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[Marxism] Muslim Vs Atlantic slave trade - comparative apocalyptics 101



I suppose this is really my fault; I?d imagined that there
was slightly more knowledge on Islamic slavery on the list
than there plainly is, and thus allowed Papa Sarty to
indulge in his habitually orotund persiflage at (as he
fondly imagines it) my expense for longer than I should,
to allow others to chip in. However, since dearth there be
(which dearth is, if I might say so, hiatus valde
deflendus) and it falls to my lot to undertake the
schooling, then schooling let there be. I shall tackle the
points about the Muslim slave trade in three parts,
according to the three main objections raised by Papa
Sarty, Waistline and Farmelantj:


1 ?Are you really claiming that slave practices of the
Ottomans, the Chinese, and the indigenous North Americans
are the same, were identical in their impacts on the
populations so enslaved as that of the Atlantic slave
trade?? (Papa Sarty)

As Willis (1985) puts it in Slaves and slavery in Muslim
Africa (JR Willis, 1985), by comparison with the
transatlantic trade the  Islamic slave trade in Africa
?compares? in scale and scope, and out-distances the more
popular subject in its length of duration.? When the
Muslim community erupted out of the Arabian peninsula
under the al-khulafa ar-rashidun (?Rightly Guided
Caliphs?) after the death of Abu Bakr in 634, as well as
peoples, settlements and goods the Muslims took over
social and economic trade networks, including the
extensive slaving networks into the interior of Africa
established by the Romans and Byzantines.

Because slavery was so widespread at the time of the birth
of Islam, it is accepted implicitly (if not condoned) in
the Quran as it was in the Bible and the Torah (for
instance, Surah 24:58: ?O ye who believe! Let your slaves,
and those of you who have not come to puberty, ask leave
of you at three times (before they come into your
presence.?). As Islam spread across the Middle East and
the North of Africa during the early medieval period, so
did its own particular and characteristic take on slavery.
In what we might refer to still as the early period of the
spread of Islam, from the Seldjuk defeat of the
Byzantines, the rise of the Mamelukes and the beginnings
of the Ottoman empire, as Willis again puts it.

?Slaves of African origin formed a vital thread in the
living lines of economic production in the Near and Middle
East and formed the cord of economic activity in Islamic
Africa itself.?

According to Toledano (Slavery and abolition in the
Ottoman Middle East, 1998) by the 19th century there were
principally three slave markets in Africa; the
trans-atlantic, the muslim and the internal slave market;
interestingly, Toledano claims that the internal market
(African-African slavery) was the biggest, although you
have to be careful about that since these would certainly
not have been distinct markets ? the original,
pre-Phoenician, pre-Greek and pre-Roman internal markets
would have been small and primitive and would no doubt
have grown massively in response, firstly to the demands
of the Roman market, secondly the Muslim market and then
latterly the transatlantic market, and as these markets
grew there would have been a considerable degree of
overlap, to the extent that distinguishing between them
would in some areas have been a bit meaningless.

So, not only am I claiming (as I shall expand on below)
that the Muslim slave trade had as big an impact as the
trans-Atlantic trade, because it lasted far longer I am
claiming that it had a greater impact, as the statistics
for intensity and type that I cite below give evidence of.


2  ?Slavery as practiced by the Ottoman's and Moors had
nothing in common with the commercial slavery based on new
world production as practiced by the French, Spanish,
Portuguese, British, and US.? (Waistline)

As we all (I hope) know, all figures for the slave trade
are controversial and subject to revision, particularly
those of the Muslim slave trade, which for some reason
(much to the puzzlement of the relatively small number of
scholars researching it) is nowhere near as popular a
topic as the transatlantic trade - I suggest some reasons
why this might be at the end. Having said which, Professor
Ralph A. Austen (University of Chicago, cited in Willis,
p. x) suggests an estimated figure of 17,000,000 for
Islamic slave trade out of Africa from c.650-1905 (and I
don?t know if this includes figures for people ?killed
during their storage, shipment and initial landing?).

Compare this with some of the estimates for the
transatlantic trade which include the numbers of Africans
who died in the process of capture, storage and on
landing: ?Approximately 8 million Africans were killed
during their storage, shipment and initial landing in the
New World. The amount of life lost in the actual
procurement of slaves remains a mystery, but may equal or
exceed the amount actually enslaved. These figures would
indicate the total number of deaths at around 16 million?
(David Stannard, American Holocaust, Oxford University
Press, 1993).

So in terms of numbers at least, bearing in mind that the
Muslim slave trade preceded the trans-Atlantic trade by
hundreds of years (and indeed the first slaves brought
into Europe in the 1440s and probably a lot longer ago
than that were seized from Muslim communities in North
Africa and would have included people made slaves by the
Muslims as  well as Muslims themselves), and that the
Muslim trade didn?t end when the trans-Atlantic trade did
and continues (by many estimates, including let us not
forget those 90,000 poor souls in Mauritania) to this day,
it is most probable that the Muslim slave trade was at
least the equal of the trans-Atlantic trade.

