The abolition of slavery

Discussion in 'BOARDANIA' started by McLaren, Mar 25, 2007.

  1. McLaren New Member

    So for the last couple of weeks the local news programme hasn't shut up about it being the 200th anniversary of the abolition of slavery. (With a lot of publicity in the national press too).

    Now they may have overdone it slightly in my opinion but obviously it is an important issue and I understand them reporting on it, particulalry if they then used the link to comment on any racial issues affecting people today, equal opportunities, etc.

    However, I don't like the way it has been reported.

    First of all Tony Blair made a speech where he expressed "deep sorrow" for Britain's part in the slave trade, excellent, a nice thing to say you might think.

    But no, instead people demanded an actual apology, and he was forced into saying "we are sorry".

    Whilst the local news says that buildings in the city where I live (a major port during the time of slavery) serve as a "guilty reminder to all of us", or words to that effect.

    Also, several buildings in my city are named after a man who made his money from selling wine, cloth and sugar whilst donating a lot of money to the city and founding hospitals and other buildings which still benefit everyone today. But he also made some money (directly or indirectly I'm not sure) from the slave trade.
    So people want the names of all of these buildings to be changed.

    Now, I'd like to ask your opinions as I'm worried that I'm secretly an evil pro-slavery racist (which, ignoring the filipino boy I have locked in my basement, I don't think I am).

    1) I don't feel the slightest bit "guilty" about the slave trade. I had nothing to do with it and I don't see why living today I should feel any more guilty than a black person living today (which has been implied in the news).

    2) I don't think members of the government should feel guilty either as they were not in power (or born) when it happened. I think Tony Blair was right to express Britain's regret that it happened, but why should he *apologise*, surely he can only speak for current Britain, which had nothing to do with it.

    3) Maybe I could be swayed on this point. But is it really that wrong to remember a man who helped the city so much by naming buildings after him (or rather not changing the names of buildings currently named after him) because he as a wealthy merchant made some of his money from something that was accepted at the time? Even if it was clearly very wrong.
    There are things that we do now and that are widely accepted, that in 200 years will surely be totally socially unacceptable (maybe causing pollution, or producing food from animals, etc) but if someone makes some money from those things and gives a lot back to a city, is it right for that city 200 years from now to judge him or her by their modern values?

    BBC NEWS | UK | Slave trade shameful, Blair says
  2. chrisjordan New Member

    Wasn't there something not long ago about some Germans (or a German newspaper) demanding that the Queen apologise for the Dresden bombings? I remember being annoyed about that. It struck me as ridiculous, for the same reasons as it's ridiculous to get Blair to apologise for Britain's part in the slave trade.

    As for the merchant, any good acts he did for the city don't exactly make his involvement in the slave trade alright, especially if those acts were achieved through the slave trade, but it's really not going to achieve anything by changing the names. And there is an argument that in his eyes he probably saw himself as doing everything for the good of the city.

    Then again, to dismiss the wrongness any kind of action just because it was socially acceptable at the time is something I'd probably disagree with. If moral values are just relative to culture or society like that, then by the same reasoning you'd have no problem with the idea of murder becoming a socially acceptable hobby in a hundred years' time. :razz:
  3. McLaren New Member

    Hmm, well yes I would have a problem with murder becoming a socially acceptable hobby...but I wouldn't have as much of a problem with a person born and raised in that society being a murderer as I would if that person lived today.
  4. Electric_Man Templar

    I have no guilt on the slave trade either, I've never sold a person and don't know anyone who has (or if they have, they haven't said anything about it). I don't even feel guilt on behalf of my ancestors, because I don't know if they were involved either. I'm pretty sure that I've said the same thing about Blair that you have on this board, he has nothing to apologise for either - although I guess Britain as a whole has something to apologise for and he kinda represents us.

    On the flipside of the people asking for buildings and such to be renamed, are those asking for reparations.

