Answering White People's Questions About Slavery: The London History Show

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J. Draper

J. Draper

Күн бұрын

If you want to find the location of any London History Show episode for yourself, you can do that here: tinyurl.com/yc3ry3ku
Images, film, music and sound licensed under Creative Commons: tinyurl.com/odbps7g
*Sources and further reading*
Two good primers on the transatlantic slave trade as a whole:
Thomas, H. 1997. The Slave Trade: History of the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1440-1870.
Walvin, J. 2011. The Slave Trade.
Four books written by actual enslaved people. All are out-of-copyright and available on the internet for free and cheaply in print:
Equiano, O. The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano.
Prince, M. The History of Mary Prince, A West Indian Slave.
Sancho, I. Letters of the Late Ignatius Sancho, an African.
Wheatley, P. Complete Writings.
Other sources:
The Legacies of British Slave-ownership database: www.ucl.ac.uk/lbs/
Letter by Elizabeth I: tinyurl.com/3durzh9c
National Museums Liverpool. The transatlantic slave trade: Europe. tinyurl.com/yjxw6m29
Runaway Advertisements database: tinyurl.com/yrkpmu5m
Newman, S. et al. Runaway Slaves in Britain: “For Sale” Advertisements. tinyurl.com/uhshcs
Osguthorpe, C., trans. 1928. William of Malmesbury, The Vita Wulfstani of William of Malmesbury, ed. Reginald R. Darlington
Mtubani, C. D. V. 1983. African Slaves and English Law.
The National Museum of Denmark. The Abolition of Slavery in 1848. tinyurl.com/fw2t3ykt
Ignatius Sancho's voting record: tinyurl.com/3sf4b7sy
The Governor of Jamaica's announcement to enslaved people upon abolition: tinyurl.com/967f3da8
Indentured servitude: tinyurl.com/3mevf4cd
The "Irish slaves" meme: Hogan, L. 2017. All of my work on the “Irish slaves” meme (2015-’20) tinyurl.com/yxevvd5y
Amend, A. 2016. How the Myth of “Irish slaves” Became a Favorite Meme of Racists Online. tinyurl.com/af4m87aw
Michael Hoffman: Anti-Defamation League, 2019. Despite KZfaq Policy Update, Anti-Semitic, White Supremacist Channels Remain. tinyurl.com/m384cwns
The Middle Passage: Rediker, M. 2007. The Slave Ship.
Intra-African Slavery: Nwokeji, G. (2011). Slavery in Non-Islamic West Africa, 1420-1820. In D. Eltis & S. Engerman (Eds.), The Cambridge World History of Slavery (The Cambridge World History of Slavery, pp. 81-110).
Lovejoy, P. (1989). The Impact of the Atlantic Slave Trade on Africa: A Review of the Literature. The Journal of African History, 30(3), 365-394. Retrieved February 7, 2021, from www.jstor.org/stable/182914
00:00 Introduction
02:47 What is the Triangle Trade?
07:06 Did we have slaves in the UK?
12:56 Why weren't the plantations in Africa?
14:24 What about all the good stuff Britain did?
21:10 It was normal back then though, right?
22:46 What about the Irish?
28:43 Didn't the Africans enslave their own people?
32:22 Why do you have to keep bringing up old history?

Пікірлер: 8 700
@anschelsc
@anschelsc 9 ай бұрын
The fact that people on a history tour ask why you're "bringing up the past" is absolutely hilarious
@agsystems8220
@agsystems8220 8 ай бұрын
When faced with a nonsensical question, I find it usually hides some deeper emotional question that the person is not able to articulate. You can either mock them, or try to figure out what they are really asking. My guess is that in many cases it might be better expressed as 'why are you making me feel guilty about this?'. I would further guess that the true answer would be 'because I feel guilty about it', and there we run into the rub. Should any of us feel accountable for our ancestors? The speaker clearly does. I do not. As far as I am concerned history is fact. It is useful for informing of current state, and particularly on the truth of human nature, but it should not bind us. There is a distinction between 'should we know the past', and 'should we relate to the past'. I think that is what the question is aiming at.
@kathrynkildow3743
@kathrynkildow3743 8 ай бұрын
Bet you feel like asking, "Do you know where you are?"
@nate8lowe
@nate8lowe 8 ай бұрын
​​​@@agsystems8220whether I feel guilty or not, I want all of us who are still profiting from these systems that still exist to acknowledge it
@noisepuppet
@noisepuppet 8 ай бұрын
Why are you bringing up this video in the comments section of this video? 😂
@MLB9000
@MLB9000 7 ай бұрын
@@noisepuppet wow, fancy meeting you here! The internet sure seems like small place sometimes.
@andthatsshannii
@andthatsshannii 11 ай бұрын
The “Africans enslaved their own people” argument is so strange to me. No one looks at European wars between countries and says “they’re fighting their own people”. It’s like they think Africa is a single country with one ethnic group of people. In reality, there’s more genetic diversity than anywhere else in the world
@Rob774
@Rob774 11 ай бұрын
Going to use this... thank you!
@everentropy
@everentropy 11 ай бұрын
I mean, white people also made other white people slaves or servants as "war trophies", particularly women
@wandamusictube
@wandamusictube 11 ай бұрын
That argument is used by those trying to put the blame on black people for the slaves that were bought and brought to the new world. It makes them feel the buying of slaves was not so bad, only buying slaves that were sold by their own people, rather than capturing them themselves. And somehow they see that as making slave buying a not-as-bad thing. People concerned about slavery likely don't say that as much as people wanting to show it was not white people's doing. So basically a racist statement.
@Wunjo1776
@Wunjo1776 11 ай бұрын
I think the point of this saying is to show that slavery is not unique to white people's.
@andthatsshannii
@andthatsshannii 11 ай бұрын
@@Wunjo1776 I don’t think anyone has ever believed that slavery is unique to white people. The transatlantic slave trade is spoken about the most because it still affects people’s lives today. However, regardless, the “own people” part is the thing I’m disputing. They were different ethnic groups from warring nations enslaving each other - as happened for millennia elsewhere in the world. So why are they considered all one “people” but when Europeans commit atrocities to one another, no one ever says they’re the same “people”? Africa is bigger than Europe and yet it gets treated like one hive mind of people.
@Angelica-ps4cs
@Angelica-ps4cs 5 ай бұрын
I'm Happy to tell you that the Boricua people of Borinkén, referred to here as Taíno, are still here! The rising popularity of DNA test kits has allowed many of us to determine Indigenous ancestry ❤ Great work!
@alejandrosantana5693
@alejandrosantana5693 4 ай бұрын
Taínos are not exclusive to PR. There are no true Taínos left in Puerto Rico except the LARPers from the UPR. If you want to find true blooded Taínos with an unbroken legacy then you need to look to San Salvador north of us, if I’m not mistaken.
@ThatWeirdo04
@ThatWeirdo04 22 күн бұрын
There are people alive today with Taino ancestry, but the Taino were still effectively wiped out by Columbus. Their language, religion, culture, everything about their society is gone. I'm glad people are starting to reconnect with that part of their heritage, but this sentiment that the Taino are still around because some people have a small amount of Taino DNA feels very dismissive of the atrocities committed against them.
@milesjolly6173
@milesjolly6173 4 ай бұрын
I’ve heard that after the British empire finally abolished slavery in 1833, the government paid compensation to slave owners (rather than, you know, THE SLAVES) for nearly 200 years, which only ended in 2015. Thanks Jenny for this informative video. As a British person myself, its important to remember the real history of the British empire which is often glorified as some wonderful noble thing, including by our current government. I love your videos, please keep it up!
@daag1851
@daag1851 4 ай бұрын
Some arguments for paying the slavers: -they are politicaly powerfull and they could couse troubles (example of what they could do: starting a civil war) -state should not invaluate your property, because it is now made illegal, (even in something as immoral as slavery); People who bought slaves in terms of law did not do something illegal, why should they be punished for doing something completely legal at that time. Stupit example of this principle: lets say the goverment tomorow bans owning gold/alcohol/cars/... (for this example lets assume owning ______ is immoral), if they do not compensate the owners, the goverment is efectivelly stealing from the people; And while yes having people as property is wrong, but something being wrong should not be basis for the state to "steal" property
@rhiannondavies4741
@rhiannondavies4741 4 ай бұрын
Literally never taught about any of this in school - I find it crazy. Oh they were definitely happy to teach us about the barbaric practices of American slave owners, but very careful never to mention that we were involved at all. Funny that!
@Zepheriah
@Zepheriah 4 ай бұрын
The second part of that isn't right: the British government paid slave owners off *in 1833*. To fund that payment, the government took out a *loan*, which the government finished paying off in 2015. The government was absolutely not still paying slave owners or their descendents or whatever in 2014, that wouldn't have been tolerated. Draper says this in the video at @19:07, but I can see how you might misinterpret that from the way she says it. Taking out very-long-term debts to pay for things is/was a relatively normal thing for governments to do. In 2006 the UK finally finished paying the US and Canada back, for emergency loans they took out to pay for World War II.
@Loveiskindloveiskind
@Loveiskindloveiskind 3 ай бұрын
@@daag1851I see your point, however aren’t you also in a way “punishing” taxpayers if money that could be allocated into the school system or infrastructure (or anything that benefits the people) is instead going to people who have become insanely wealthy from slavery? The wealth garnered by the sales and or various plantations didn’t disappear. It’s almost as if they were being paid for the profit they could have made- not their actual losses. And I do not think that the immorality of it all should be overlooked. Though I understand your point was moreso about the law side of things I think it serves a greater discussion. This is not a case of people in poverty doing immoral things to get out of poverty (which is still bad), this is very rich people doing bad things to enrich themselves even more so. It is a great example of how the really rich and powerful will almost never have to deal with the consequences of their actions even in such a horrible case because they are DIRECTLY involved in lawmaking. Democracy in Capitalism doesn’t benefit the general public but those who have capital (aka power). I’m pretty sure if this was the case of outlawing “property” (hate this in the context of human life) of the working class there would have been no payments made.
@daag1851
@daag1851 3 ай бұрын
@@Loveiskindloveiskind to your point: not all slave owners were ultra rich, some were small farmers with one slave to help with the farm (acording to Gilder Lehrman Institute: 1 in 2,5 slave owners (in USA) had between 1-9 slaves)
@dannyroy
@dannyroy Жыл бұрын
"Why do you have to keep bringing up old history? " -Is literally on a tour about the history of London
@babaganoush6106
@babaganoush6106 Жыл бұрын
if we learn nothing from history then we are doomed to make the same mistakes
@greglocker2124
@greglocker2124 Жыл бұрын
​@@babaganoush6106 if we don't breathe then we are doomed to asphyxiate
@babaganoush6106
@babaganoush6106 Жыл бұрын
@@greglocker2124 genius
@panhandlersparadise1733
@panhandlersparadise1733 Жыл бұрын
@@babaganoush6106 Do you have a history of making stupid comments on KZfaq or other forms of social media? Learning about history has nothing to do with how people treat each other in today's world. That's just a cheap cop-out phrase people like to say when they know about a few historic events but don't understand the context under which those events occurred.
@henrymanor9850
@henrymanor9850 Жыл бұрын
Awesome ma'am. I like this documentary. That's just it! This is part of LONDON history! Some can't handle truth.
@samuelrosander1048
@samuelrosander1048 Жыл бұрын
2:00 I wish more people would take this position. "I don't know everything, but I provide sources, and if you want to correct me, you also need to provide good sources." Great video.
@ScorpioTear
@ScorpioTear Жыл бұрын
Except you get the people who are like this is what I'm saying it's fact you need to look up yourself cuz I'm too lazy to provide sources.
@kellygreen-cw5hs
@kellygreen-cw5hs Жыл бұрын
@@ScorpioTear - "Too lazy to provide sources" is too often a fallacy when the person asking for sources is practicing the Gish gallop, as Brandolini's law is a real thing.
@julijepp
@julijepp Жыл бұрын
​@@kellygreen-cw5hs you say as you use niche language completely alienating laymen to what you're talking about, on that note I'm too lazy to google these words while watching the video lol
@kellygreen-cw5hs
@kellygreen-cw5hs Жыл бұрын
@@julijepp - If you are “alienated” by things you are ignorant of, that very much sounds like a “you” problem, and not one for me to concern myself with. Frankly I would think you should be embarrassed to publicly admit you are defiantly intent to remain uneducated, but then you do you.
@acakecat7581
@acakecat7581 Жыл бұрын
Honestly, she won me over with the wink 😉
@Itzskimpy
@Itzskimpy 8 ай бұрын
As an actual Irish person it's probably the worst thing ever experiencing an American explain your own country's history (inaccurately ofc) to you so confidently when they themselves have never even set foot in Ireland or have any connection other than their 12th cousin or something. Another thing is, how they only recognise how bad slavery is when they try saying the whole Irish were slaves thing. Complaining about our ancestors being slaves but then saying you don't complain about it is the cherry on top
@noisepuppet
@noisepuppet 8 ай бұрын
As an American I can say a normal amount of Irish history knowledge for us goes like "celts something something potatoes emigration something The Troubles"
@LordHorst
@LordHorst 7 ай бұрын
"But I am 12.5% Irish myself, so I am an expert on Irish history!"
@tadghsmith1457
@tadghsmith1457 6 ай бұрын
It's ridiculous to say the Irish were all enslaved under Cromwell. I mean, he killed 40% of our population, so that was 40% right there who couldn't be enslaved! Lol! As for Irish people owning slaves. Sure but so did freed black people!
@mariecait
@mariecait 6 ай бұрын
@@Jack_Russell_Brown lol right
@maydaymemer4660
@maydaymemer4660 6 ай бұрын
Idk I think Americans as a whole think slavery was bad. They kinda fought a war to get rid of it
@DiXtionRap
@DiXtionRap 4 ай бұрын
“Why are you bringing up old history?” “… this is a museum”
@patrickpollard5926
@patrickpollard5926 4 ай бұрын
How did you come to be where you are today? Are you a native of the country you live in?
@full-lifesoil1549
@full-lifesoil1549 4 ай бұрын
@@patrickpollard5926 🤣
@JCUTTJCUTT
@JCUTTJCUTT 3 ай бұрын
Old history? Smh.. If you notice when it comes to certain things in history certain people want to just forget all about it.. But when it comes to other things like the history of America 🇺🇸 or Britain founding fathers and exc.. “Let’s never forget about that”!! 😃..The nerve of some people.. smdh
@full-lifesoil1549
@full-lifesoil1549 3 ай бұрын
@@JCUTTJCUTT correct my brother!! They know what they do! They have tactics to GASLIGHT u, in ways that place shame on you for speaking the TRUTH! They are deceivers (DEVILS). It's their strongest tactic, to deceive u, in ALL WAYS (LITERALLY)!!!
