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The first humans lived in Africa, not in Israel, not in the Middle East The first humans migrated out of Africa about 70,000 years ago to populate the whole world First of all, by "Adam and Eve" I mean the first humans, not the mythical Adam and Eve of religion. That's also the way it was used in the documentaries that I'll provide below. Those who follow this blog and have read my book: What is Satan? What is Lucifer? The biggest secret in the world already know that the book began from this topic. The sciences of Paleontology, Archeology, Anthropology, even history have all shown that the first humans lived in Africa, not in Israel or any place in the Middle East. My favorite of these sciences is genetics because it's totally based on hard verifiable evidence that could be repeated. Below are two science backed documentaries using DNA sequencing to prove that the first humans lived in Africa. Just in case you're wondering; what's DNA? DNA stands f...
Slavery in America began when the first African slaves were brought to
the North American colony of Jamestown, Virginia, in 1619, to aid in the
production of such lucrative crops as tobacco. Slavery was practiced
throughout the American colonies in the 17th and 18th centuries, and
African-American slaves helped build the economic foundations of the new
nation. The invention of the cotton gin in 1793 solidified the central
importance of slavery to the South’s economy. By the mid-19th century,
America’s westward expansion, along with a growing abolition movement in
the North, would provoke a great debate over slavery that would tear
the nation apart in the bloody American Civil War (1861-65). Though the
Union victory freed the nation’s 4 million slaves, the legacy of slavery
continued to influence American history, from the tumultuous years of
Reconstruction (1865-77) to the civil rights movement that emerged in
the 1960s, a century after emancipation.
FOUNDATIONS OF SLAVERY IN AMERICA
In the early 17th century, European settlers in North America turned to African slaves as a cheaper, more plentiful labor source than indentured servants (who were mostly poorer Europeans). After 1619, when a Dutch ship brought 20 Africans ashore at the British colony of Jamestown,Virginia, slavery spread throughout the American colonies. Though it is impossible to give accurate figures, some historians have estimated that 6 to 7 million slaves were imported to the New World during the 18th century alone, depriving the African continent of some of its healthiest and ablest men and women.
In the 17th and 18th centuries, black slaves worked mainly on the tobacco, rice and indigo plantations of the southern coast. After theAmerican Revolution(1775-83), many colonists (particularly in the North, where slavery was relatively unimportant to the economy) began to link the oppression of black slaves to their own oppression by the British, and to call for slavery’s abolition. After the war’s end, however, the new U.S. Constitution tacitly acknowledged the institution, counting each slave as three-fifths of a person for the purposes of taxation and representation in Congress and guaranteeing the right to repossess any “person held to service or labor” (an obvious euphemism for slavery).
IMPORTANCE OF THE COTTON GIN
In the late 18th century, with the land used to grow tobacco nearly exhausted, the South faced an economic crisis, and the continued growth of slavery in America seemed in doubt. Around the same time, the mechanization of the textile industry in England led to a huge demand for American cotton, a southern crop whose production was unfortunately limited by the difficulty of removing the seeds from raw cotton fibers by hand. In 1793, a young Yankee schoolteacher named Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin, a simple mechanized device that efficiently removed the seeds. His device was widely copied, and within a few years the South would transition from the large-scale production of tobacco to that of cotton, a switch that reinforced the region’s dependence on slave labor.
Slavery itself was never widespread in the North, though many of the region’s businessmen grew rich on the slave trade and investments in southern plantations. Between 1774 and 1804, all of the northern states abolished slavery, but the so-called “peculiar institution” remained absolutely vital to the South. Though the U.S. Congress outlawed the African slave trade in 1808, the domestic trade flourished, and the slave population in the U.S. nearly tripled over the next 50 years. By 1860 it had reached nearly 4 million, with more than half living in the cotton-producing states of the South.
SLAVES AND SLAVEHOLDERS
Slaves in the antebellum South constituted about one-third of the southern population. Most slaves lived on large farms or small plantations; many masters owned less than 50 slaves. Slave owners sought to make their slaves completely dependent on them, and a system of restrictive codes governed life among slaves. They were prohibited from learning to read and write, and their behavior and movement was restricted. Many masters took sexual liberties with slave women, and rewarded obedient slave behavior with favors, while rebellious slaves were brutally punished. A strict hierarchy among slaves (from privileged house slaves and skilled artisans down to lowly field hands) helped keep them divided and less likely to organize against their masters. Slave marriages had no legal basis, but slaves did marry and raise large families; most slave owners encouraged this practice, but nonetheless did not hesitate to divide slave families by sale or removal.