    Now it could just be me, but does that sound a tad excessive? Especially considering that some african governments (or tribal chiefs) of the time received a lot of money/goods for allowing the foreigners to steal their people. Sadly, it seems to all come down to people wanting money, the people running this campaign probably don't care about apologies, all they want is the cash and a cushty lifestyle.

    Besides, even if reparations were paid, how would it be distributed evenly? A lot of the ancestors of slaves now live in the countries that enslaved them, so it can't all go to the states that they originally came from. And what state would it leave the countries that paid? At those amounts, pretty much financially crippled.
  5. chrisjordan New Member

    Well yeah, less chance of you being murdered back then when you weren't around. :p

    I do think it's slightly unfair to judge him now by modern values now, though. After all, they weren't his values. This is where it gets tricky, because it really depends on which society is right. The idea of slavery repulses me (mostly stemmed from the thought of being a slave) and I think it's wrong, but then I was born into this society.

    But aside from all that, this retrospective name-changing and apologising doesn't really make any sense in practice, because where does it end? Are we going to go back through the history of history and identify every similar incident in the same way?

    I think in part the name-changing is just a way for us to publically wash our hands of it and make our collective conscience feel a bit better whenever an anniversary comes round.
  6. Maljonic Administrator

    I think they should rename the buildings if it will make people feel better.
  7. McLaren New Member

    Good point. Like most people I don't really care what the buildings are called, and I don't really think that changing their name is that significant or necessary personally. But if some people do care then I guess there is no harm in changing them, then everyone is happy.
  8. spiky Bar Wench

    I think when these types of debate flare some of the perspective is lost on why someone should say sorry. I mean there's saying sorry because you personally feel responsible for something happening, and then there's saying sorry because you regret something happened but you weren't responsible for it.

    They're having this same debate about whether the PM should apologise to Australian aborigies for genocide and stealing land and children. He says he wasn't to blame so shouldn't say sorry, the other side says that he should express regret that it happened so that healing and closure can happen and then the country can move on.

    Sometimes sorry is the hardest word...to define.
  9. Ba Lord of the Pies

    Societies grow and mature just as people grow and mature. Slavery was just as wrong then, but Ba wouldn't hold someone engaged in slavery from that time as he would now. To a certain extent, they didn't know better.

    Of course, just like a child caught shoplifting, they still need their bottom paddled.
  10. Roman_K New Member

    Nor should you feel guilty. The son should not feel guilty for the sins of the father, or grandfather, or great-great-great-great-grandfather. It wasn't you who commited these acts.

    "White Man Guilt" is no less racism than "Black Man Inferiority", as it basically says the same thing to an extent. "White Man is Inferior, because White Man has a culture of slavery and exploitation. Black Man doesn't have such a culture, so Black Man is superior."

    That's racism. Of course, political correctness does not allow me to call it that, but I personally don't give a damn about political correctness. And speaking of slavery, it was hardly reserved to Europe. Africa had an extensive slaving network, which was one of the chief pillars of support for slavers who went for "stock" on the African coasts. And the Barbary Pirates come to mind as well.

    This sort of thing is just so... stupid. It has nothing to do with facts, and everything to do with gross generalizations.

    I agree. Blair expressed Britian's regret of what occured. The Britian of today is not the Britian of over 200 years ago, and to say that the Britian of today must apologise is.. a bit lame, really.

    I agree with Mal on this one. This isn't really a matter of principle, is it? But then again, most of the historical figures we respect would be thought to be quite... unrespectable by today's standards. To say the least. So while I don't think the name changing is warranted, I do not think I have much to say against it beyond "the reasons are a bit on the silly side".

    Ooh! *files lawsuits against Italy for the actions of the Roman Empire, and the Inquisition*

    Seriously now, this is so stupid that it's actually become funny.
  11. Hsing Moderator

    Blair is of course not responsible for the slave trade, but as somebody has pointed out, he is a represantative. My personal opinion is that any state which has profited from slave trade grand style would do the memory of the past's slaves and their own self esteem as a society a bigger favour if they put some extra energy in fighting today's slavery.