@shirlandcharles9142
@shirlandcharles9142 3 ай бұрын
Biblically speaking we brought slavery on ourselves due to sin it’s in the Bible
@bfoster417
@bfoster417 Жыл бұрын
As a black man who's parents come from Jamaica but I was born in Britain (London) , this was one of the BEST show's explaining slavery I have ever seen and I have seen quite a lot, I'd just like to say THANK YOU, I will be sharing the show on social media.
@Silkytoaster
@Silkytoaster Жыл бұрын
I agree . This is one of the best explanations I have ever come across . I knew a lot of this before but but there was so much more I did not know
@HisameArtwork
@HisameArtwork Жыл бұрын
I had no idea white UK tax payers had to pay for ending colored slavery. But I'm not surprised, in the newly formed Romania the government payed churches to free gypsies from slavery. And we only ever did that after everybody else in Europe signed papers for abolishing it. Now the romanian principates were under Otomman and Russian occupation, themselves colonies under foreign rule so it's not clear where the majority of gypsies came from, probably middle east by how they look. Nobody seems to be doing much research on the topic. Hope we get a clearer picture someday. These things are not taught in school, we're all forced to take orthodox religion class, cuz communism bad we need god now. Even though most churches were built during communism because they were such a great tool for flushing out dissent and dragging them to hard labor camps.
@curtisthomas2670
@curtisthomas2670 Жыл бұрын
@@HisameArtwork What escapes many people is the fact that the descendants of slaves in British colonies and in the UK who paid taxes helped fund the repayment of loans the British government took out to compensate the slaveowners, the people who enslaved their ancestors. The government only finished paying off the loans several years ago
@jenniferd264
@jenniferd264 Жыл бұрын
I can’t say this any better ❤ So I’ll just agree! Thank you JD, you are a truly beautiful and wonderful person 😊
@angrytedtalks
@angrytedtalks Жыл бұрын
Your parents came to UK freely as British Commonwealth subjects and you are 100% British. Thank heavens the Caribbean is free and prosperous now, the pre Colombian indigenous were completely wiped out.
@peakdelvalle197
@peakdelvalle197 Жыл бұрын
I'm a New Orleans tour guide and I feel this on such a deep level. It's become progressively more difficult to even do our job without people writing bad reviews about us for "only talking about slavery" just because we refuse to ignore or gloss over the topic
@teshlafreeman4040
@teshlafreeman4040 Жыл бұрын
I would love to have learned about this when I was young it is so important and would have changed my beliefs and behaviors I had as a young person
@laurettelaliberte8864
@laurettelaliberte8864 Жыл бұрын
I've seen people go off about this in various places online, and experienceced it when chaperoning class trips in my native virginia. . It's like they want the romanticized version of the antebellum south without the residual l guilt, and they will go to great lengths to diminish or rationalize anything related to slavery.
@hellazein
@hellazein Жыл бұрын
Never stop talking about it, have someone reply with some snarky comeback in the reviews 😂
@mwfmtnman
@mwfmtnman Жыл бұрын
That must be annoying. Buy, let me ask you, do you mention who it was that sold those poor folk to the Americans? You know, other Africans? Slavery is a very ugly thing that has been with every culture and ethnicity, and to present it as an American thing isn't helpful.
@b1gS0Wh4t
@b1gS0Wh4t Жыл бұрын
Is it true prisoners from Paris were granted release if they agreed to marry a prostitute and move to Louisiana?
@David-lr2tj
@David-lr2tj 8 ай бұрын
Great job! As a Vermonter, I need to point out that from 1777 to 1791, Vermont was an independent republic(a friend, now in his eighties, is the only living person wounded by a 'shot fired in anger' by New York at Vermont- he was working on a house near the border when a 16 lb cannonball fell out of the wall/chimney jucture above him, breaking several bones in his foot). What's a couple hundred years between enemies? Vermont had its own mint and money(the mint was 2 mi from the site of the above incident). Unfortunately, I also have to report that the abolition was not unconditional, minors were excluded, and recovery of escaped slaves from neighboring territories was allowed. A simplified, whitewashed version was taught in our schools until recently.
@topherkrock
@topherkrock Ай бұрын
That's a nice story and it's accepted by some.
@elliot6166
@elliot6166 7 ай бұрын
"Why do you have to keep bringing up old history" isn't something I ever thought someone would ask someone who gives history tours
@oliviacarolinanogueira7769
@oliviacarolinanogueira7769 8 ай бұрын
You talked about "inherited" slavery, it's important to remember that some slave owners took advantage of that and created essentially slave nurseries, where slave women would forcedly have children that practice was most common after the abolishing of the slave trade, when they couldn't buy more slaves.
@Frommerman
@Frommerman 7 ай бұрын
That was how slavery worked in the United States for the last 30 years of the institution.
@nnekaedwards6147
@nnekaedwards6147 7 ай бұрын
"Nursery" sounds a bit sanitized ... "breeding machines" or "inhouse brothels for Black breeding" might be more apt ... glad you brought it up, though ... this accounts, in no small measure, for the heartbreaking prevalence of broken homes and paternal absenteeism and the "village ram-goat" mentality among Black men and Black adolescent males ...
@moosesandmeese969
@moosesandmeese969 7 ай бұрын
@@Frommerman Yeah they called them "breeding farms"
@skeletorlikespotatoes7846
@skeletorlikespotatoes7846 7 ай бұрын
No they didn't 😅
@GBfanatic15
@GBfanatic15 7 ай бұрын
@@skeletorlikespotatoes7846 yes they did
@Ottovontubes
@Ottovontubes 10 ай бұрын
As a black person living in America I found this intriguing. While I was aware of the information in a broad sense, the details are fascinating. I love how you used the questions asked by white patrons to give context to your presentation. We hear most of those same questions here in America and it never occurred to me that were versions of the same questions in other countries caused by my provincial thinking on the subject. Thanks for the video, you've taught me something and I appreciate it.
@makesnosense6304
@makesnosense6304 10 ай бұрын
The English word slave comes from Old French sclave, from the Medieval Latin sclavus, from the Byzantine Greek, which, in turn, comes from the ethnonym Slav, because in some early Medieval wars many Slavs were captured and enslaved. Slavic states were the Kievan Rus', the Second Bulgarian Empire, the Kingdom of Poland, Duchy of Bohemia, the Kingdom of Croatia, Banate of Bosnia and the Grand Principality of Serbia. Islamic Slave Trade (African Zanj slaves) 9xx - now Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade: 1501-1866
@420JackG
@420JackG 10 ай бұрын
The idea of a "concession" comes to mind. This was a recent practice, too.
@Ottovontubes
@Ottovontubes 10 ай бұрын
@@makesnosense6304 I don't see the reason for your post except to deflect from the subject of the Trans-Atlantic slave trade.
@makesnosense6304
@makesnosense6304 10 ай бұрын
@@Ottovontubes Then you don't understand that slavery is more than just Trans-Atlantic slave trade and I just wanted to point that out. That doesn't mean I take away from the Trans-Atlantic slave trade. I have at no point said anything that pretends that didn't happen.
@Ottovontubes
@Ottovontubes 10 ай бұрын
@@makesnosense6304 ... or you are purposely avoiding talking about a specific aspect of slavery for some reason by bringing in tangential and irrelevant points. Deflecting is not the same as pretending it didn't happen. What was the purpose of comparing the Islamic Slave Trade and the Trans-Atlantic slave trade if not to deflect? How is it relevant to either her video or my response?
@styleyK
@styleyK 4 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your approach to this subject and your well presented and detailed research. As a UK black man who's parents are from the Caribbean (African slave descendants), this really hits home with me. I have learnt so much more about world history and my history since leaving school, and my education in the history of this world will continue. Also it's my belief that black history month should be abolished! Why!? Because black history is part of world history, and should be taught and explained as such and not as something separate. 🙏🏿❤️🇦🇬🇬🇧
@garethjenkins2729
@garethjenkins2729 8 ай бұрын
Having been a fan of your work for a couple of years, I'm surprised that this video hasn't come to my attention sooner. I appreciate the measured and balanced approach that you've taken to the subject and I honestly think that this video should be shown in schools.
@garethjenkins2729
@garethjenkins2729 8 ай бұрын
(FYI, as a neurospicy person, the repetitive music did grate after some time)
@GhostSal
@GhostSal 5 ай бұрын
Balanced? We have must have two very different definitions for the word “balanced”. She intentionally used an ad hominem argument to discourage raising questions about how the Irish were treated. While the definitions of indentured and słavery have two very different meanings, in real world practice indentured were also very often treated as słaves. Asking questions about this shouldn’t be discouraged and nor should questions about anyone’s history. She also gave credit to Haiti for ending słavery first. Which while not directly stated was certainly implied. The issue is, there is a difference between fighting for your own freedom and freeing others. Also, Haiti never actually ended słavery, they actually just renamed it to restavek (where people are førced to work without pay and are also abus3d; meaning beat3n and rap3d). Another point she raised was that England paid słavers but she didn’t actually explain why? They paid them to free the slaves, the idea was that way they could avoid a civil war in order to free them. These are just a few things I remember from the video that were clearly biased and not balanced. Now if you enjoyed the vïdeo, that’s fine but I wouldn’t call it balanced or objective.
@snoopstheboss994
@snoopstheboss994 4 ай бұрын
@@GhostSal If you can not understand the difference between being indentured for 4-7 years vs generations of slaves were children were sold and women raped for more slaves.... it is on you.
@GhostSal
@GhostSal 4 ай бұрын
@@snoopstheboss994 I get your misconception, you’re talking about how they were defined but that wasn’t how they were actually treated. The argument is it was índentured servitude and that’s not the same. However, that’s not what it actually was in real world practice. The Irish were beat3n, had their lands taken, many were førced into service, førced to wørk, forced from their homełand, Irísh wømen rap3d, their chíldren at times actually were sołd and the majoríty were kílled (or had their contracts extended till they dīed). That is in fact słavery, even if they called it something else. Here are a couple qoutes with references: “In theory, the person is only selling his or her labor. In practice, however, indentured servants were basically slaves and the courts enforced the laws that made it so. The treatment of the servant was harsh and often brutal. In fact, the Virginia Colony prescribed “bodily punishment for not heeding the commands of the master.” (Ballagh, 45) Half the servants died in the first two years. As a result of this type of treatment, runaways were frequent. The courts realized this was a problem and started to demand that everyone have identification and travel papers. (A.E. Smith 264-270).” - Deanna Barker, Frontier Resources That’s half in just two years, while other sources claim it was half in total or less around 1/3. Yet, other sources say it was 60% that díed (or were kílled) in total (not just in two years). “Only about 40 percent of índentured servants lived to complete the terms of their contracts. Female servants were often the subject of harassmeñt from their masters. A woman who became pregnant while a servant often had years tacked on to the end of her service time.” - UShistory(dot)org 5b. Indentured Servants By “harassmènt” they mean rap3d.
@brucehartnell1475
@brucehartnell1475 Жыл бұрын
You showed up on my KZfaq feed with the “shorts”, and I was bowled over by the information and intelligent approach you were able to deliver in under a minute. This is my first dive into one of your longer videos and I am even more impressed. Keep up the good work!
@l.alexander4696
@l.alexander4696 Жыл бұрын
I had the exact same response to this video. Am so impressed with this presentation
@lizicadumitru9683
@lizicadumitru9683 Жыл бұрын
Same! And that lovely English accent had me smashing the subscribe button 😂
@keeyan2166
@keeyan2166 Жыл бұрын
It's so sad she hasn't uploaded long form videos in over half a year. I love all these videos and will definitely run out soon :( Hopefully the explosion she's seen due to the shorts, lead to her making a few longer videos again
@koraliekora-leepalmer4024
@koraliekora-leepalmer4024 Жыл бұрын
It's my first long video too!
@melkor9121
@melkor9121 Жыл бұрын
Exactly. That's my exact experience with this channel
@hojetsala5178
@hojetsala5178 9 ай бұрын
When you start concieving of all humans past and present as people like yourself, the sheer scale of suffering and tragedy becomes so staggering and hard to bear. Thank you for your work.
@FaxSicarius
@FaxSicarius 9 ай бұрын
The question is why others have not already come to this conclusion when I figured it out like 40 years ago. Humans are barbaric to each other and always have been. We see it now in the pandemic. No one cares if they harm another innocent human, they just want their own pleasures and desires and human lives are just a price they're willing to pay to get their own "freedom", whatever that may mean to them.
@peteryoble9227
@peteryoble9227 9 ай бұрын
It’s literally unfathomable. I can feel my mind actively rebel when I begin to try to contemplate the sheer scale and horror of our collective history because the suffering and injustice and cruelty of it all is quite literally inconcievable to someone who has lived as good and free a life as I have. It’s like trying to imagine the scale of the universe itself - we can technically measure it in numbers and statistics, but the true nature of it all escapes our understanding because the terrible magnitude of it all simply dwarfs our capacity for comprehension.
@denislaminaccia1
@denislaminaccia1 9 ай бұрын
Now imagine that we are doing it all again to the animals. The suffering, the horror, the tragedy, exploitation - it is still there, at the nearest factory farm. How can we claim that we have learned from the past, while still doing it, but to a different group of beings.