Slavery was both familiar to and widely accepted in all
walks of life in Ottoman Empire from its beginnings in
13th century; it was more institutionalized in the home
countries of those Islamic nations conducting the trade
than was the case for Spain, Portugal and Britain and by
the 18th century in the Ottoman empire the number of
slaves being imported rose to between 16,000 and 18,000
per annum for first 70 years of the century (compare with
estimated 25,000 per annum in 1700 for trans-Atlantic
trade, rising to about 80,000 p.a. by 1850 and rapid
decline thereafter) and whereas under pressure from the
new anti-saving nations the numbers of slaves being traded
in the Ottoman Empire began to diminish rapidly from about
1840, it never actually ended.


3 ?The latter variety of slaves could become quite wealthy
and powerful in their own right despite their status as
being the property of the state or of the emperors.?
(Farmelantj)

Speaking to the quality and type of slavery, Farmelantj
and others suggest that the trans-Atlantic trade was
?chattel? slavery and therefore involved a type and
intensity of slavery that was far worse than Muslim
slavery. There are doubtless those on this list who know a
little more about the trans-Atlantic trade than I, who
will also doubtless be aware that the kind of slavery that
took place in the New World was not monolithic in type,
but also varied greatly, which is not to underplay the
suffering that took place but to suggest that
qualitatively there would have been a good deal of
difference between the short and brutal life of a slave
imported to cut sugar cane in the West Indies (for
example) and (for want of a better example) one of the
house slaves owned by the Bush family in Maryland, or a
slave in Brazil.

The Muslim slave trade did differ in some distinctive
characteristics from the transatlantic trade ? it was for
instance a far more feminized phenomenon than
trans-atlantic trade, and the taking of particularly
female slaves was driven by Islamic concept of concubinage
? the percentage of that estimated 17,000,000 would have
been characterised by a far greater number of women and
children than the transatlantic trade.

So far as the Ottoman empire itself was concerned, there
were almost certainly a far greater variety of types and
class of slave. The main classes of Ottoman slaves were:
domestic slaves, female harem slaves, Sultan?s Kuls
(officeholders), court and elite eunuchs, Circassian
agricultural slaves, slave dealers and slave owners. There
is another controversy over the quality and intensity of
slavery of all of these different types of slave amongst
scholars of the Muslim trade. For instance, despite
distinctions between types of slaves (e.g. kuls), the
environment in which conventional slavery of all types
took place meant that, from the beginning to the end of
the Empire, the Sultan could confiscate all property of
all of these classes of slaves and kill them with no legal
process at all. Over time, though, the status and absolute
nature of the condition of slavery changed as the Ottoman
empire matured; after the 16th century it became quite
rare for the Sultan to order this kind of execution and
then it tended to occur mainly as a political example.

Some critical scholars maintain, however, that right to
the end of the Ottoman Empire, slavery in some countries
and regions was conducted with unequalled savagery. Jay
Spaulding, for instance (in ?Slavery, Land Tenure, and
Social Class in the Northern Turkish Sudan," International
Journal of African Historical Studies 15/1 (1981): 1-10)
reckons that in Ottoman-Egyptian Sudan slaves were
considered to be nothing more than ?talking animals?
(al-hayawan al natiq); that slaves were given different
names to prevent their integration with free people; that
slaves in some districts were not even buried in order to
save money, instead they were either left for animals to
eat or dumped in rivers; that the Ottoman government
demanded slaves as taxes, and that household slaves were
frequently sold and very rarely manumitted.

By way of concluding, for me it is fairly plain that one
reason that research into the Muslim slave trade is so
badly neglected is because of political instrumentality.
Firstly, Lefties/Marxists in the rich countries of the
North have the trans-Atlantic trade fixed as part of their
capitalism-orientated compass and, as for the Muslim
trade, well, what?s that got to do with the development of
Capitalism? Secondly, owing to the increasing centre of
gravity constituted by the North American scholastic world
(as well as its financial power) and its increasing
absorption in African-American culture, obviously the
trans-Atlantic/Triangular Trade has become increasingly
important to African-American studies and the overall
perception of ?African-American-ness?. It would be
tempting but unjustifiable to add a third motive, that the
more feminized Muslim slave trade simply wasn?t that
interesting to overwhelmingly andro-centric, patriarchal
hierarchy of Marxist thought because it simply wasn?t that
interested in anything to do with women.

Which is strange really, because you?d have thought that
Marx above anybody would have been interested in female
slavery and the economics of the dual reproductive/
productive role played by women, given the amount of time
he spent boning the hired help.
 
And now, to lighten the tone, I am introducing a Happy May
Day competition! The winner of the prize will be the first
person to send me an e-mail with their name and address
and the correct answer to the following question:

When I read Papa Sarty's e-mails, what fictional character
immediately springs to my mind? Is it:

a) Captain Haddock from the Tintin books?
b) Colonel Hathi from Disney's Jungle Book?
c) Smaug from the Hobbit?
d) A combination of the above?

The winner of this competition will receive the
magnificent prize of Max Hastings and Simon Jenkins
wonderful 1984 book, The Battle for the Falklands!

Happy May Day!

Jon Cloke




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