): 5:16pm On Oct 13, 2021
shocked
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by Taiwx(m): 5:16pm On Oct 13, 2021
Too long abeg I no dey do lipsrsealed
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by Shokoloko(f): 7:45pm On Oct 13, 2021
Good read

Africa began well, however something happened and greed stepped in.

I put it too you that the bane of Africa is not religion but greed.

We are not more religious than the Italians, the Middle Easterns, Asians, South Americans. But see what they have done in countries like Italy, UAE, Kuwait, India, Japan, Brazil, Argentina

We must also remember that slavery consisted more of trade than kidnap (more slaves were sold by their kin than were kidnapped by the white man) Who even showed the white map the territory to kidnap since there was no GPS then

What ailed Africa centuries ago (that drove them to sell men for alcohol and mirrors) still ails them today. Africa has not ended sale of its citizens. We are a greedy lot. And that is why instead of developing Africa we prefer to "pandorally" move the wealth of Africa to any place that is not Africa
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by A001: 7:59pm On Oct 13, 2021
Shokoloko:
Good read

Africa began well, however something happened and greed stepped in.

I put it too you that the bane of Africa is not religion but greed.

We are not more religious than the Italians, the Middle Easterns, Asians, South Americans. But see what they have done in countries like Italy, UAE, Kuwait, India, Japan, Brazil, Argentina

We must also remember that slavery consisted more of trade than kidnap (more slaves were sold by their kin than were kidnapped by the white man) Who even showed the white map the territory to kidnap since there was no GPS then

What ailed Africa centuries ago (that drove them to sell men for alcohol and mirrors) still ails them today. Africa has not ended sale of its citizens. We are a greedy lot. And that is why instead of developing Africa we prefer to "pandorally" move the wealth of Africa to any place that is not Africa
You're right, except where you exonerated religion as being one of the major problems.

It's: the foreign religions are. Those other countries you mentioned that had great development despite being religious, stuck to their native religions and gods.

Thus, they can preserve their cultural values, which are their identity and their soul (core) as a people or nation.

Anyone well-versed in the history of the Abrahamic religions know their adherents worship and revere the ancestors of Israel or some European countries and Arabs — Jehovah and Allah respectively — who were deified as gods.

The whites and Arabs in their wisdom never forgot their ancestors, roots, and cultures. But Africa despise theirs and place great value on the imported gods and their cultures.

Such a people that have forgotten their roots can't grow and develop. No be curse.

If one can't worship the native gods, the ideal thing is to cherish one's culture and have deep respect for the native gods, just like scientists have deep respect for early scientists, philosophers and thinkers like Galileo and Einstein.

The average Nigerian, who is ignorant of history, has simply failed to develop the critical thinking skills required to break free from the shackles of the foreign, imported religions of the colonizers, slavemasters, and conquerors.

Corruption, greed, selfishness, poverty are the hallmarks of mentally enslaved people with their poor and shallow mentality. No thanks to religion and the fictitious Jesus.

Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by Dabronze(m): 9:15pm On Oct 13, 2021
Babaetsu1:
Who wan read am finish?
If you want to hide for blackman just hide it inside a book because they never read it
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by Nobody: 9:23pm On Oct 13, 2021
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1 Like

Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by Treepower2000: 9:24pm On Oct 13, 2021
A001:
The creation of the modern, interconnected world is generally credited to European pioneers. But Africa was the wellspring for almost everything they achieved – and African lives were the terrible cost.

It would be unusual for a story that begins in the wrong place to arrive at the right conclusions. And so it is with the history of how the modern world was made.

Traditional accounts have accorded a primacy to Europe’s 15th-century Age of Discovery, and to the maritime connection it established between west and east.

Paired with this historic feat is the momentous, if accidental, discovery of what came to be known as the New World.

Other explanations for the emergence of the modern world reside in the ethics and temperament that some associate with Judeo-Christian beliefs, or with the development and spread of the scientific method, or, more chauvinistically still, with Europeans’ often-professed belief in their unique ingenuity and inventiveness.