@trinleywangmo
@trinleywangmo 9 ай бұрын
Today, I wager, there's never more people being "trafficked": The new word for slavery. If we're willing to do it to our own... what chance do animals have? @@denislaminaccia1
@HebrewsvJohnv
@HebrewsvJohnv 9 ай бұрын
The 'Fall of Constantinople' in 1453, then fortuitously saw the Byzantine Empire diminished and left the Papacy in top spot. The Fall of Constantinople was also tied to 'Dum Diversas', a Papal Bull which endorsed Portugal's initiating role in the West and Trans-Atlantic Slave Trades under Prince Henry the Navigator. Pope Martin V authorized a crusade against Africa in 1418 and this coupled with a later bull (1441) sanctioned the Portuguese trade in African slaves. Ten black African slaves were presented to Martin in 1441 by Prince Henry of Portugal. By 1444, a ‘cargo’ of 235 enslaved Africans had been brought to Lagos in Portugal. The Portuguese were using enslaved Africans on sugar plantations in Madeira, a Portuguese island off the west coast of Africa, by 1460. They built the first slave fort in 1481, on the coast of modern Ghana. This was Elmina Castle, the headquarters of the Portuguese slave traders. In the early 17th century, Portugal was a major trader in enslaved Africans. At this time, it held the asiento, or contract, to supply the Spanish colonies with slaves. This meant that as well as buying their own slaves, the Portuguese were buying slaves for Spanish owned plantations. This added to the overall number of slaves which Portuguese ships carried. Records show the total figure to be 4,650,000 enslaved Africans. On the 18th June 1452, Pope Nicholas V, issues the Papal Bull Dum Diversas, it authorised Alfonso V of Portugal to reduce any “Saracens (Muslims) and pagans and any other unbelievers” to perpetual slavery. This formally legitimized the Portuguese slave trade from West Africa, so serving as a major origin point of the Transatlantic Slave Trade. This Papal bull along with the doctrine of discovery and Berlin Scramble for Africa set off the basis of mass genocide, colonialism, destruction, theft of lands, apartheid, racism, segregated, racial inequality for tens of millions of people maybe more, with people still stigmatised, racially abused, police brutalised and mass incarcerated as a result. We also find the following: 1.) No direct admission of guilt, complicity, the foundational role played or the authorization given for the slave trade under the Roman Catholic Church - as given in various Papal Bulls. No condemnation of the blessings and approval for this until 2023, BUT NOT DIRECTLY FOR AFRICANS IN THE SLAVE TRADE! 2.) No papal accountability and reflection on the error of the Roman Catholic Church in assigning the Pope to have Papal Supremacy supposedly over the whole of Christendom - so as such that he was considered the supreme authority - as such to be unchallenged by such papal decrees. 3.) No wider acknowledgment of the wider damage, racial oppression, loss of identity and groups generated as religious lost identity cults like the Hebrew Israelites or the dehumanization and degradation caused and inflicted on the black race. 4.) No understanding of the mindset influenced and birthed for racists, especially those with power like Kings, who would in turn influence or perpetuate such attitudes and mindsets within the subjects of their kingdoms. In 1455, Pope Nicholas V gave Portugal the rights to continue the slave trade in West Africa, under the provision that they convert all people who are enslaved. The Portuguese soon expanded their trade along the whole west coast of Africa. Henry the Navigator held the monopoly on all expeditions to Africa granted by the crown until his death in 1460. The authority to write such a Papal Bull came out of the Papal claim and doctrine of 'Papal Supremacy', the Supreme Pontiff claim and a claim to 'Apostolic Succession', which we don't find Biblically, rather it is contrived by clever semantics, eisegesis and fallacious appeals in faulty hermeunetics. ...These false doctrines emanate from or are endorsed by The Catholic Church: * The Vicar of Christ...A God title affixed * The Primacy of Rome * Apostolic Succession and Sacred Tradition claims * Supreme Pontiff. Outside of that in further falsehood for me you then have: * The Immaculate Conception * Mary's Perpetual Virginity * Marian dogma - Two Papal Infallibility Statements * Marian Apparitions * Purgatory (Sale of indulgences led to the Reformation) * Eucharist Transubstantiaton * Infant Baptism * Priesthood Celibacy * Veneration of saints and sacred images. ADOLPH HITLER SAID: Hitler was also ready to discuss with the Bishop (Wilhelm Berning) his views on the Jewish question: "As for the Jews, I am just carrying on with the same policy which the Catholic church has adopted for fifteen hundred years, when it has regarded the Jews as dangerous and pushed them into ghettos etc. "The Nazi Persecution of the Churches" by J.S. Conway, Pgs. 25, 26 & 162. Bernhard Stempfle: Was a Catholic priest and journalist. He helped Adolf Hitler in the writing of Mein Kampf. He was murdered in the Night of the Long Knives. Stempfle entered the priesthood in 1904. He joined the Hieronymite order (the Poor Hermits of Saint Jerome) in Italy. Hitler himself stated, "I learned much from the Order of the Jesuits. Until now, there has never been anything more grandiose, on the earth, than the hierarchical organization of the Catholic church. I transferred much of this organization into my own party."“Hitler m’a dit”, (Ed. Co-operation, Paris 1939, pp.266, 267, 273 ss Walter Schellenberg, former chief of Nazi counter-espionage made this statement: "The S.S. organization had been constituted by Himmler according to the principles of the (Catholic) Jesuit Order. Their regulations and the Spiritual Exercises prescribed by Ignatius of Loyola were the model Himmler tried to copy exactly. Himmler's title as supreme chief of the S.S. was to be the equivalent of the Jesuits' 'General' and the whole structure was a close imitation of the Catholic Church's hierarchical order." Himmler used the Jesuits as the model for the SS, since he found they had the core elements of absolute obedience and the cult of the organisation. Höhne, Heinz (2001). The Order of the Death's Head (p135: The Story of Hitler's SS. Penguin Books. Also, Lapomarda, Vincent (1989). The Jesuits and the Third Reich, pgs 10-11. Franz von Papen, another powerful Nazi, who was instrumental in setting up the concordat between Germany and the Vatican had this to say: "The Third Reich is the first world power which not only acknowledges but also puts into practice the high principles of the papacy." If you are not aware of what a concordat is, a concordat is an agreement between the Vatican and a government. As far as the Vatican is concerned, that government that signed the concordat has now become a part of the government of God, and the Vatican fully intends to stabilize that government, give it divine protection, and give it international protection. Seven German researchers from the University of Munster announced that they had studied documents from the Vatican archives that were recently made available concerning the activities of Pope Pius XII’s during World War II. The research revealed that the pope knew from his own sources about the Nazi death camps and Hitler’s attempts to exterminate the Jews but the pope chose not to reveal this to his contacts with the U.S. government. Pope Pius decided that the reports were inaccurate after an aid convinced him that the main sources, Jews and Ukrainian, could not be trusted because they lied and exaggerated. 1 Corinthians ch 5 v 10 Yet not altogether with the fornicators of this world, or with the covetous, or extortioners, or with IDOLATERS; (FLEE CATHOLIC VENERATION OF SAINTS, STATUES AND MARY IT IS IDOLATRY). for then must ye needs go out of the world. 11 But now I have written unto you not to keep company, if any man that is called a brother be a fornicator, or covetous, or an IDOLATERS, or a railer, or a drunkard, or an extortioner; with such an one no not to eat. FLEE CATHOLIC VENERATION OF SAINTS, STATUES AND MARY IT IS IDOLATRY. Titus 3:10 “A man that is an heretick after the first and second admonition reject;” FLEE FALSE CATHOLICISM DOCTRINE AND HERESY, SUCH AS MARY WAS A PERPETUAL VIRGIN, PURGATORY, PENANCE CAN ATONE. FLEE CATHOLICISM FLEE CATHOLICISM, READ THE FIVE SOLAE, FIND A GOOD CHURCH, READ YOUR BIBLE, REPENT AND PREACH THE GOSPEL.
@amymccoy8964
@amymccoy8964 7 ай бұрын
Thank you so.much for this education on the British Slave trade. I am here in America and I still keep learning more about the American slave trade. Just recently I went to a small museum in South Carolina that taught me about the gullah rice and indigo trade. This involved Africans taken from areas in West Africa who knew how to grow Rice. They were specifically bought by people to grow rice in America where it didn't exist before. So interesting and something I was never taught in any class through college. So much to still be learned. Never stop! Thank you again.
@Cindy99765
@Cindy99765 3 ай бұрын
Plus the Gullah Geechee people are still alive and well!
@farqs1532
@farqs1532 3 ай бұрын
i'm watching your vid 2 years on for the first time and it is superb in it's simplicity. and reminds me that there are still good people in this mad world...even on youtube. thank you Miss Draper.
@Baruch1girl
@Baruch1girl 8 ай бұрын
I am a black American. The way you presented this information was nuanced and respectful. Thank you! This means so much❤
@SchwarzSchwertkampfer
@SchwarzSchwertkampfer 3 ай бұрын
True indeed. Very respectful.
@MaximusWolfe
@MaximusWolfe 2 ай бұрын
No, it’s just pure spin, but okay, buckwheat.
@1Kapachow1
@1Kapachow1 Ай бұрын
It wasn't nuanced, it was heavily biased and manipulative. In reality, all empires enslaved and everyone (including europeans) were enslaved. The *first* empire to *abolish* slavery is europeans, so europeans should be proud.
@someguy6651
@someguy6651 Ай бұрын
@@1Kapachow1 Ah yes, the one unified european empire. If you weren't gonna try to listen, why'd you even bother coming by?
@1Kapachow1
@1Kapachow1 Ай бұрын
@@someguy6651 It is besides the point that some countries in Europe were first but the rest followed. The truly amazing thing is that slavery IS STILL LEGAL in many countries worldwide - guess in which cultures/countries.
@randystone4903
@randystone4903 Жыл бұрын
As a Southerner whose family has a complete mythology about the "War of Northern Aggression" (grandma often used this phrase) I appreciate this information. What really hit home and washed the last of confederate propaganda out of my head was the realization slave children were ripped from their mother's arms and sold. Some family members still hear repeatedly from friends slavery wasn't that bad and the Confederacy was about states rights. It was news to them that the confederate constitution clearly states that slavery is a state's right to continue without interference. I've talked to Virginia aristocrats who compared losing slaves to us losing electricity today. Our Southern aristocracy has an unbroken line going back to colonial times which is definitely unAmarican. I'm old enough to remember segregation in the USA that as an emphatic child I wondered why we restricted Blacks as second class citizens without the power to vote or even use the same drinking fountain much less sit in a whites only diner. We have made progress I believe by remembering our past and learning how important equality is to a healthy society.
@danielmalcolmclohesy7604
@danielmalcolmclohesy7604 Жыл бұрын
I can empathise with you. My country had legally sanctioned Segregation called Apartheid in my language. It didn't end until 1990! I have heard people say we behaved like a country under seige from EVERYONE!
@akken2112
@akken2112 Жыл бұрын
“Cause slavery to disappear and you will have wiped America off the map of nations.” ---Karl Marx
@danielmalcolmclohesy7604
@danielmalcolmclohesy7604 Жыл бұрын
@@akken2112 As an "antekommunis" (against Communism) ever since I was very young. An uncle of mine who I loved as a boetie went to war against the Communists to defend my country and also our neighbour in the Namibië and he was killed in another forgotten African war. Ja, I KNOW there is much politics and I am NOT an Apartheid apologist please! It just becomes more personal on that level. I do not even know why you quote this because Marx's prediktion obviously did not come to fruition.
@akken2112
@akken2112 Жыл бұрын
@@danielmalcolmclohesy7604 Let's be perfectly clear and honest. The/You Boers did not invade Angola, attack Mozambique (and probably murdered Samora Machel), murder Chris Hani, Steve Biko and countless others to defend "against Communism". The/You Boers committed countless acts of violence to sustain and maintain white supremacy, period.
@kidheadcase
@kidheadcase Жыл бұрын
@@danielmalcolmclohesy7604 ​ I reject Marxism while also appreciating that it was an earnest attempt at humanity’s betterment. I like the philosopher, Karl Popper’s take on Marxism and would point anyone interested in the subject towards his book ‘The Open Society And It’s Enemies’. A person who I do not particularly admire, Winston Churchill, said (rather brilliantly) of democracy: “Democracy is the worst form of government - except for all the others that have been tried.” This could also perhaps sum-up the way I feel about life in a capitalist nation like Australia (where I live). My society being considerably better and fairer to it’s citizens than, say, North Korea should not be cause for complacency in our efforts towards bettering the respective good-qualities and fairness of this nation. We should never get proud and conservative about things. We should always be looking to help those around us and we should always be bettering ourselves (and our societies).
@bananabobo789
@bananabobo789 8 ай бұрын
Hey! I'm an activist from the UK and this was such a refreshing video. I often hear these exact questions but I'm not a historian so sometimes I struggle to argue against what I don't know (especially the comments on Irish Slaves). It sucks that even when you're doing your job you get people who think they must know better and question what you've said, but I'm glad I found this video and got the opportunity to learn myself. Now I have the ammunition to defend myself whenever someone calls me a racist for wanting to talk about why it is still important to talk about the effects of the slave trade
@KaiTenSatsuma
@KaiTenSatsuma 8 ай бұрын
1:18 - Nail, Head, etc: there's a reason you, and nobody gets taught the details of the history. Because it's incredibly hard to come away with the details and justifications given *even at the time* in hand with an impression that things were anything other than completely mean-spirited for the sake of profit and on the whole very little has changed. Separate-but-related-topic: Don't look into the particulars of Britain's occupation of India unless you want to spend an afternoon drinking.
@iskrajackal9049
@iskrajackal9049 8 ай бұрын
@bananabobo789 You are so correct in what you say. Even right now there us still slavery going on. To be forced into a minimum wage job, with or without zero hours, and with the precariousness of no written contract is pretty much slavery.
@kesiafiya1347
@kesiafiya1347 8 ай бұрын
Absolutely brilliant!!! So well done! ❤ hopefully there's some school teachers out there who choose to include this video in a lesson plan 🤞
@jerrybrown1446
@jerrybrown1446 Жыл бұрын
I was a poor student in school and dropped out. I have since developed a love of learning and I am very grateful for teachers like you on KZfaq who are willing to share their knowledge.
@annacobb1140
@annacobb1140 11 ай бұрын
Me too! It's kinda become a hobby for me to find good sources. Expensive degrees often get attached to some ignorant people. I believe this to be an absolute gem of a channel!!
@lightbeingform
@lightbeingform 11 ай бұрын
Keep going! ❤ Having been down that path and later returned to college(post GED/ remedial courses), I can say there are merits to the college experience as well, but it is by no means necessary to develop intellectually. What your intellect develops into depends on how well you maintain your intellectual virtues and critical thinking skills. Bon voyage! Have fun!🎉
@spiritbond8
@spiritbond8 11 ай бұрын
Teachers are Saints!
@klimtklavier
@klimtklavier 10 ай бұрын
@@spiritbond8 Sadly, there isn't one here.
@Isabel-of4wq
@Isabel-of4wq Жыл бұрын
I can’t say enough good things about this video. Im a British American with a degree in history. The tone, the accuracy, critical thinking and respect for sources - and the way she presents the evidence - is exemplary. I hope this gets viewed widely by many audiences … i certainly recommend it.