    The saddest point is, from today's point of view, that, while still working over the slave trades of the past, most states involved on both side tend to neglect that never in humanity's history so much actual slaves lived on this planet - people, particularly children, sold, chaeaper than ever in history too*, as sex slaves, cheap workers, camel jockeys, maidens, etc etc. Remember Tempus horrible experience with the maid? She probably hired willingly at some point, not knowing what was coming, into what has to be called slavery: You are in every way at someone elses mercy, physically and economically, and with no way to freely leave and escape your situation. You are being owned.
    Those states still turning (at least) a blind eye on slavery within their borders should focus on that.

    I do understand that there is still a public discourse on slave trade throughout history. The broader context of the arrival of Europeans and later colonialism is still an undercurrent of many, many conflicts around the world today, particulary on the African continent. Although the remark that often native elites where involved in slave trade is true. Nobility sold their subjects to overseas as did nobility everywhere in the world; more often though whole societies turned against their lesser armed neighbours and sold their POWs, market demand often churning such conflicts.

    I find it an interesting, but rather difficult question when historical responsibility needs to end. I think that historical guilt and personal guilt should be divided, for once - when you did not load personal guilt upon your shoulders that is, of course.

    I know that historical cases are hardly ever comparable. Still - my parent's generation, for example, was born after WW2; now, had this generation just said, "Hey, we weren't born, didn't do anything to anybody! So, no guilt, no excuses!", this present society would have developed differently, and not for the better.
    I know that as such this example is a little over the top. I also know that 200 years do make a difference. So does that the survivors of persecution through the Third Reich were still alive, and the wounds were fresh when my parents were younger. But even now that all the culprits die of old age or are already dead, I think that we are doing our own society as well as the memory of the dead a favour if we remember what has happened with, well, a gist of collective responsibility.

    Because especially in times like these, when we think we are acting rational, and are so far from it, it should be remembered that a state loosing sight of protecting every human's dignity -and other old fashioned icons like it, even when it doesn't pay out in economical terms (any states icon these days)- is a very poisonous thing. Closing the historical files of any atrocity is always a two sided thing.


    One other thing comes to mind, - and I am sorry if I turn this topic, but it shows why I see this as a rather complex one - ten years ago or so my father and I had a (civilzed) discussion with a colleague of his about reparation lawsuits from several families - Eastern European forced laborers as well as several Jewish families from the USA whose members had managed to flee the Third Reich at the price of all they posessed at the time.
    It was about compensation for both endurance as well as lost family fortunes, and possible only then because before that, the Iron Curtain had prevented such processes. The colleague argued that after fifty years, demanding repayment from firms which were struggling after the Reunification anyway, seemed senseless to him, because the people who had built those firms for decades weren't to blame. We objected that many of these firms managed to rebuild so quickly after the Second World War because nobody back then dared to take their stolen capital, or make them pay for having used Forced Laborers, because nobody wanted to sustain a poor Germany in the middle of Europe right at the start of the Cold War, and that it wasn't the victims fault nobody would have wanted to debate their cases until then - so they shouldn't be made responsible for the delay with which this was happening.

    One could argue that moral repayment for the slave trade has been horribly delayed - I think that is how many people feel. (Just trying to imagine their point of view here, nothing you wrote was wrong as such after my opinion.) But this whole case might also show that delaying such clearing processes in history only leads to the remainings still coming back to bite you in the ass, even when it is 200 years later. And with that, I don't mean the fact Blair had to apologize, and that so many people feel uncomfortable about that, but more the fact that so many people are still feeling they are being owned an apology, and living the lives that makes them feel that way.




    *children from 30 USDollars upwards, in some parts of the world.
  12. Maljonic Administrator

    Hsing, you said everything I wanted to say last night but was too tired to get the words out - so I simply wrote: I think they should rename the buildings if it will make people feel better. But, if you could read between the line, I meant to say everything that Hsing did. :smile:
  13. Buzzfloyd Spelling Bee

    This is an interesting subject.