In the popular imagination, these ideas have become associated with the work ethic, individualism and entrepreneurial drive that supposedly flowed from the Protestant Reformation in places such as England and Holland.

Of course, there is no denying the significance of the voyages of mariners such as Vasco da Gama, who reached India via the Indian Ocean in 1498, Ferdinand Magellan, who travelled west to Asia, skirting the southern tip of South America, and Christopher Columbus.

As the author Marie Arana has elegantly said of Columbus, when he sailed west, “he had been a medieval man from a medieval world, surrounded by medieval notions about Cyclops, pygmies, Amazons, dog-faced natives, antipodeans who walk on their heads and think with their feet – about dark-skinned, giant-eared races who inhabit the lands where gold and precious gems grow.

When he stepped on to American soil, however, he did more than enter a new world: he stepped into a new age.”

Although these famous feats of discovery dominate the popular imagination, they obscure the true beginnings of the story of how the globe became permanently stitched together and thus became “modern”.

If we look more closely at the evidence, it will become clear that Africa played a central role in this history. By miscasting the role of Africa, generations have been taught a profoundly misleading story about the origins of modernity.

The first impetus for the Age of Discovery was not Europe’s yearning for ties with Asia, as so many of us learned in school, but rather its centuries-old desire to forge trading ties with legendarily rich Black societies hidden away in the heart of “darkest” west Africa.

Iberia’s most famous sailors cut their teeth not seeking routes to Asia, but rather plying the west African coastline.

This is where they perfected techniques of mapmaking and navigation, where Spain and Portugal experimented with improved ship designs, and where Columbus came to understand the Atlantic Ocean winds and currents well enough that he would later reach the western limits of the sea with a confidence that no European had previously had before him, of being able to return home.

Well before he mounted his expeditions on behalf of Spain, Columbus, an Italian from Genoa, had sailed to Europe’s first large, fortified overseas outpost, which was located in the tropics at Elmina, in modern-day Ghana. European expeditions to west Africa in the mid-15th century were bound up in a search for gold.

It was the trade in this precious metal, discovered in what is now Ghana by the Portuguese in 1471, and secured by the building of the fort at Elmina in 1482, that helped fund Vasco da Gama’s later mission of discovery to Asia.

This robust new supply of gold helped make it possible for Lisbon, until then the seat of a small and impecunious European crown, to steal a march on its neighbours and radically alter the course of world history.

Bartolomeu Dias, another Portuguese explorer who knew Elmina well, rounded Africa’s Cape of Good Hope in 1488, proving the existence of a sea route to what would become known as the Indian Ocean.

But no onward voyage to Asia would even be attempted for nearly a decade after that, when Da Gama finally sailed to Calicut (now known as Kozhikode in India).

The teaching of history about this era of iconic discoveries is confoundingly silent not only on that decade, but on the nearly three decades between the Portuguese arrival at Elmina in 1471 and their landing in India in 1498.

It was this moment, when Europe and what is nowadays styled sub-Saharan Africa came into permanent deep contact, that laid the foundations of the modern age.

The elision of these three pivotal decades is merely one example of a centuries-long process of diminishment, trivialisation and erasure of Africans and people of African descent from the story of the modern world.

It is not that the basic facts are unknown; it is that they have been siloed, overlooked or swept into dark corners.

It is essential to restore key chapters such as these to their proper place of prominence in our common narrative of modernity.

Starting in the 15th century, encounters between Africans and Europeans set the most Atlantic-oriented Europeans on a path that would eventually propel their continent past the great civilisational centres of Asia and the Islamic world in wealth and power.

The rise of Europe was not founded on any innate or permanent characteristics that produced superiority. To a degree that remains unrecognised, it was built on Europe’s economic and political relations with Africa.

The heart of the matter here, of course, was the massive, centuries-long transatlantic trade in enslaved people who were put to work growing sugar, tobacco, cotton and other cash crops on the plantations of the New World.