@VolkColopatrion
@VolkColopatrion 11 ай бұрын
I also suggest Thomas Sowell. Because he also dispels many myths that are said very very often in American schools. And some people don't like him for that because I don't know. Maybe because of his economic views and how he disposed of many convenient myth
@LC-sc3en
@LC-sc3en 11 ай бұрын
​@@VolkColopatrion Black people who are conservatives and agree with Sowell do exist but they are rare and most and scholars who study the social economics and history of the United States disagree with a lot of his points on it being a cultural issue. He puts forward a lot of "respectability politics" as if only black Americans could get their act together and work hard they would be in the same place due to the existence of American meritocracy. Asides from the meritocracy being a myth (only about 18% of people regardless of race actually moving up social classes in their lifetimes despite working their butts off). And asides the idea that lower class people aren't "working hard enough" when we all know the most grueling jobs are some of the least paid.... Being respectable and middle class didn't save Greenwood from being burnt down by white people. Then decades later after it was rebuilt and was wealthier and more prosperous than ever, that didn't save it from being bulldozed to build a highway. Being respectable or affluent didn't prevent Portland from forcefully buying homes from black people at far below market rate in the only affluent black neighborhood and bulldozing them for a hospital expansion that never happened. Or flooding the towns to make a brand new lake or reservoir for white residents. There are so many stories of this happening to hard working middle class families that it would take many pages to list them. The US government systematically has discriminated against black people at nearly every turn and profited off of it. Said profits or benefits mostly going towards upper and middle class white citizens. It may be that there is no explicitly racist law or rule on the books. But it is hard to deny something about the system sets it up so it just so happens to be black and brown people suffering for progress while white people disproportionately get all the aid. Just look at how the covid relief money went. The wealthy with their connections got the most, then white middle and lower class people, and minority owned business got far less than their share of the pie by percentage of need. But then people go and throw a hiss fit when someone suggests doing an aid program to even out the distribution because it explicitly mentions race so "racism".
@saritavenkatapathynaidu9533
@saritavenkatapathynaidu9533 11 ай бұрын
@@LC-sc3enI wish that I had the energy and capacity to take these wonderful resources - (ie: this video, but also the comment section), find the sources via contacting commenters, etc, and compile just the knowledge we collectively hold in this community. I find that the most difficult thing isn’t the actual part of presenting knowledge to someone who has any chance of listening (some people never will, it’s too emotional for them and they feel shame); the hardest part is compiling and sourcing the information in understandable and digestible ways without straying too far from our primary sources and the words of our scholars and educators. Sometimes the information we need when we’re dumbfounded at the replies or stammering to help them see is in so many places and so common, but inaccessible. I think about that quite a lot. Anyway, this is a very roundabout way of saying thank you for your analysis and comments, they’re indispensably valuable and one of the good jumping off points for me when it comes to understanding the opposing perspective so that I may break down its logical fallacies and point out the core basis of its beliefs in plain sight. Thanks!
@johnmckiernan2176
@johnmckiernan2176 10 ай бұрын
@@VolkColopatrion Thomas Sowell isn't even a historian. He's an economist, a shill and a mouthpiece for every trending piece of right wing bigotry.
@richardwills-woodward5340
@richardwills-woodward5340 9 ай бұрын
This was propaganda, not history. The sources are a crime against learning. I hope few see this today, it is deeply evil propaganda.
@geraldrhule5945
@geraldrhule5945 5 ай бұрын
Thank you for puting this so exclently to me 😢 whit tears in my eyes I said thanks again😢 l am a African Jamaican ..so imagine the pain I'm going thrugh right now😢 but to you I feel nothing but love and gratitude thank you so much❤
@EmilyFuger
@EmilyFuger 7 ай бұрын
This was excellent. Thanks for taking the time to put it all together this way.
@EMB238
@EMB238 Жыл бұрын
As a tour guide in Philadelphia, preparing materials that address the enslaved African experience, your presentation is a valuable resource. Thank you. 🇺🇸
@tomthx5804
@tomthx5804 11 ай бұрын
Any clown that uses "enslaved persons" rather than the usual "slaves" can never be trusted.
@EMB238
@EMB238 11 ай бұрын
@@tomthx5804 What! You’re making a bold statement about someone (me) you don’t even know. Buzz off, buster!
@EMB238
@EMB238 11 ай бұрын
@@VolkColopatrion Thanks for the link. Will check it out. My issue w/ “Tom” is to say a person with a different experience “can not be trusted.” Ad hominem assertions are out of bounds! Sorry.
@VolkColopatrion
@VolkColopatrion 11 ай бұрын
@@EMB238 where did he say that? What is the context
@EMB238
@EMB238 11 ай бұрын
@@VolkColopatrion please see in my “replies.”
@meg_pflueger
@meg_pflueger 11 ай бұрын
My mom is from Trinidad and Tobago and is afro-caribbean. I am mixed and was born in the US. It is so interesting to learn about slavery from the British perspective. It is something that had a great impact on my ancestors and everything coming together to make my existence possible. ❤ Thank you for approaching this topic sensitively and factually!
@duccop5623
@duccop5623 10 ай бұрын
this comment deserves more likes
@rashidbelike9430
@rashidbelike9430 9 ай бұрын
I’m asking this question of a lot of Caribbean‘s in the comment section. I want to know if y’all call yourselves African-Americans in the Caribbean because I’ve never heard any Caribbean person using that term for themselves unless they were living in the continental United States of America in a Black American community.
@quiznak1003
@quiznak1003 8 ай бұрын
@@rashidbelike9430 While I'm not from the Caribbean, both my mom and my grandmother on my father's side of the family are. With that in mind, the answer is no. African-American is a term that is only used by those in the US. Black people from the Caribbean and even from other parts of the Americas don't really use that term.
@Ainennke
@Ainennke 7 ай бұрын
This was such a well-constructed and sensitive dive into this topic. Thank you.
@philliphessel6788
@philliphessel6788 5 ай бұрын
Thank you for this well done presentation! As a U.S. American, I am very plainly surrounded by still ongoing afflictions traced back to slavery. The poison of racism dividing our nation is far from the least of those. There are also interestingly different (albeit generally tragic) histories in different parts of this large country, plenty to occupy specialized scholarship.
@otaple
@otaple 3 жыл бұрын
I want to thank you for subtitling your videos. I have a Japanese friend who lived near London for a while. I sent her your channel and she said the subtitles allow her to use the videos for brushing up on her English.
@mongoliandude
@mongoliandude Жыл бұрын
Heads up: the people of African descent in the Caribbean are typically referred to as Afro-Caribbean, rather than African-American. Many Afro-Caribbean populations absorbed the dwindling native islander populations through inter-marrying and this DNA is still very visible in modern, commercial genealogy tests among Afro-Caribbean, although it is sadly true that the distinct native islander populations have disappeared. Great video, thank you.
@Alaskan-Armadillo
@Alaskan-Armadillo Жыл бұрын
There still is a lot of indigeneity in the Caribbean (Specifically the Greater Antilles) it is just that the Spanish lied on census records saying that people who were mixed with indigenous were either more Spanish then indigenous and therefore 'hispanicized'. As well as deliberately lying and calling indigenous people African. They talk a lot about this in the book Havana and The Atlantic by Alejandro Fuentes.
@UnderTheSameSun693
@UnderTheSameSun693 Жыл бұрын
They haven't disappeared. They're still here. The Taino.
@jasonblanchfield4780
@jasonblanchfield4780 Жыл бұрын
Caribs.
@blackbway
@blackbway Жыл бұрын
Of the four big islands (The Greater Antilles), Jamaica has the least trace of native blood left. In Cuba, DR, and especially Porto Rico, the native blood still runs strong. I am From Jamaica, and I always wish I could identify at least one native person on the island.
@nmart1n
@nmart1n Жыл бұрын
@@UnderTheSameSun693 I immediately thought of Dominica.
@Lorna8264
@Lorna8264 8 ай бұрын
Thanks for your explanation particularly towards the end
@Finn4thewinn
@Finn4thewinn 5 ай бұрын
As an American this was so interesting, very glad you made this video since we barely learn about slavery as is. We often have to seek out information on our own so I appreciate self-aware vids like this ❤
@GhostSal
@GhostSal 5 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, American education on the subject of słavery is abysmal, it leaves out way too much. Słavery across the globe and throughout time wasn’t because someone had a certain skín color and if those people weren’t there słavery wouldn’t exist. Yes, in North America for a time race was the excuse that was used, so was religion, but those were only the excuses used. Many people seemingly only want to díscuss North America or put more an emphasis on it saying it was far worse than anywhere else. So let’s clear up some things. we often hear people say 400 years but actually Błack people didn’t become the majority of słaves in Notth America till the mid 1700s. Which lasted until 1865, just over 100 years. Still horrific, still clearly an injustice and críme against humanity but certainly not an isolated event. Before that the majority of słaves in Ameríca were the índigenous tríbes/First Nations people. In fact 400 years really doesn’t even scratch the surface, słavery existed for tens of thousands of years, if not hundreds of thousands. Słaves and índentured servànts were used for labor and/or s3x. There are a lot of mísconceptions regarding índentured servantš, índentured servànts weren’t always treated better, nor did they always agree to be índentured servànts (that’s right there were iídentured servànts that were forced into servítude, just like słaves). Sometimes the contract holder would sell the contract of the índentured servànt to someone else without their consent, thereby extending the contract (so 20 years could become 40). Another thing they would do is førce the wømen to get pregnant, which would also extend their contracts and keep them pregnant till old age (by then owing more years, than they had years of life left and I’ll let you figure out how they førced them to get pregnant). How about słavery, so many people make arguments it was only horrifíc in Ameríca and that it wasn’t that bad here or there but is that true? Słavery as already mentioned existed for thousands and thousands of years, all across the globe. Chattel słavery did in fact also exist in Afríca and it wasn’t a kinder gentler form of słavery; unless you consider mass human sacrifíce and canníbalísm kinder and gentler. Słavery existed in Afríca well before Eurøpeans showed up and Afrícan rulers fought the Eurøpeans in order to keep it going. In the Middle East the słave market was huge, the słaves brought in were often castràted (so no, that wasn’t a kinder gentler form either). Słavery existed in Asia and Asía is still infamous for having sweatshops. The Vikíngs often raided Eurøpe and took słaves back with them. The wømen they took served the Viking men, both work and s3x. When the słave øwner díed, the wøman he had as a słave would often be gàng ràpéd by the men in the village and kīlled to serve the owner in the afterlife. Ancient Romans brutałły ensłaved other Europeans and people around the Mediterranean. In the Amerícas the Natíves enslaved others Natíves and also had human sacrifíce. The point is słavery was and is horrifíc, all over the world it’s horrifíc and has been for a very very long time (that’s not minimizing it for one group to say that, in fact it’s minimizing everywhere else to not recognize it was horrific all over). How about chattel slavery? Here is the thing, you can’t ensłave descendànts if there aren’t any. The Barbary słaves often had a much shorter lífe span and had no hope of procreatíon. Many díed chaíned in the ínterior of the ship sitting in their own excrèment covered in open wøunds or díed chaíned to a sínking ship that lost a battle. There was no fèmale companíonship, no livíng to an old age, no sunshíne, no høpe … Just the incredibly harsh realitíes of the shíp for the rest of their short míserable líves. In the Middle East the vast majoríty of słaves were castratèd and agian never had the opportuníty to reprøduce. Many of which didn’t even survíve being castrated. Does anyone really think that’s any “better”? Also, this idea many people have that chíldren of słaves were born free across the globe or słaves weren’t sold as property (except in Ameríca) is absurd. When people say that in North Ameríca it was wørse or Eurøpeans have the most to be błamed for (which is said a lot lately), that isn’t intellectually honest and is blatantly ígnoring the atrocitíes commítted around the globe. Yes, it was horrific in North America AND it was/is horrific across the globe throughout mankind’s history. When people blame only group of people over everyone else, it is in fact minimizing the atrocitíes committed everywhere else. Those people are doing precisely what they blame other people for doing (i.e., “minimizíng” the atrocitíes of słavery, except they are minimizing it around the entire world).
@justacommenter
@justacommenter 11 ай бұрын
A good book for Irish Americans to read is "How the Irish Became White" by Noel Ignatiev. The Irish were horribly oppressed and subject to many atrocities in Ireland under British rule, there's no denying that. However in America, despite initial xenophobia (ala "No blacks, no dogs, no Irish), the Irish had the advantage of not looking very different from other white Americans. Within a generation or so they would have been able to "become white" becoming policemen etc. and distinguishing themselves as different from other immigrants who were non-white by being racist themselves.
@justacommenter
@justacommenter 11 ай бұрын
@@Mewmew-lv5iv Well obviously the skin colour hadn't changed. It was ethnic and class discrimination they faced. The title refers to how the Irish stopped themselves from being seen as something other than regular white Americans.
@spe3dy744
@spe3dy744 11 ай бұрын
​@@Mewmew-lv5iv Maybe "civilised" would be a better word, but "white" is a closer fit to the modern day terms I guess. Not that white means civilised but in how relations between people are.
@ravenof1985
@ravenof1985 11 ай бұрын
it was a lot longer than one generation, they were "indentured servants" or prisoners brought over from the early days and were discriminated against until the end of the 19th century with some discrimination going until the mid 20th century (and was at its highest between the potato famine and the civil war). It sort of still goes on today with terms like "mick" "paddy wagon" and the way we are portrayed as drunk potato eaters around St Patricks day (imagine calling chinese people "wangs" a police van was called a "N word Van" or people celebrated black history month with fried chicken and grape soda).
@tammyd.970
@tammyd.970 11 ай бұрын
I think this is a valid point. 'white' and 'black' are constructs, is the point you are making, I believe. If you go to the continent of Africa, people are not going to see themselves as 'black'. In fact, many people are described as 'blue' or 'red' or whatever. In America, people from some countries were not considered 'white', such as Italians. The formation of blackness and whiteness is complex and fascinating, if one has the luxury of being able to step back far enough to examine it clearly. It is not something just defined by skin color.
@sean5350
@sean5350 11 ай бұрын
@@Mewmew-lv5iv it's in the same vain that the irish where called dirty and the n word due to living amongst black people
@kymaeryk
@kymaeryk Жыл бұрын
I am an American of slave descent who studies Arab colonization and slavery of Africa and have seen the same level and degree of misinformation and deflection of blame. I hear Americans even say Europeans invented slavery and it's crazy to me. It's also annoying how people here in the middle east get upset that I study what I study. They ask the same question why dont I study transatlantic or blame the Europeans for xyz which is odd to me as my pursuit in history is finding what happened not blaming anyone today.
@salehal-jeelani7523
@salehal-jeelani7523 Жыл бұрын
That's sad man. I guess people always want to feel "innocent", even though they aren't even getting blamed for the shit that happened to begin with.