Slave revolts did occur within the system (notably ones led by Gabriel Prosser in Richmond in 1800 and by Denmark Vesey in Charleston in 1822), but few were successful. The slave revolt that most terrified white slaveholders was that led byNat Turnerin Southampton County, Virginia, in August 1931. Turner’s group, which eventually numbered around 75 blacks, murdered some 60 whites in two days before armed resistance from local whites and the arrival of state militia forces overwhelmed them. Supporters of slavery pointed to Turner’s rebellion as evidence that blacks were inherently inferior barbarians requiring an institution such as slavery to discipline them, and fears of similar insurrections led many southern states to further strengthen their slave codes in order to limit the education, movement and assembly of slaves. In the North, the increased repression of southern blacks would only fan the flames of the growing abolition movement.
RISE OF THE ABOLITION MOVEMENT
From the 1830s to the 1860s, a movement to abolish slavery in America gained strength in the northern United States, led by free blacks such asFrederick Douglassand white supporters such as William Lloyd Garrison, founder of the radical newspaper The Liberator, andHarriet Beecher Stowe, who published the bestselling antislavery novel “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” (1852). While many abolitionists based their activism on the belief that slaveholding was a sin, others were more inclined to the non-religious “free-labor” argument, which held that slaveholding was regressive, inefficient and made little economic sense.
Free blacks and other antislavery northerners had begun helping fugitive slaves escape from southern plantations to the North via a loose network of safe houses as early as the 1780s. This practice, known as theUnderground Railroad, gained real momentum in the 1830s and although estimates vary widely, it may have helped anywhere from 40,000 to 100,000 slaves reach freedom. The success of the Underground Railroad helped spread abolitionist feelings in the North; it also undoubtedly increased sectional tensions, convincing pro-slavery southerners of their northern countrymen’s determination to defeat the institution that sustained them.
WESTERN EXPANSION AND DEBATE OVER SLAVERY IN AMERICA
America’s explosive growth–and its expansion westward in the first half of the 19th century–would provide a larger stage for the growing conflict over slavery in America and its future limitation or expansion. In 1820, a bitter debate over the federal government’s right to restrict slavery over Missouri’s application for statehood ended in a compromise:Missouriwas admitted to the Union as a slave state,Maineas a free state and all western territories north of Missouri’s southern border were to be free soil. Although theMissouri Compromisewas designed to maintain an even balance between slave and free states, it was able to help quell the forces of sectionalism only temporarily.
In 1850, another tenuous compromise was negotiated to resolve the question of territory won during the Mexican War. Four years later, however, theKansas-NebraskaAct opened all new territories to slavery by asserting the rule of popular sovereignty over congressional edict, leading pro- and anti-slavery forces to battle it out (with much bloodshed) in the new state ofKansas. Outrage in the North over the Kansas-Nebraska Act spelled the downfall of the oldWhig Partyand the birth of a new, all-northern Republican Party. In 1857, the Supreme Court’s ruling in the Dred Scott case (involving a slave who sued for his freedom on the grounds that his master had taken him into free territory) effectively repealed the Missouri Compromise by ruling that all territories were open to slavery. The abolitionist John Brown’s raid at Harper’s Ferry, Virginia, in 1859 aroused sectional tensions even further: Executed for his crimes, Brown was hailed as a martyred hero by northern abolitionists and a vile murderer in the South.
CIVIL WAR AND EMANCIPATION
The South would reach the breaking point the following year, when Republican candidateAbraham Lincolnwas elected as president. Within three months, seven southern states had seceded to form theConfederate States of America; four more would follow after the Civil War (1861-65) began. Though Lincoln’s antislavery views were well established, the central Union war aim at first was not to abolish slavery, but to preserve the United States as a nation. Abolition became a war aim only later, due to military necessity, growing anti-slavery sentiment in the North and the self-emancipation of many African Americans who fled enslavement as Union troops swept through the South. Five days after the bloody Union victory at Antietam in September 1862, Lincoln issued a preliminary emancipation proclamation, and on January 1, 1863, he made it official that “slaves within any State, or designated part of a State…in rebellion,…shall be then, thenceforward, and forever free.”