The long thread that leads us to the present began in those three decades at the end of the 15th century, when commerce blossomed between Portugal and Africa, sending a newfound prosperity washing over what had previously been a marginal European country.

It drove urbanisation in Portugal on an unprecedented scale, and created new identities that gradually freed many people from feudal ties to the land.

One of these novel identities was nationhood, whose origins were bound up in questing for wealth in faraway lands, and soon thereafter in emigration and colonisation in the tropics.

As Portugal started to venture out into the world in the 1400s – and for nearly a century this meant almost exclusively to Africa – its people were among the first to make another conceptual leap.

They began to think of discovery not merely as the simple act of stumbling upon assorted novelties or arriving wide-eyed in never-before-visited places, but rather as something new and more abstract. Discovery became a mindset, and this would become another cornerstone of modernity.

It meant understanding that the world was infinite in its social complexity, and this required a broadening of consciousness, even amid the colossal violence and horror that accompanied this process, and an ever more systematic unmooring from provincialism.

The fateful engagement between Europe and sub-Saharan Africa produced civilisational transformations in both regions, as well as in the wider world – ones that, looking back today, produced an exceptionally crisp division between “before” and “after”.

Back then, Europeans were mindful of this reality. As late as the 1530s, well after the start of Portugal’s more famous spice trade with Asia, Lisbon still recognised Africa as the leading driver of all that was new.

João de Barros, a counsellor to that country’s crown, wrote: “I do not know in this Kingdom a yoke of land, toll, tithe, excise or any other Royal tax more reliable … than the profits of commerce in Guinea.”

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/news/2021/oct/12/africa-slaves-erased-from-history-modern-world
D
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by A001: 9:30pm On Oct 13, 2021
Fastcars11:
God or no God doesn't solve anything .. You are also a part of what you are criticizing.. So many people irrespective of their religions,colours and beliefs have brought good to the world ...
No, I'm not part of the slaves worshipping a god, believing Satan, demons, or other fictional entities of religions and juju exist. I take full responsibility for my actions and believe in no God but myself.

So, I'm not part of the problem when I approach problems practically and scientifically, not spiritually or by hoping for a miracle to happen like the religious do.
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by Nobody: 9:32pm On Oct 13, 2021
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Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by Nobody: 9:36pm On Oct 13, 2021
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Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by Shokoloko(f): 10:10pm On Oct 13, 2021
A001:

You're right, except where you exonerated religion as being one of the major problems.

It's: the foreign religions are. Those other countries you mentioned that had great development despite being religious, stuck to their native religions and gods.

Thus, they can preserve their cultural values, which are their identity and their soul (core) as a people or nation.

Anyone well-versed in the history of the Abrahamic religions know their adherents worship and revere the ancestors of Israel or some European countries and Arabs — Jehovah and Allah respectively — who were deified as gods.

The whites and Arabs in their wisdom never forgot their ancestors, roots, and cultures. But Africa despise theirs and place great value on the imported gods and their cultures.

Such a people that have forgotten their roots can't grow and develop. No be curse.

If one can't worship the native gods, the ideal thing is to cherish one's culture and have deep respect for the native gods, just like scientists have deep respect for early scientists, philosophers and thinkers like Galileo and Einstein.

The average Nigerian, who is ignorant of history, has simply failed to develop the critical thinking skills required to break free from the shackles of the foreign, imported religions of the colonizers, slavemasters, and conquerors.

Corruption, greed, selfishness, poverty are the hallmarks of mentally enslaved people with their poor and shallow mentality. No thanks to religion and the fictitious Jesus.

Religion of any sort only exaggerates the true character of a person. Africans were worshipping native gods when they were selling off their brethren en-masse.
Before the white man arrived Africans under their early ancient religion began selling themselves to the Arabs in 832 AD. Are we also going to blame the white men and Christianity for slave trade that begun before the first century.

I state again religion has nothing to do with the inherent greed of the black man. Drop N10,000 as if by mistake on any Nigerian road: both atheist, christian, muslim worshipper will make a dive for the money.