@gypsydonovan
@gypsydonovan Жыл бұрын
I think, at least for many Americans descended from slaves, there is a need to not quite blame, but hold responsible those who have continued racist intentions system meant to continue slavery (such as private prisons) or institutional methods of oppression (denial of loans, educational opportunities & home ownership) that continue to thrive today. I had an uncle who used to complain that slavery is over, black people should just get over it. But how can you get over something that isn’t really over? And, our history books are incredibly biased. Bringing it up, talking about what the slave trade was, it’s current effects, is the only reason people have any unbiased knowledge of the Atlantic slave trade. The average person doesn’t seek out primary sources like journals, census data or wills. They know what they learn in school, and, imo more importantly, they learn through black peoples sharing their knowledge & personal experiences. It may be through politics or activism, through academic or popular writing, and it may be through the arts. Music, sculpture, paintings. I’m interested in the era. I’m a historian. I still don’t think I have 1/25 the knowledge about it that I should. If you look black & come from the states, there’s a biased assumption that as a historian you’re going to study slavery. Study whatever you’re Interested in. It’s ridiculous (& racist) for anyone to push you towards a field because of the color of your skin. But racial bias is so insidious that people don’t even realize how racist the assumption is or that they wouldn’t ask the same of a white American historian. I am a white American historian & no one has ever asked me why I don’t specialize in the Atlantic slave trade. Nor have they questioned my degrees in medieval Europen history or Viking burial practices. If you are only asking something because of melanin level, you need to reflect on that. If I were in your position, I’d point that out every time it comes up.
@D4L_457
@D4L_457 Жыл бұрын
Well I don’t know who invented I know the Romans had slaves that they made into slaves or brought slaves, but I know they was the worst.
@D4L_457
@D4L_457 Жыл бұрын
Same in America apprentice we called in sharecropping in America. Irish slaves was apprentice and was allowed to be brought and live free Blacks was not. Daniel Boone brought his wife Rebecca and she was free.
@grudgebearer1404
@grudgebearer1404 Жыл бұрын
As a fellow historian you should and hopefully is able to differentiate slavery on the Middle East and Africa as result of power dynamics of conflict and ethnicity and the transatlantic slavery that was about exploiting slave labor to profit from it and in the end being the main engine of the Primitive Accumulation of Capital that has direct results on today's geopolitics.
@user-li7zq2py5p
@user-li7zq2py5p 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for covering this top. You have done very well. I like your vest. Very stylish!
@valhalla-tupiniquim
@valhalla-tupiniquim 6 ай бұрын
This is the most important video of this channel until now. I became your fan! ❤
@cameronwansley9049
@cameronwansley9049 Жыл бұрын
My father is African American & my mother is Caucasian English, so growing up with both nation's histories of slavery being told in my house was very important to my growth as an empathetic individual, especially considering nearly every history book I encountered in school told the lightest possible versions of the truth in order to save face & not upset the local PTA groups. Criticism is so often misinterpreted as hate, when in reality it is the very thing that can propel us into a future of understanding & harmony with our neighbours on this planet. Thank you so much for addressing this topic not only with incredible tact & tenacity, but for being so engaging in how you relay said information with sincere understanding; I was entranced by how firmly your gaze remained on the lens & felt as if your words landed with more oomph because of it - Fantastic piece all around 🤙🏽
@kasondaleigh
@kasondaleigh Жыл бұрын
I agree. People say “ don’t talk about religion politics or money”, but only by being critical of the status quo AND discussing your criticisms with others can people learn to be better humans and move our society forward.
@VolkColopatrion
@VolkColopatrion 11 ай бұрын
Yeah that said there's myths on every side. Sometimes we don't even intend them but sometimes lies get propagated so often that they become the truth. Thomas Sowell also addresses some of these. I think you would prefer a lot by reading his books if only to possibly see the inaccuracies within them or maybe learn some more
@mcfahk
@mcfahk 11 ай бұрын
@@VolkColopatrion 'I think you would prefer a lot' What does that mean? Also, Thomas Sowell? Really? Who next? Clarence Thomas? 'There are myths on every side', perhaps, but that does not imply equivalency, and it doesn't mean that all views on any matter carry equal weight. All opinions are not equal. You would, I presume, not go to your butcher to have your brain examined when it hurts. Learn to write and phrase more carefully: there are not always good people on both sides, and there are not always good arguments on both sides. Certainly not when it comes to topics like this.
@VolkColopatrion
@VolkColopatrion 11 ай бұрын
Why do you assume I have an ulterior motive? And ofcourse different myths are less or more wrong. It seems like you're projecting things onto me And what does Clarence Thomas have anything to do with this conversation? Near as I can tell he wasn't a historian. I'm not sure if he ever opined on the history of slavery or if his opinion should matter because he's not a historian
@VolkColopatrion
@VolkColopatrion 11 ай бұрын
@@mcfahk Clarence Thomas has nothing to do with this at all. He's a judge not a historian and I'm not sure he's ever opined and even if he did I don't think it would be worth much. But here you are saying that I'm here with the ulterior motive?
@urieaaron
@urieaaron Жыл бұрын
I just can't think of the words to express how impressed I am with your work. This episode in particular would be a clear winner in a competition with many major documentary studios. Somehow you struck just the right balance between being a talking head and over dramatizing the video with too many distractions and added graphics. Your sometimes subtle and not so subtle raising of an eyebrow or a bit of a wink added just the right amount of informational context at just the right time. I can see you have worked with the public for quite a long time and have learned how to express yourself in ways that lets rude people know exactly what you are thinking without giving them the tools to cause you additional difficulties.
@jamesc7277
@jamesc7277 Жыл бұрын
I’m a second-generation American of virtually all Irish ancestry. I usually say the British essentially practiced on us before they spread out to colonize and abuse the rest of the world. Maybe not a lot of Irish slavery, but lots of nasty exploitation, brutalization, and murder.
@kellygreen-cw5hs
@kellygreen-cw5hs Жыл бұрын
As a tour guide, she is clearly VERY good at here job! 🤩
@miguelthealpaca8971
@miguelthealpaca8971 Жыл бұрын
I wish there were awards for KZfaq videos, like there are for TV shows and films, because she deserves one.
@STSWB5SG1FAN
@STSWB5SG1FAN Жыл бұрын
@@miguelthealpaca8971 I believe you can nominate her and her videos for some award on KZfaq, or just keep subscribing and tell everyone you know to subscribe to her channel so she'll earn that golden KZfaq plaque.
@Angelica-ps4cs
@Angelica-ps4cs 5 ай бұрын
This is such a well crafted video. I really appreciate the way you've handled this. Also, I must say; you have lovely penmanship.
@GrammaJamma4U
@GrammaJamma4U 4 ай бұрын
Thank you for your posting.
@SescilyConey
@SescilyConey Жыл бұрын
This was so good. As a Black woman in the US, seeing all of this information tied together was so good and informational. Well done. I’ve subscribed!
@spenser9908
@spenser9908 Жыл бұрын
Oh, "as a black woman", are you at all interested in hearing about black African slave traders every five minutes, while every other nation's involvement with slavery goes virtually unheard of?
@sjappiyah4071
@sjappiyah4071 Жыл бұрын
@@spenser9908 Having fun engaging in deflection under every comment?
@spenser9908
@spenser9908 Жыл бұрын
@@sjappiyah4071 Why can't I get a straight answer out of anyone? You don't seem to know what deflection is. I'm helping you understand why people tend to ask these questions by showing you their point of view.
@sjappiyah4071
@sjappiyah4071 Жыл бұрын
@@spenser9908 Because you’re not asking a straight question and you know it, it’s a loaded question being used for deflection. And yes I am using deflection correctly, this video is discussing the triangle slave trade , and it’s ramifications. You under every comment bringing up slavery that occurred in Africa is not contributing to the conversation, as again the video and it’s discussion is focusing on the triangle trade. By repeatedly bringing this point up your aim is to distract from the current subject at hand…
@spenser9908
@spenser9908 Жыл бұрын
@@sjappiyah4071 Yes it's a loaded question, that's entirely the point. And you know the answer, which proves your hypocrisy, which is therefore why you refuse to answer it. Talk about bad faith. You're not remotely interested in understanding why these people are asking her these questions, clearly. You just want to call them racist whenever they do. You're part of the problem.
@enryuxzero
@enryuxzero Жыл бұрын
As an Irish man I do think the Irish were lucky compared to African slaves but should still be discussed more than it currently is, irish history particularly outside of Ireland is often shown with a lack of context, a better understanding of the history particularly the dificulty relationship with our neighbour under the crown can be healthy when discussed with open minds
@ambriaashley3383
@ambriaashley3383 11 ай бұрын
As a descendant of African slaves (not saying I speak for all of them), I agree that we must speak out & learn about all spaces as it all was a tragedy. It horrifies me that anyone was enslaved, especially in such a barbaric way as African chattel slavery
@tumadre50
@tumadre50 11 ай бұрын
I would like to learn much more about the history of the Irish in general for sure. But like all history it needs to be as objective as possible. Nearly all mentions of Irish history I hear in the US (other than what little we learned in school) are usually meant as a means to downplay or outright ignore the history of African slavery in the Americas and their descendants. In other words they have a political/ideaological agenda not an interest in teaching or learning history.
@AndromedaCripps
@AndromedaCripps 11 ай бұрын
Both communities benefit from increased literacy on the topic- explaining the impact and significance to Irish people and their descendants with more sincerity, while also revealing the truth of comparison with African chattel slavery. Wider literacy on the subject takes it out of the hands of white supremacists to teach, removing their ability to use the story as misinformation to further their sociopolitical agenda.
@hypersynesthesia
@hypersynesthesia 11 ай бұрын
I’m Irish too and I agree it should be discussed more & understood better. However, it deserves its own conversation, started in good faith rather than whataboutery, and Black people deserve for the conversation about their peoples’ history not to be derailed by it.
@tianamarie989
@tianamarie989 11 ай бұрын
​@@tumadre50 idk, when you start asking questions of those that mention Irish slavery aren't trying to downplay or ignore the history of african slavery here in america, they say that they bring it up because the majority of black/african Americans act as though they are the only race that was enslaved.(again that's their words not mine) which if you talk with or watch black/african Americans videos you can see that they do in fact act as though they are the only race that's been enslaved. I thinks it's unfair to make statements like you did without asking why they are saying that. Also, I fully believe that every creator, person, and commentators have agendas, and it's foolish to think not one person doesn't have one.
@latishalarimore7156
@latishalarimore7156 Ай бұрын
I love your videos. This one reminds me of a wonderful history teacher I had in high school. Something she said that has always stuck with me is "if you don't learn from history you are doomed to repeat it." She may have been quoting someone else but it has always made me think.
@octagon3759
@octagon3759 8 ай бұрын
Personally (I am from the US) I was always taught that indentured servitude was how America got around the slave trade after it was banned (besides prison slaves), the 40 acres and a mule was revoked by Abraham Lincoln's successor (yes his very own vice president) thus putting the vast majority of freed slaves in a predicament, they were now free but had not a single penny to their name and no education whatsoever under their belt, many decided to become indentured servants, having this sort of work been all they've known, so they could attain at least something in their post slavery live, as well as the fact that there were codes on how you may punish slaves which got more strict as time went on, I remember reading The Crucible in high school (a book about the Salem Witch Trials) and one of the focus points was about a slave being murdered and someone being arrested for it (I don't have great memory of the book, it was pretty boring, so I may be wrong about this part), though after some brief research I found that it was also pretty rare for these sort of crimes to be pursued (including murder). All in all, yes it was ABSOLUTELY worse to be a slave, but I'd appreciate if you didn't spend so much time trying to downplay how abusive indentured servitude was, people may have willingly agreed to it but it was only because the situation they were in was somehow even worse than the one proposed buy the job (at least in their own perspective), and just because they could sue does not mean that the majority of the cases had a fair assessment (as I mentioned earlier killing slaves was illegal in the US well before the abolishment of slavery, however it was still quite rare for slave owners to be prosecuted over the murder of a slave). I understand the need to combat white supremacy, and I applaud your efforts to do so, but it should not be at the sacrifice of the suffering of the millions whos position forced them into indentured servitude
@matthewhiggins1984
@matthewhiggins1984 Жыл бұрын
I watched this last night and keep mulling over what I learned in my head. This was a very good piece of historical education, especially the point about why this specific slave trade is unlike any other and why it is so relevant to Europeans and Americans. As an Irish-American I can tell you the example of “Irish Slavery” you cited (the book from 1993 written by the white supremacist) is probably the first written comprehensive statement of this false claim, but this trope has been batted about by the Irish-American community for years before that. It’s a story I heard as a kid in the mid 80s and was probably being told long before that. I’ve noticed that many Irish-Americans use this false history to justify white supremacist, white grievance, and racist beliefs.
@andreabrown4541
@andreabrown4541 Жыл бұрын
Which is extremely bizarre considering the relationship the continental Irish had with African Americans both during the abolitionist movement (statues of Douglass) and the CRM.
@EvanEvans9
@EvanEvans9 Жыл бұрын
Isn't slavery still happening all over Africa?
@kudjoeadkins-battle2502
@kudjoeadkins-battle2502 Жыл бұрын
@@EvanEvans9 It happens all over Europe as well.
@barry4887
@barry4887 Жыл бұрын
@@EvanEvans9 Middle East and Europe as well !!
@thomasherrin6798
@thomasherrin6798 Жыл бұрын
@@kudjoeadkins-battle2502 Not legally!?!
@Jeffertoya
@Jeffertoya Жыл бұрын
Tooo good! As an African American, I've heard these questions too many times to count. I wish giving the answers mattered to most who have asked me. . . Thanks for doing this.
@2degucitas
@2degucitas Жыл бұрын
Too bad you have to tolerate people's ignorance, but I commend you for trying.
@frankkiejo5560
@frankkiejo5560 Жыл бұрын
Exactly. I learned to stop answering them if they ask certain questions in a certain way. They don’t want answers. They want a justification.
@chrisfs150
@chrisfs150 Жыл бұрын
Jefferson Montoya what part of africa did you come from?
@pauljordantalbot4100
@pauljordantalbot4100 Жыл бұрын
As an Irish American, I sometimes heard the “what about the Irish?” Argument (usually not even by Irish defended people) and it reeked of racism, love that this video gave me the words to address that nonsensical comparison. Yup, it was a white nationalist paper from the 90’s not even that long ago. manipulative classism
@Jeffertoya
@Jeffertoya Жыл бұрын
@@chrisfs150 my ancestors are mostly from Senegal. Thanks for askin!
@thomasfarrier9122
@thomasfarrier9122 4 ай бұрын
Happy New Year, Ms D. Thanks for creating truly enjoyable content.
@clwilson920
@clwilson920 4 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your research into this topic. You've cleared up some confusion for me, and allowed me to do the same for those close to me. Maybe it'll even do some good.