    There has been a strong focus in the articles I've read on slavery today, not just of 200 years ago, and how and where the slave trade exists now, in the UK and abroad. So I don't think it's the case that we're focusing on history at the expense of dealing with current problems. Especially as a problem from 200 years ago that wasn't dealt with is still a problem now, as Hsing expressed.

    That said, I don't think it's the case that slavery has been ignored or Britain's part in it glossed over. I find it slightly odd that there is so much angst over Britain's part in the trans-Atlantic slave trade when it was also this country that took the chief role in bringing it to an end (theoretically - I suppose really it just went underground). If we are identifying ourselves with our nationality and history - rather than personal responsibility, as Spiky commented - should we not be proud of the part Britain played in bringing an end to this part of the history of slave-trading?

    For myself, the pride and the shame are fairly evenly balanced. I don't feel the need to apologise for or boast about my country.

    Regarding reparations... I can see the case for them, but, ultimately, what good do they do? And where does it all end? I think it's reasonable to ask for reparations for something that happened in your lifetime, like the people Hsing talked about. But there has to be a cut-off point. Should English people demand reparations because we were sold as slaves in the Roman Empire (liked Roman touching on the Romans, by the way ;) )? I do have sympathy for people who have suffered, but I do think there comes a point where common sense has to prevail over feelings that someone owes you something.
  14. Maljonic Administrator

    I suppose it depends where you live and your circumstances. If I grew up somewhere where I felt belittled all the time, where people treated me differently because of my race, I'd wonder what the hell happened in my ancestral past to make me so unlucky to be living in such a place... then I'd think, oh yeah my ancestors were stolen and brought here against their will and feel a little self-conscious about the facts of my history and possibly have a stigma about being surrounded by people whose ancesters brought my ancestors here and so on.

    I'm not sure where you draw the line with such a massive thing as this. There's no particular people to blame, like Hitler, just countries, governments and groups of people. I think we can thank God, or whatever, that our ancestors finally gave up slavery but I also think that expecting praise for doing it is slightly dodgy considering it's the same people that started doing it in the first place. I don't mean England invented slavery, I just mean that England was committing atrocoties then decided not to and shouldn't be praised for deciding not to as much as admonished for doing it in the first place.

    I'm not sure how much there has been in the way of apologies in the past, very little I should imagine, and guess it was more a case of saying to the slaves: "we don't do slavery anymore, you can all go and do something else if you want... or maybe stay here working for whoever, but under your own free will".

    I think the main thing is for people to remember it happened and try to behave more nicely to each other in the future. If there ever are any reparations I'm sure there must be a charity group or two that could get the money.
  15. Buzzfloyd Spelling Bee

    That seems like a pretty good summary, Mal.

    I don't think England (or, indeed, Britain) should be praised for stopping doing something bad, but I think an acknowledgement of it is necessary when analysing the past. If you had a child who kept behaving badly, then realised he was behaving badly and tried to make amends, you wouldn't simply punish him for behaving badly - you'd take into account that he was aware he'd done wrong and was trying to fix it. Or you would if you were a good parent, anyway. Of course, if his bad behaviour had been directed at another child, an apology would be appropriate - but then we're back into the realms of personal responsibility versus being a spokesperson for a group or nation.

    We had a discussion at church the other day (we're looking at slavery for our Lent course this year) about whether or not the trans-Atlantic slave trade has had a lasting effect on race relations now. I think the general conclusion was that it very much has done in the US, but less so in the UK. I was interested that a Jamaican woman in the group felt that, in this country, we need to move on from navel-gazing and looking at the past and simply work on race relations now and in the future. She thinks that for most black people in Britain, slaves in America had no more to do with their lives than abused women in China; people whose plight draws sympathy and compassion, but who are entirely unrelated in their circumstances. She thinks that Blair's apology is only really relevant to Americans. I'm not sure that I agree with her.

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