Those using humans for ritual sacrifice, Its neither the God of Christians or Moslems that is being sacrificed to.

Africa has a culture of greed

Religion has nothing to do with how forward or backward a race are
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by musicwriter(m): 10:18pm On Oct 13, 2021
A001:

You're right, except where you exonerated religion as being one of the major problems.

It's: the foreign religions are. Those other countries you mentioned that had great development despite being religious, stuck to their native religions and gods.

Thus, they can preserve their cultural values, which are their identity and their soul (core) as a people or nation.

Anyone well-versed in the history of the Abrahamic religions know their adherents worship and revere the ancestors of Israel or some European countries and Arabs — Jehovah and Allah respectively — who were deified as gods.

The whites and Arabs in their wisdom never forgot their ancestors, roots, and cultures. But Africa despise theirs and place great value on the imported gods and their cultures.

Such a people that have forgotten their roots can't grow and develop. No be curse.

If one can't worship the native gods, the ideal thing is to cherish one's culture and have deep respect for the native gods, just like scientists have deep respect for early scientists, philosophers and thinkers like Galileo and Einstein.

The average Nigerian, who is ignorant of history, has simply failed to develop the critical thinking skills required to break free from the shackles of the foreign, imported religions of the colonizers, slavemasters, and conquerors.

Corruption, greed, selfishness, poverty are the hallmarks of mentally enslaved people with their poor and shallow mentality. No thanks to religion and the fictitious Jesus.

Perfect response there.

Corruption, greed, selfishness, poverty are symptoms showing that a society is sick. They're effects and NOT the CAUSE itself. The CAUSE has been set in motion since our unfortunate contact with Europeans who destroyed our natural way of speaking, learning, thinking, nationality and believing. The result is the way we exist today. But you see, the people you're dealing with here don't yet understand the problem themselves. They don't understand it because one of the purpose of education in Africa is to make sure we don't inquire about our unfortunate contact with Europeans. And I can bet you (yourself) didn't learn this in school but through your personal research.

However, the consequence we now suffer were not just caused by foreign religion alone. The three causes are wrong LANGUAGE, wrong EDUCATION, wrong GOD.

No matter which of those three you adopt from a foreigner you're doomed. Even if you accept one of them.

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Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by A001: 10:30pm On Oct 13, 2021
Shokoloko:


Religion of any sort only exaggerates the true character of a person. Africans were worshipping native gods when they were selling off their brethren en-masse.
Before the white man arrived Africans under their early ancient religion began selling themselves to the Arabs in 832 AD. Are we also going to blame the white men and Christianity for slave trade that begun before the first century.

I state again religion has nothing to do with the inherent greed of the black man. Drop N10,000 as if by mistake on any Nigerian road: both atheist, christian, muslim worshipper will make a dive for the money.

Those using humans for ritual sacrifice, Its neither the God of Christians or Moslems that is being sacrificed to.

Africa has a culture of greed

Religion has nothing to do with how forward or backward a race are
It mainly has to do with religion. And the problems you mentioned all boil down to the poor mentality of people, especially the religious ones.

It's only religious people that believe in many superstitious things, so you'd find vices like using humans for sacrifices common among them, whether Muslims, Christians or traditionalists.

An atheist or agnostic that does not believe in the supernatural can't engage in that.

Then, at any point in time, it was not the whole of Africa that participated in slave-trading, using humans for sacrifices. And there were people that criticized these barbaric practices when they were common in certain areas.

Then, greed isn't just an African thing. I see you don't know the history of colonialism in Africa done by countries such as the Great Britain, France, Holland.

All the corrupt practices African leaders are exhibiting today were learned from the colonial masters who plundered the wealth and statues of many countries in Africa to develop the West.

Greed, corruption aren't an African thing. Generally, people with a poor mentality that believe in fictitious entities like Jesus, Satan to solve problems for them will be greedy and corrupt.
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by hucknall: 10:31pm On Oct 13, 2021
[s]
A001:

You're right, except where you exonerated religion as being one of the major problems.