@mrjones2721
@mrjones2721 10 ай бұрын
Nobody goes to a museum for, say, medieval English farm life and says, “What about the French? They had farming in the Middle Ages, too.” No one goes to an exhibition on Scottish industry and complains that no one’s talking about the Swiss or the Chinese. It’s only when something bad comes up that people remember there are other countries in the world.
@ayeyou5651
@ayeyou5651 9 ай бұрын
​@MennilTossFlykunewhy do people go there just to ask that question... So dense
@murk4552
@murk4552 8 ай бұрын
@MennilTossFlykune whataboutism is a fallacy, not asking a real question that is objective and unloaded with bias.
@unluckyomens370
@unluckyomens370 8 ай бұрын
@MennilTossFlykunewould you ask about french medieval farms at an exhibit for medieval english farms?
@SomeInfamousGuy
@SomeInfamousGuy 8 ай бұрын
​@MennilTossFlykuneYes, as much as anyone is trying to make us believe that only Europeans had slaves.
@Andyboy992
@Andyboy992 8 ай бұрын
@@murk4552 If you have Mediterranean roots, and some white lady is trying to get you to buy into her personal guilt trip and ignoring your own peoples history with the slave trade out of arab and african countries... you are going to have some pretty pointed questions. Especially if you are aware of the war on slavery that the british were the first to initiate
@davidsnapp7121
@davidsnapp7121 Жыл бұрын
I really appreciated what you said regarding the “normal back then” segment. You brought up many good points. Keep up the good work.
@deadprivacy
@deadprivacy Жыл бұрын
still is normal to this day in some parts of the world, always has been, heres looking at you prophet muhammed....
@grimnir2922
@grimnir2922 Жыл бұрын
​@deadprivacy Or you know. The South. Had to get your jab at Muslims though, I get it.
@deadprivacy
@deadprivacy Жыл бұрын
@@grimnir2922 its only muslims who follow a prophet who literally laid down rules for trading and keeping slaves. where its prevalent in the world today? are islamic states. there isnt any other culture where they have the practice codified and deified?
@haristheconqueror
@haristheconqueror Жыл бұрын
@@grimnir2922 Does slavery not cause any feelings of righteous indignation for you? Or are you arguing that the Middle East doesn't have slavery anymore? And the South?! What?!
@kamilahmaudsley964
@kamilahmaudsley964 10 ай бұрын
@@haristheconqueror I think their comment is meant to be a condemnation of the commenter's motivation being islamophobia, rather than genuine concern about modern forms of slavery.
@keithwortelhock6078
@keithwortelhock6078 4 ай бұрын
Cracking presentation! Thank you!
@getofficialwithdante6719
@getofficialwithdante6719 3 ай бұрын
This video is a must-watch for colleges around the world, especially those located in regions that have been colonized. The speaker does an excellent job of explaining every aspect of the topic and addressing all the questions and concerns that are often a headache for Black people to answer or rebut. I truly appreciate the effort that was put into making this video. Kudos to the speaker!
@throwback19841
@throwback19841 Жыл бұрын
I am very privileged to have had a history teacher at my (private) school who ignored the national curriculum and covered slavery and apartheid. He was a substitute out of retirement covering for our usual history teacher who had a horrible car accident and needed 2 years to recover (he walked again but we carried him into school on our shoulders when he returned). Anyway as a result he didn't give a damn about not following the curriculum. I didn't realize most kids in the early 90s didn't get taught this in British schools.
@phoebesmith9089
@phoebesmith9089 Жыл бұрын
Nobody in the US gets taught this in schools, either. I only learned more in college. And that’s only because I took what was called then minority studies classes.
@BiTurbo228
@BiTurbo228 Жыл бұрын
@@COM70 The difficult is that it does matter now. Aboriginal peoples of Australia are still suffering from the fallout of those extermination efforts. How much responsibility we should take for that, and how much we should do to rectify it is a debate that is going on today and has real world consequences for real people. It very much does 'matter now'.
@BiscuitGeoff
@BiscuitGeoff Жыл бұрын
I studied history in a state school in the 90s. We learnt about the triangular trade. We studied sources from abolitionists describing the horrible conditions on the ships. I do remember also being told that we were the first to abolish the trade and that it was never truly legal in the UK; it was contrasted with the US. I don’t think it was a-level so must have been lower down the school.
@izannemarais156
@izannemarais156 Жыл бұрын
Did you learn about the Anglo-Boer War too? Curious?
@charliemccarroll3859
@charliemccarroll3859 Жыл бұрын
@@izannemarais156 I learned about that in school back in the mid eighties.
@lindenhill951
@lindenhill951 Жыл бұрын
I adore when you said "First of all this is a history channel". But truly a very insightful video. Thank you. You delivered the facts in a very compassionate and respectful manner(not to say you shyed away for them). As a human I think that's important.
@janedoe3043
@janedoe3043 6 ай бұрын
I would have pointed out Haiti has never been allowed to grow an economy globally because they still suffer interference from counties that were upset with their rebellion including France and the United States.
@deborahkay8067
@deborahkay8067 5 ай бұрын
Thank you for your knowledge, courage and desire to share history. We can all learn from your example. I appreciate you.
@deguilhemcorinne418
@deguilhemcorinne418 Жыл бұрын
Excellent job ! Very articulate answers to those not always innocent questions. I wanted to share an anecdote : I happened to help an Arab woman to prepare for a French nationality exam, which included French history main features. At one point, we spoke about slavery abolition (she had to remember the date) and because she was bilwildered why France had to terminate slavery, I explained her the triangular trade in which France had a great part, and how millions of Black Africans were brought to Americas. She suddenly had a "aha" moment (and me , a true shock) : "oh, but so, it is why they are so many black people in the United States ? I was wondering if they were a native people of the country or what". Now, this woman had a very poor education background in her country, and when she came to France she focused on learning the language, not on France or world history. In fact, I consider her as very intelligent, as she was able to digest a lot of information in a few months and showed extraordinary willingness to understand history, which was a complete unknowed ground for her. She suddenly joined the dots about some "joke" comments she heard that seemed to hurt her black collegues, and that made no sense for her until this "aha"moment.
@TiffyVella1
@TiffyVella1 Жыл бұрын
I think a lot of us who were given whitewashed or incomplete history lessons as children have "aha" moments later in life. Things we low-key knew but had never thought deeply about suddenly make awful sense. History helps us see the world more as it is, warts and all.
@hankcohen3419
@hankcohen3419 Жыл бұрын
The Hatians have spend 200 years paying off the French for their enslavement.
@antoniocasias5545
@antoniocasias5545 Жыл бұрын
Forget education! *_wHY diD fRAnCE aBoLiSH sLaVeRY_* like ……..
@antoniocasias5545
@antoniocasias5545 Жыл бұрын
@@TiffyVella1 Meh
@iamsaved7
@iamsaved7 11 ай бұрын
Ms. Draper is amazing! How refreshing! I have spent a decade working as a tour guide on an American plantation as a descendent of enslaved people. I have encountered the same questions and Ms. Draper’s responses reflect a desire to see and to tell the truth. What an educator! The truth is often uncomfortable. That discomfort, however, leads to growth. Ms. Draper, you made my day! What a video!
@richardwills-woodward5340
@richardwills-woodward5340 9 ай бұрын
Do you state that 1/3 of slave owners in New Orleans were black? Or does that fact escape you on your 'tours'?!
@GhostSal
@GhostSal 8 ай бұрын
The truth? I admire looking for the truth, my concern is is that what this was? Who was first to abolish słavery? While słavery existed across the globe and goes back thousands of years, that didn’t mean every single place had słavery. So to give Haiti credit as abolishíng słavery first seems incredibly disingenuøus. Yes Britain also wasn’t first but the British did actively and literally fight much of the world to stop słavery. Whereas, Haiti was a successful revolt, which wasn’t unheard of historically speaking and very different than the people that were holding the słaves deciding it’s wrong and needs to end. You can’t compare the two, that is people fighting to free themselves with people fighting to free others. References correct? You shouldn’t need a reference for every point, it really should be common sense. What was paying słave owners all about? Paying słave owners wasn’t about paying people for having słaves, it was to pay them to free those very same people and to avoid a civíl war. If the US did that they could have avoided their civíl war. Now reparatïons is a separate discussíon and deserves a much longer post. Were the Irish słaves? I’m not going to play the semantícs game, the answer is yes (but not always, so also really it’s yes and no). What do I mean? Not all were, many were índentured servànts that agreed to it. However, many were forced into it and no they weren’t always treated better. Their chíldren were sold, they were beat3n, their wømen rap3d and many were kílled. Just look up the potato famine for one, this wasn’t an act of nature but an act of genocíde. The other thing is it wasn’t uncommon to be førced into servïce for lífe, this was done as a łegal puníshment or through clauses in the contract. So wømen would be førced to get pregnànt over and over till they owed more years than they had left to líve. Another thing to keep a servànt for life was to resell the contract without their cønsent and without deducting years already served. The Irish sufferèd at the hands of the English for centuries longer than the Atlantic słave trade existed (and again they weren’t always treated better). This isn’t a racíst talking point, this is the actual history and ad hominem attacks don’t change that. Índentured servantš always were treated better and agreed right? Already answered, the answer is no, but let’s look into this a little more. the first Afrícans sold in Afríca and brought to North Ameríca were treated as índentured servantš. This actually didn’t change till the 1700s, when the first laws for słavery were written and many of these first laws actually didn’t focus on skín color but focused on religion. One example of this is the following law passed in 1705, here is an exert: “All servants imported and brought into the Country. . . who were not Christians in their native Country. . . shall be accounted and be slaves..” - Virginia General Assembly. People tend to bring up John Casor or John Punch, yes while both were held for life, they weren’t the norm and were exceptions to the rule at the time. Also look up their stories, you might be surprised by who sued in court to own another man for līfe, the other case was one of punishment for running away. Wealth and “good faith”. So yes people of the time got rich off of słavery but only Eurøpe is rich today. Except that’s not from słavery, that’s because of the Índustríal Revolutïon and the labour movement. Before the 1900s most everyone was living in extreme poverty. It’s not like the rich shared their wealth with everyone else, that’s the difference between Afríca and Eurøpe today. Afríca never had an Industríal Revolutíon or a labour movement. I’m wrong, right? Ok, let’s see if the wealth from the trillions in gold recently discovered in Uganda enrichs everyone there or just the few at the top. Yes, I also encourage others to research this some more, i’d recommend starting with Thomas Sowell.
@brannonwyndesor2442
@brannonwyndesor2442 4 ай бұрын
Thank you for an honest educational resource. Also, thank you very much for providing resources, an importance that seems lost in today's discussions of divisive topics.
@dunkel429
@dunkel429 7 ай бұрын
Wow this was a fantastic video. Some of these questions are so off the wall and I really appreciate the very clear explanations. As a person living in the US who went to crappy public school, we don’t learn most of this stuff.
@brm117
@brm117 9 ай бұрын
I really appreciate how this video was edited. Very few jump cuts, and a relaxed, steady pace. This is such a breath of fresh air online!
@randomliamsquares765
@randomliamsquares765 Жыл бұрын
I’m Irish and have lived in Ireland my whole life and the “Irish were slaves” is not something u ever heard here until literally the last few years. Trust me if it was true we’d have been fed it all the time since birth haha
@moiraruff3292
@moiraruff3292 Жыл бұрын
And there are tales about the Irish on plantations sharing life with black slaves as though on the same level when the Irish had their step dancing (although there is little evidence beyond the 1820s in Ireland) and the Africans had rhythm and so emerged flatfooting/clogging/jazz dance and so tap dance! Maybe, but very little evidence of step dance in Ireland before c1820s (from my master's degree at Limerick University). Researchers (from Boston University) into wooden-soled, percussive clog dance (definitely a tap dance precursor) in 19thC US theatres found an apparent mix of English, Irish and French performers. The meld of sources for tap seems much more diverse and interesting. But the unproven slave origins story still persists, as in at least one TV documentary and some dance history writings.
@brigidspencer5123
@brigidspencer5123 Жыл бұрын
The Irish were frequently indentured servants in North America, some may have also been slaves too. White slavery is not unheard of, even today and no, they aren’t all Irish either.
@madhatterline
@madhatterline Жыл бұрын
@@brigidspencer5123 yes, but there is a recent conspiracy going round that they weren't indentured servants, that thousands of them were enslaved, & it's all been covered up some how.
@FenrirWolfganger
@FenrirWolfganger Жыл бұрын
Well I finished my Leaving in '86 and one of the stories my class did in Irish involved an Irish man as part of Cromwell's deportation to Jamaica (the all male class was very interested in the idea of there being a hundred women but two hundred men being deported). Our teacher at the time also talked about their been sent as Irish slaves in Jamaica, no distinction was made on indentured servants. This is all well pre the '93 book mentioned in the above video. While I've certainly seen more "Irish were slaves too" memes on the Internet, the Internet barely existed when I was in school. Also our (you and me) nationalist "propaganda/information/ what do you want to call it" at the time and since was more concerned with what was happening in the North now and in the whole country in the past, what happened once Irish left the country just wasn't talked about so much. Ps still up thumbed your comment.
@Bella-fz9fy
@Bella-fz9fy 11 ай бұрын
Most indentured servants from the beginning in America were English anyway,apparently over 60% of immigrants to America from England got there that way.I did see a programme from Jamaica showing a group of white people there who had originally been sent as white slaves from villages in England,that was interesting.
@ccooper1808
@ccooper1808 3 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing this!
@sentinal2343
@sentinal2343 5 ай бұрын
Such a truly refreshing take, all corners covered, No denial of or for anyone's role's! calmly laid out! nice work!
@GhostSal
@GhostSal 5 ай бұрын
A lot of mistakes were made though.
@MrOilpainter
@MrOilpainter Жыл бұрын
This was great. Thanks. As an American, it's encouraging to have a European talk about their country's complicity. My French, Dutch and Portuguese friends seem to be unable to do this. Thanks again.
@Azerty72200
@Azerty72200 Жыл бұрын
Hello! I'm French, so I'm well-placed to say that we definitely talked at length about this stuff in school. However, I'm also well placed to see why not everyone would be willing to listen to those lessons. Beyond just students being inattentive I mean. First, we don't have a huge black population, which means we don't feel as concerned. And the black people we have, aren't the descendants of slaves, but of immigration most of the time. Very different. So we aren't exposed to this history. Secondly, we have a bit of chauvinism going on, so some people don't want to hear about the negative impacts of colonisation, and the faults of our country. Thirdly, we have some people who either racist or anti-immigration, so they don't have as much empathy for the black slaves of old. I hope I've been useful :-)
@chrisper7527
@chrisper7527 Жыл бұрын
@@Azerty72200 , and France continues to suck the resources out of its former African colonies, to help sustain itself at the harm of the very people it formerly colonized. The evil continues.🤷🏽‍♂️
@kymberlycourage
@kymberlycourage Жыл бұрын
French, Dutch and Portuguese are all European 🙄 you mean it’s encouraging that an English is talking about their country’s complicity.
@DWilliam1
@DWilliam1 Жыл бұрын
Many blacks in France are from the former French colonies like Martinique and Guadeloupe and Sengal. The French were the third largest slave traders in the world behind the Brits and Portuguese. You imported so many slaves to Haiti you lost the country. And don’t get me started about Louisiana.
@kymberlycourage
@kymberlycourage Жыл бұрын
@@DWilliam1 what are you rambling about. Who said anything about what you’re saying. Comprehension is key.
@neilwilkins3616
@neilwilkins3616 3 ай бұрын
Thank you. You have managed to open my eyes. Highly informative and hugely entertaining. In another time you would have had your own television series by now.
@davidsizer2438
@davidsizer2438 4 ай бұрын
Bravo!! Excellent video, clear, and well explained, with solid sources. Thank you! 😊
@LanguageNerdsofia_
@LanguageNerdsofia_ 11 ай бұрын
In Brazil we still use this expression that roughly says "meant to be seen by the English". Slavery was far from ending up when it was forbidden because of the English's pressure, so people'd disguise it somehow. Now we use it when there is a set o rules for something that are not really put to practice, they're there just to avoid political, popular, or any kind of internal or external pressure. At least, this is the most commonly agreed on version on the origins of the expression.
@artbk
@artbk 11 ай бұрын
In Brazil there were recent cases of work analogous to slavery. This year.
@koitsenka
@koitsenka 9 ай бұрын
Thank you for your excellent coverage of this subject. I wanted to know my African heritage. I had my dna done, then exported my raw data to a site named gedmatch. They have a filter named Ethiohelix, that is focused on African DNA. I found out the tribes that I still have a connection to. Using other sites that do more family connecting, I tracked DNA relatives living in Africa today, and those who had African heritage, and what tribes were named. I wish my mother were alive to be able to say, "You are Zulu, Mama. Your height and build came from the Maasai. My unexpected shortness? Mbuti." Not just the name of a Plantation and a massa, if we were lucky.
@Guineapigsreadingbooks
@Guineapigsreadingbooks 8 ай бұрын
Being able to find things like that out today is a wonderful thing. I am glad that you get to have some sort of connection to the heritage and history that was stolen.
@blacktigerpaw1
@blacktigerpaw1 6 ай бұрын
​@@GuineapigsreadingbooksZulus are a Bantu people. Bantus committed one of the largest genocide on the continent. You didn't know that, because you clearly don't read enough books.
@Guineapigsreadingbooks
@Guineapigsreadingbooks 6 ай бұрын
@@blacktigerpaw1 fair enough. I don’t know much about African history, or which tribes have which history. I still think that knowing where you come from has value, even if part of learning your history means learning the sins of your ancestors.
@mesabaker9625
@mesabaker9625 5 ай бұрын
Koitsenka - that is really cool! To be able now to recreate some of the missing genetic background for your whole family! And finding new family. Do you think you might ever travel to Africa to try to meet some of these relatives?
@blacktigerpaw1
@blacktigerpaw1 5 ай бұрын
@@mesabaker9625 Yes, she should go there and meet the Xhosa, who hate her people's guts, and the Khoi-san, the people her ancestors nearly eliminated.
@Brianbeesandbikes
@Brianbeesandbikes 8 ай бұрын
Brilliantly composed and delivered!! Following and sharing.
@dandjurdjevicplus1
@dandjurdjevicplus1 3 ай бұрын
Your channel is an amazing resource. Thanks for all your work.
@sherricolli7875
@sherricolli7875 Жыл бұрын
Phenomenal job. As a black female in Atlanta Ga this was both educational and moving. I appreciate and applaud your efforts to educate us all. Thank you.
@spenser9908
@spenser9908 Жыл бұрын
What do you know about African slave owners?
@guesswhoscomingtoyoutube
@guesswhoscomingtoyoutube Жыл бұрын
More than you troll
@ckd0680
@ckd0680 Жыл бұрын
I feel the same way...in the same city...Ga peach...atl...appreciate this vid so much!
@jadapinkett1656
@jadapinkett1656 Жыл бұрын
​@@spenser9908 Nothing. Their kind loves playing the victim.
@kamilahmaudsley964
@kamilahmaudsley964 10 ай бұрын
@@jadapinkett1656 do you really think that by using the name and photo of a Black woman you are actually fooling anyone?
@vm1776
@vm1776 Жыл бұрын
I visited the Harriet Tubman house in NY state many years ago. Our guide told us that the Irish had worse slave conditions than Africans because the slave master had 7 years to get their work out of the Irish, but wouldn't want to work an African slave too hard because they had a lifetime to get work out of the slave and a healthy African slave could give the master slave babies. I asked her what she meant by Irish slaves, because I had never heard of that, though I had heard of intentured servants, and she confirmed that she was referring to intentured servants as Irish slaves. I wasn't going to argue with the tour guide but ...
@afreaknamedallie1707
@afreaknamedallie1707 Жыл бұрын
😨😨 that guide needs to be fired omg
@earlbedfordjr83
@earlbedfordjr83 Жыл бұрын
​@@afreaknamedallie1707 No she shouldn't. You do know indentured Servitude was included in the 13th amendment because of the argument made in congress that indentured Servitude was politically correct term for white slavery. The conditions wasn't much better and contracts were bought, sold, and extended.
@afreaknamedallie1707
@afreaknamedallie1707 Жыл бұрын
@@earlbedfordjr83 well that is quite the uninformed take. "White slavery" was not a thing. We could talk about the abusive power used to get people to "voluntarily" agree to indentured servitude, sure. But that was never slavery, literally by how it functioned in the law. Chattel slavery made people into livestock. They were not legally considered human. That's what makes the slavery you're trying to cheapen with your myths about Irish slaves so much different than indentured servitude.
@earlbedfordjr83
@earlbedfordjr83 Жыл бұрын
@@afreaknamedallie1707 White people being sold into chattle slavery was most definitely a thing. Poverty level orphans in London during the industrial revolution. The chimney sweep boys who died when machines were available. The maiming and death of orphaned poverty level children in factories? Well known activist author Charles Dickens whose work was a commentary of these and other societal issues of the time? Those things ring any bells? The poor laws during the colonial period of the British Empire sent some of these slaves to the colonies. And the indentured Servitude system did in a lot of cases act like slavery. When the 13th amendment in the US was being drafted and debated the argument that its politically correct term for white slavery was successfully used. I have ancestors that lived under indentured Servitude because their father was an indentured servant who fell in love with a slave making his contract which was originally a punishment for a butcher having an affair with a noble lady in England. Carry on for three generations. It doesn't cheapen slavery to acknowledge all humans were enslaved. That not just one people were enslaved and sold as property. What it cheapens is the ability to divide us as people. As far as humans being property. Well we are our own property. If we don't or can't see it that way it allows governments to decide they own us. It happened throughout human history this way too. Communism saw its people as its property. And caused a lot of deaths. Plus as an individual is entitled to profit off one's property and the individual is the individuals property only we can make profit off ourselves. So humans being property is a result of slavery is ridiculous, and us shirking off the idea we can be property and we own ourselves. The UK and the US will claim ownership of us if we don't claim ownership of ourselves. Also the concept humans can't be property cheapens the concept of marriage. Which is two individuals giving each other to each other. It wasn't chattle slavery that made humans into property. It was chattle slavery that turned humans into commodity. And the near abolition of chattle slavery (it still exists today in a couple of forms) didn't stop us from being commodities. And the concept of us shouldn't be commodities is a big problem for advertisers, big tech, and other companies that have made our digital selves into commodities and that's pure profit. The data we give these companies is a multi trillion dollar industry in the 21st century. The idea there never was white slavery was ridiculous and indentured Servitude being white slavery was one of the things the abolition movement pushed. They wanted the entire slave trade destroyed and they decided indentured Servitude was part of that slave trade at the time it was systemic and widespread.
@annaclarafenyo8185
@annaclarafenyo8185 Жыл бұрын
@@afreaknamedallie1707 "White slavery" is the name given by Europeans to sex-trafficking by Arabs in European women, it became a euphamism for sex-trafficking which was used until the 1930s.
@annegreengables6367
@annegreengables6367 5 ай бұрын
You brought up some very interesting points in your video that I never realized.
@jawvees2585
@jawvees2585 8 ай бұрын
Perspective changer, thank you🙌🏼🍃
@itsROMPERS...
@itsROMPERS... Жыл бұрын
I knew most of this stuff but there was one thing that never occurred to me: that the depletion of Africa brought in by the slave trade actually made it possible for Europeans to colonize Africa. I guess I always assumed that Europeans just had the power and wiles to dominate, but it turns out that wasn't the whole story. Thanks, J!
@jasonreed7522
@jasonreed7522 Жыл бұрын
Its a common assumption that i myself also held, that Europe colonized Africa when their technology finally was advanced enough to do so. Partially from medicine helping them not all die of malaria and a million other diseases they had no natural resistance to, and particularly from the fact that guns are better than bows and spears for the purpose of warfare. (Admittedly this is what many history books used in grade school say) I can now add to the list of reasons for this colonization, the depopulation and economic devastation from the slave trade having long term impacts still felt today.
@TS-jm7jm
@TS-jm7jm Жыл бұрын
​@@jasonreed7522 i am from zimbabwe, this notion that slavery devastated africa and depleted it is simply not true, and its such a bold assertion that it struck me speechless that people can claim this was the case, anyone saying this knows absolutely nothing about the native tribal warfare and colonial history to be able to say such an unnuanced thing as a definitive explanation.
@honestly1970
@honestly1970 Жыл бұрын
@@TS-jm7jm can't say it devastated, but depleted seems pretty accurate. It took away resources. They say that depletion of people aided in the conquering of Native Americans. Do you have any recommendations on sources about tribal warfare to refer us too. And - Zimbabwe -land locked country in the South of the continent. umm - not viewing you as a valid source.
@BiscuitGeoff
@BiscuitGeoff Жыл бұрын
@@TS-jm7jm it’s not just her assertion. If you look in the sources, it’s the last link. She’s based her words on academic research. Maybe follow the link, give it a read and see what you think of the research?
@vespasiancloscan7077
@vespasiancloscan7077 Жыл бұрын
Her claim doesn't really make sense. Europe had to economically cripple coastal areas in Africa in order to advance inland, where they allegedly previously couldn't? An entire continent as massive as Africa had its economy stagnated because because the work force in coastal areas was constantly abducted? How does that negate the "power and wiles" of the colonizing nations? Sounds very revisionistic and contradictory. On one hand the Europeans used their power for something as terrible as slavery, but on the other they weren't even that powerful? It's not the "explorer in tights and a funny hat" that's expected to conquer lands. It's the armies that you don't want to lose to disease. I fail to see how technological superiority wasn't virtually the whole story of how Europe colonized any place.
@adamtapparo2168
@adamtapparo2168 9 ай бұрын
Imagine being a human being owned by someone else and there is nowhere you can go to find justice or freedom because this is considered just and lawful and right. And this is based upon nothing but the the color of your skin. It’s just devastating to think how many people lived that as a reality. Absolutely heartbreaking
@foppypoof5195
@foppypoof5195 9 ай бұрын
What’s even worse is that people used the Bible to justify slavery, screwed up. As someone who lives In Alabama, I still see a lot of racism around here unfortunately, in fact I live inside of a neighborhood with an extremely racist person who says that black people are ruining society and are “taking over.” That’s just insane to me, 100 years in the future and still fragments of 1760s tolerance.
@luisfilipe2023
@luisfilipe2023 8 ай бұрын
And sadddest of all there are more slaves nowadays then ever. Sure it’s illegal but most never find freedom anyway
@Blueberryminty
@Blueberryminty 8 ай бұрын
i don't think it's based on only the colour of their skin, it was also based on cultural differences and an unwillingness to respect other ways of living, feeling superior and even thinking of themselves as being higher humans. it doesn't really matter if it was just the colour or not, it's atrocious behaviour and we should remember and keep learning from it, so we wouldn't fall in such a horrible thinkingpattern again even though in-group out-group thinking is a common way of our brain to make sense of our world, our wonderful brains are also capable of going beyond those patterns. (and use more open and inclusive ways of thinking)
@canthandlenohandle
@canthandlenohandle 8 ай бұрын
​@@BlueberrymintyI see where you're coming from, and you've got a point about cultural differences and ideas of superiority playing a role. But remember, in many cases, like in the United States, it WAS primarily about the color of their skin. People even used things like the Bible to justify why black people 'deserved' that position. In-group/Out-group thinking rules a lot of our brain & discriminating by skin color *was* one way in which we applied that. It's a little uncomfortable to think about, but the reason it does matter is because, those same biases that we created to point out whoever's in the out-group back then, still affect how we perceive people to this day. To ignore that would be like looking at the Holocaust & saying that it wasn't just about Judaism.
@eksbocks9438
@eksbocks9438 8 ай бұрын
The most troubling part is there are people who still want to keep that tradition going. Even though it ended 150+ years ago. It's pretty easy to tell. When they have this notion to boss people around. And not show any grace in return.
@user-nx9ic6ld8b
@user-nx9ic6ld8b 6 ай бұрын
FABULOUS VIDEO! Well done.
@angusmalcolm7738
@angusmalcolm7738 4 ай бұрын
Have just discovered this, two years on… Brilliantly conceived and presented! Everyone needs to watch this. I particularly appreciated the point about how our moral values are so massively determined by factors outside our control. We all need to be mindful that what is considered normal right now may not be objectively right. The final summary is deeply compelling and utterly unmissable.
@dasherreal
@dasherreal Жыл бұрын
"You guys need to figure that out, on your own." That was a great line. I know it wasn't meant to be terribly funny, but I needed that laugh. I laughed hard. Thanks.
@alaric_
@alaric_ Жыл бұрын
Also, at times US and their history with slavery overshadows others so it's good to separate them as their own. Only because the because the subject is so huge that if one would try to include everything, something would need cutting and generally it would mean everything but US and their history.