It's: the foreign religions are. Those other countries you mentioned that had great development despite being religious, stuck to their native religions and gods.

Thus, they can preserve their cultural values, which are their identity and their soul (core) as a people or nation.

Anyone well-versed in the history of the Abrahamic religions know their adherents worship and revere the ancestors of Israel or some European countries and Arabs — Jehovah and Allah respectively — who were deified as gods.

The whites and Arabs in their wisdom never forgot their ancestors, roots, and cultures. But Africa despise theirs and place great value on the imported gods and their cultures.

Such a people that have forgotten their roots can't grow and develop. No be curse.

If one can't worship the native gods, the ideal thing is to cherish one's culture and have deep respect for the native gods, just like scientists have deep respect for early scientists, philosophers and thinkers like Galileo and Einstein.

The average Nigerian, who is ignorant of history, has simply failed to develop the critical thinking skills required to break free from the shackles of the foreign, imported religions of the colonizers, slavemasters, and conquerors.

Corruption, greed, selfishness, poverty are the hallmarks of mentally enslaved people with their poor and shallow mentality. No thanks to religion and the fictitious Jesus.
[/s] sad
Im so disappointed in you . How will you be mixing basics economics with religion.

China has the if not the biggest then the second largest market in the world.
Please what religion is China?

Is Dangote, the richest African a traditionalist? sad
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by hucknall: 10:33pm On Oct 13, 2021
musicwriter:


Perfect response there.

Corruption, greed, selfishness, poverty are symptoms showing that a society is sick. They're effects and NOT the CAUSE itself. The CAUSE has been set in motion since our unfortunate contact with Europeans who destroyed our natural way of speaking, learning, thinking, nationality and believing. The result is the way we exist today. But you see, the people you're dealing with here don't yet understand the problem themselves. They don't understand it because one of the purpose of education in Africa is to make sure we don't inquire about our unfortunate contact with Europeans. And I can bet you (yourself) didn't learn this in school but through your personal research.

However, the consequence we now suffer were not just caused by foreign religion alone. The three causes are wrong LANGUAGE, wrong EDUCATION, wrong GOD.

No matter which of those three you adopt from a foreigner you're doomed. Even if you accept one of them.
There is nothing objective about this write up. They are pure rants.

1 Like

Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by hucknall: 10:35pm On Oct 13, 2021
Fastcars11:
The problem of the black man is also greed , a black man is naturally greedy ...it's not as if other races aren't greedy , but the black man is a special case , Always looking for ways to hack (exploit) or manipulate a system to suit his desires at the expense of others .. And that is the definition of a black man...trust a black man with your life for a second and have it traded for peanuts ... I even once thought judas iscariot was black ..
Greed has nothing to do with color. Personally are you greedy?
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by A001: 10:36pm On Oct 13, 2021
hucknall:
[s][/s] sad
Im so disappointed in you . How will you be mixing basics economics with religion.

China has the if not the biggest then the second largest market in the world.
Please what religion is China?

Is Dangote, the richest African a traditionalist? sad
Your problem is ignorance. I'm sure you didn't take it the time to read the insightful and well-researched article.

You reason like the average Nigerian that dislikes reading and thinking critically.

It's people like you that still call for a return of the British rule. SMH.
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by A001: 10:42pm On Oct 13, 2021
Slaves of fictitious Jesus have a peculiar way of thinking which looks childish.
Re: Built On The Bodies Of Slaves: How Africa Was Erased from Modern World History by hucknall: 10:46pm On Oct 13, 2021
A001:

Your problem is ignorance. I'm sure you didn't take it the time to read the insightful and well-researched article.
Actually it was one direction and narrow minded. I don't expect an enlighten person to blame a certain religion for economics failure and tell me to worship stones. Do you worship idols?

You reason like the average Nigerian that dislikes reading and thinking critically.
You haven't met upto 5% of Nigeria in your entire life and you already think you know 'an average Nigerian'

It's people like you that still call for a return of the British rule. SMH.
Now you are associating me with an idea I made no reference to. And condemning me for it.

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