@damofx
@damofx Жыл бұрын
Truly brilliant. I’m Irish and would’ve been a teenager when the book that spawned the Irish Slavery myth was published. My formative years as an adult ran alongside the popularity of the Irish slavery concept and I never even knew. Meme culture around the 2010’s was the perfect catalyst for this misinformation and will sadly develop further I feel. Thank you for educating me
@VolkColopatrion
@VolkColopatrion 11 ай бұрын
Oh yeah the Irish were oppressed but lies and exaggerations will not serve anybody. They're certainly works at over here on cruise ships. And also the idea of slaves not being exclusively black is technically correct which is the best kind of correct. And it wasn't just white people that owned slaves. It really was a question of class and privilege and there was a class of privileged individuals who had black skin in the south. But then all that went away when the one-drop Claus kind of hat or some other weird racist bullcrap law had to come into effect. I think I'm a bit fuzzy on the details
@stephanies1474
@stephanies1474 11 ай бұрын
It's not a myth.
@theodoraanagor6219
@theodoraanagor6219 11 ай бұрын
@@stephanies1474 it is a myth.
@stephanies1474
@stephanies1474 11 ай бұрын
@@theodoraanagor6219 Sure if that makes you feel better but this woman on here is covering up Cromwell's crimes against the Irish. Indentured servants have contracts and the people he sold did not.
@bmiles4131
@bmiles4131 11 ай бұрын
@@VolkColopatrion what “south” had a class of privileged black skinned individuals? Not the American south, if that’s what you were told.
@AngusHirstAngusHirst
@AngusHirstAngusHirst 7 ай бұрын
I've never heard or noticed this point before 3:44 very enlightening 😳 great video! 👍
@tmeyer2022
@tmeyer2022 8 ай бұрын
Thank you. Once I would have asked most of those questions myself. You validate what I have learned over my lifetime.
@leaveluck2heven
@leaveluck2heven Жыл бұрын
I absolutely love how you presented this topic with tact and respect. I’m an America of African decent, only 3 generations removed from slavery (how’s that for “old history”?) and I have often wondered how it had been seen or thought of in the UK. Thank you for such an interested video.
@tempestatiseye
@tempestatiseye Жыл бұрын
So hard to explain to so many, My grandmother was still share cropping and my father born in 44 grew up in rural south and still remembered the dehumanizing conditions he had to endure.
@monkeytennis8861
@monkeytennis8861 Жыл бұрын
Three generations? Can you elaborate on that? Thanks
@shaylataylor9525
@shaylataylor9525 Жыл бұрын
@@monkeytennis8861 At least one of their great grandparents were enslaved
@classicalteacher
@classicalteacher Жыл бұрын
@@shaylataylor9525 I'd say 4 generations at least. And that's if each parent had a child at age 40. Or maybebleavenluck2heven is 80 years old. KZfaq's largest demographic is 80-90 year olds... Totally legit.
@simonbroberg969
@simonbroberg969 Жыл бұрын
My nieghbour was in court last year due to a slavery case. The so called perp did a few months in jail and the day he got out of prison they had to move him very quickly www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-oxfordshire-46536734
@twrivalis
@twrivalis 9 ай бұрын
Terrific video! Very good job being respectful while directly answering the types of questions that people ask. I particularly like that you grant the audience the assumption of asking in good faith. I wish more people understood that, even if you're right, talking down to someone when they ask you a question only makes them more resistant to your point of view.
@FlatGuitarsSharpCats
@FlatGuitarsSharpCats 9 ай бұрын
Thank you for this comment. The good faith point is a sound point for me when I try and change the way my father argues with people not aligning with his ‘side’ of history. I tend to forgive him because he’s in his late 70s and I learn to listen and understand where the true source of a belief no matter how misguided is still helpful when voiced. I believe we are all looking for the truth. Some people have suppressed truth through their lives and sign up for the comfortable belief. I understand this, some minds may never change. Knowing how to speak and teach respectfully is what I have taken in buckets from J. Draper’s videos. Truly inspiring and I want to go to London again. Missing home lots. Sorry to get meta but I like when comments listen to the content of the video and add something news. Thank you for reaching inside of a part of me I never really knew was there….well until I started thinking and typing it out. Peace and love
@hawkatsea
@hawkatsea 8 ай бұрын
22:10 Well Said. I appreciate this video and think that conversations about our history with slavery and race must begin with this exact acknowledgement and frame of mind.
@Anil18834
@Anil18834 2 ай бұрын
Excellent work. Very well researched, informative and with the right touches of intermittent levity to get through such a hard subject. Thank you
@Vearru
@Vearru Жыл бұрын
The idea of someone going to a history museum and then asking why why are being told about history has to be one of the most bizarre things I’ve heard. I can understand a child going to mandatory public school asking about that because this is an extremely heavy and difficult topic, and they are being forced to learn about it, I felt that way about learning about the holocaust as learning about it in graphic detail in half my classes for weeks on end is a lot for an overly empathetic child to endure and it really took a toll on my mental health. But for an adult to voluntarily go to a history museum and voluntarily listen to a talk about the slave trade for less than an hour and then complain about that, it’s worse than childish.
@yourmother9834
@yourmother9834 Жыл бұрын
People go to Monticello and get mad that they talk about slaves its so disrespectful
@EF-fc4du
@EF-fc4du Жыл бұрын
Your premises childish. The notion that one cannot voluntarily go to a source of information with the purpose of questioning the relevance or thoroughness of that information implies a passivity of willful ignorance that one should not want to champion. The motor for these questions ought to be obvious: there is a strong and growing sense that the topic is being narrowly presented for the deliberate purpose of creating an ethical emphasis not commensurate with it's historical prevalence.
@GhostSal
@GhostSal Жыл бұрын
@@EF-fc4du Perfectly stated, I was put off by the ad hominem attack against anyone that raises concerns about how the Irísh were treated. It’s ok to have differences of opinion but it’s not ok to call people “racîst” and “whíte supremacíst” for asking the question. Also, not everything she stated was completely accurate, so it also came off as a bit pretentious.
@masscreationbroadcasts
@masscreationbroadcasts Жыл бұрын
That's because they aren't asking "why are they being told about history", they are asking "why is history used on them the way it is", even though they can't find the words to ask that question.
@mercygraceful4924
@mercygraceful4924 Жыл бұрын
What they are really saying is "we don't want to deal with sad part of history" sorry but we have to look at the downside of history Black, Arab, Or European. It is human history.
@ItsTheBoombox
@ItsTheBoombox 11 ай бұрын
I'm Irish, and your discussion of the topic was spot on. We do not consider ourselves as apart of slavery, its never talked whatsoever. There's a million evil things the British did to us, but slavery is not on that list.
@EarlGreyLattex
@EarlGreyLattex 11 ай бұрын
Well said!
@philipmccready7090
@philipmccready7090 11 ай бұрын
As an Irish person, I know that the Irish were slavers, like almost every other civilization from the Greeks, to the Egyptians and Vikings. St Patrick was a Roman boy from England that was caught by Irish slavers and taken to Northern Ireland and served as a farm worker/shepherd. When he escaped and returned to his homeland, he wrote and spoke out against the injustice of slavery which was being perpetrated by a Roman general. After the collapse of the Roman Empire, the level of Irish slavery increased dramatically.
@vicguide4580
@vicguide4580 11 ай бұрын
Look at Irish in north America different ball game
@blooblak01
@blooblak01 11 ай бұрын
@noel9625 Maybe that's a different video. Why not suggest it to her?
@blooblak01
@blooblak01 11 ай бұрын
I believe there was quite a lot of indentured servitude imposed on Irish people, particularly in the so-called new world.
@robinfoster7597
@robinfoster7597 8 ай бұрын
Excellent work Jennie, Well done.
@faustox.alvarado6326
@faustox.alvarado6326 2 ай бұрын
This is excellent information. Keep up the good work and keep using that rhetorical whip which adds flavor to your argument.
@FrantifaSuperSoldier
@FrantifaSuperSoldier Жыл бұрын
As a white people who has heard these questions from other white people both in person and on the internet I really appreciate how in depth this video went with its explanations. I also feel really stupid for not already knowing some of this information but the great thing about learning is that you're never done
@RojaJaneman
@RojaJaneman Жыл бұрын
Everyone besides black people have asked these questions. They’re obvious questions
@Dangreenwatson
@Dangreenwatson Жыл бұрын
@@RojaJaneman “why keep bringing up old history” is not an obvious question, it’s a loaded one. The answer, however, is that it’s the reason the West is wealthy today
@angrytedtalks
@angrytedtalks Жыл бұрын
@@Dangreenwatson The West is rich because of natural resources and the technology to maximise their value. Slavery ended when the industrial revolution replaced manpower with machines. The money keeps rolling in because of tech, not manpower.
@spenser9908
@spenser9908 Жыл бұрын
I wonder why African slave owners is never brought up during Black History Month?
@Mindbender55
@Mindbender55 Жыл бұрын
Don’t feel bad. At least you were able to have a open mind and watch it
@EastBayFlipper
@EastBayFlipper Жыл бұрын
"Why would you want to bring up old history here" Said while in a museum 😏 😂😹🤣😂😹🤣
@findolinfly
@findolinfly 6 ай бұрын
Very important video. Thanks :)
@TheBlazingDead
@TheBlazingDead Ай бұрын
You're honestly like the Tom Scott of History KZfaq. I completely trust what you're saying, because you talk about actual reality, with no opinions skewing the story. It's nice to hear a creator with integrity.
@mydogdeli
@mydogdeli Жыл бұрын
Excellent video essay. The measured tone, the turn of phrase, the research, the sources provided, and the clarity, are all top notch. This information provides effective counter arguments to the (sadly) increasing numbers of people who are trying to mitigate and diminish the role that American and European enslavers played in the transatlantic trade. Thank you.
@formulaic78
@formulaic78 11 ай бұрын
Maybe some people are mitigating it but many others are simply saying, hang on, why in just going about my life have I heard a hundred stories about enslaved African Americans but almost none about those sent to Arabia in equally huge numbers (but over a longer time period). And why is the British Navy's role in eliminating slavery not widely known? And many of these questions will have arisen alongside the BLM marches where a non balanced view of Britain's role in the slave trade was put forward. So while some actual racist people may be trying to mitigate, many not racist people are just seeking a more balanced telling of history. And of course more white people in Britain are going to ask those questions than black people, and be sensitive when black people are present, because white people's recent ancestors weren't subject to the colonial racism that Britain was part of, so they can have more detachment about it. They might be much less detached when speaking about their recent ancestors who died in world war 1 in terrible conditions, or further back, their ancestors who toiled in awful conditions in the workhouses of the industrial revolution.
@mydogdeli
@mydogdeli 11 ай бұрын
@@formulaic78 Anyone who responds to conversations about the history of slavery in the US with anything along the lines of, "Oh yeah, well what about ancient Egypt" or "African enslavers" or "present day slavery" automatically sounds an awful lot like they're trying to mitigate and assuage America's historical role in it.
@Ineverusemychannel
@Ineverusemychannel 10 ай бұрын
@@formulaic78Have you considered you hear more about your country’s participation because of ethnocentrism? I am American and most of my historical education is America-based. Sure, I got to take classes about other cultures and countries but only after doing so well in America-centric classes that I was allowed to. People learn their country’s history first, it’s the most practical method of teaching history, especially in nationalistic countries. If you choose not to expand your education beyond it, that’s a personal choice. People in day to day life talk about their country more often than others because that’s what is most relevant to them. Whataboutism doesn’t bring awareness, it only serves to cover up awareness. If you’re tired of being boxed in to your country’s history, broaden your community.
@GhostSal
@GhostSal 9 ай бұрын
Was it though, was it “excellent”? I admire looking for the truth, my concern is is that what this was? If it is then my comments sharing my knowledge of the history will be welcome. Who was first to abolish słavery? While słavery existed across the globe and goes back thousands of years, that didn’t mean every single place had słavery. So to give Haiti credit as abolishíng słavery first seems incredibly disingenuøus. Yes Britain also wasn’t first but the British did actively and literally fight much of the world to stop słavery. Whereas, Haiti was a successful revolt, which wasn’t unheard of historically speaking and very different than the people that were holding the słaves deciding it’s wrong and needs to end. You can’t compare the two, that is people fighting to free themselves with people fighting to free others. References correct? You shouldn’t need a reference for every point, it really should be common sense. What was paying słave owners all about? Paying słave owners wasn’t about paying people for having słaves, it was to pay them to free those very same people and to avoid a civíl war. If the US did that they could have avoided their civíl war. Now reparatïons is a separate discussíon and deserves a much longer post. Were the Irish słaves? I’m not going to play the semantícs game, the answer is yes (but not always, so also really it’s yes and no). What do I mean? Not all were, many were índentured servànts that agreed to it. However, many were forced into it and no they weren’t always treated better. Their chíldren were sold, they were beat3n, their wømen rap3d and many were kílled. Just look up the potato famine for one, this wasn’t an act of nature but an act of genocíde. The other thing is it wasn’t uncommon to be førced into servïce for lífe, this was done as a łegal puníshment or through clauses in the contract. So wømen would be førced to get pregnànt over and over till they owed more years than they had left to líve. Another thing to keep a servànt for life was to resell the contract without their cønsent and without deducting years already served. The Irish sufferèd at the hands of the English for centuries longer than the Atlantic słave trade existed (and again they weren’t always treated better). This isn’t a racíst talking point, this is the actual history and ad hominem attacks don’t change that. Índentured servantš always were treated better and agreed to it right? Already answered, the answer is no, but let’s look into this a little more. the first Afrícans sold in Afríca and brought to North Ameríca were treated as índentured servantš. This actually didn’t change till the 1700s, when the first laws for słavery were written and many of these first laws actually didn’t focus on skín color but focused on religion. One example of this is the following law passed in 1705, here is an exert: “All servants imported and brought into the Country. . . who were not Christians in their native Country. . . shall be accounted and be slaves..” - Virginia General Assembly. People tend to bring up John Casor or John Punch, yes while both were held for life, they weren’t the norm and were exceptions to the rule at the time. Also look up their stories, you might be surprised by who sued in court to own another man for līfe, the other case was one of punishment for running away. Wealth and “good faith”. So yes people of the time got rich off of słavery but only Eurøpe is rich today. Except that’s not from słavery, that’s because of the Índustríal Revolutïon and the labour movement. Before the 1900s most everyone was living in extreme poverty. It’s not like the rich shared their wealth with everyone else, that’s the difference between Afríca and Eurøpe today. Afríca never had an Industríal Revolutíon or a labour movement. I’m wrong, right? Ok, let’s see if the wealth from the trillions in gold recently discovered in Uganda enrichs everyone there or just the few at the top. Yes, I also encourage others to research this some more, i’d recommend starting with Thomas Sowell.
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