By freeing some 3 million black slaves in the rebel states, theEmancipation Proclamationdeprived the Confederacy of the bulk of its labor forces and put international public opinion strongly on the Union side. Some 186,000 black soldiers would join the Union Army by the time the war ended in 1865, and 38,000 lost their lives. The total number of dead at war’s end was 620,000 (out of a population of some 35 million), making it the costliest conflict in American history.
THE LEGACY OF SLAVERY
The 13th Amendment, adopted late in 1865, officially abolished slavery, but freed blacks’ status in the post-war South remained precarious, and significant challenges awaited during theReconstructionperiod (1865-77). Former slaves received the rights of citizenship and the “equal protection” of the Constitution in the 14th Amendment (1868) and the right to vote in the 15th (1870), but the provisions of Constitution were often ignored or violated, and it was difficult for former slaves to gain a foothold in the post-war economy thanks to restrictive black codes and regressive contractual arrangements such as sharecropping.
Despite seeing an unprecedented degree of black participation in American political life, Reconstruction was ultimately frustrating for African Americans, and the rebirth of white supremacy–including the rise of racist organizations such as the Ku Klux Klan–had triumphed in the South by 1877. Almost a century later, resistance to the lingering racism and discrimination in America that began during the slavery era would lead to the civil rights movement of the 1960s, which would achieve the greatest political and social gains for blacks since Reconstruction.
Africason is a die-hard believer in Africa. Twitter: @african_school Web: www.africason.com Email: info(AT)africason.com Find my songs on iTunes, artiste name: Africason
The first humans lived in Africa, not in Israel, not in the Middle East The first humans migrated out of Africa about 70,000 years ago to populate the whole world First of all, by "Adam and Eve" I mean the first humans, not the mythical Adam and Eve of religion. That's also the way it was used in the documentaries that I'll provide below. Those who follow this blog and have read my book: What is Satan? What is Lucifer? The biggest secret in the world already know that the book began from this topic. The sciences of Paleontology, Archeology, Anthropology, even history have all shown that the first humans lived in Africa, not in Israel or any place in the Middle East. My favorite of these sciences is genetics because it's totally based on hard verifiable evidence that could be repeated. Below are two science backed documentaries using DNA sequencing to prove that the first humans lived in Africa. Just in case you're wondering; what's DNA? DNA stands f...
How Wole Soyinka, Chinua Achebe, Christopher Okigbo, Ezekiel Mphahlele & Co were deceived by Britain, the CIA & MI16 to destroy African languages in literature By Africason The biggest mistake ever made by educated people on the African continent In 1945, the second world war ended, however, with that end began an ideological and geopolitical tussle between Western powers led by USA and their allies (supremacist, capitalists) versus Eastern powers led by Russia and their allies (socialist, communists). The two powers (East and West) began fighting a weaponless war of supremacy appropriately called the "cold war" in which both sides were vying to outdo each other to control the world. It's called cold war because no weapons were used, instead coercion, lies, threat, psychological means, rhetorics, espionage and things like that were used. Their madness touched everywhere in the world and Africa wasn't left out. By the 1960's, colonialism was fastly endi...
Role of Christian missionaries in the colonization of East Africa Christian missionaries in East Africa (1). Missionaries signed treaties which were later used by colonialists to take over colonies e.g. Tucker, a British Missionary interpreted the 1900 Buganda Agreement to the regents of Kabaka Daudi Chwa II. This led to loss of political, economic and social powers to the British protectorate government. Sir Harry John stone who signed on behalf of the British government confessed that; “I John stone shall be bound to acknowledge the assistance offered to me by the missionaries especially the CMS. Without their assistance on my side, I do not think Uganda’s chiefs would agree to the treaty which practically places their country and land in the British hands”. (From partition of Africa by Prof Sempebwa). (2). Missionaries supplied information to the colonialists which they utilized to plan how to effectively impose their colonial rule on how to crash t...
KWAME NKRUMAH: THE FATHER OF AFRICAN NATIONALISM AND THE FIRST PRESIDENT OF GHANA Celebrating our African historical personalities, discoveries, achievements and eras as proud people with rich culture, traditions and enlightenment spanning many years Osagyefo Dr Kwame Nkrumah (21 September 1909 – 27 April 1972), P.C., was the leader of Ghana and its predecessor state, the Gold Coast, from 1951 to 1966. Overseeing the nation's independence from British colonial rule in 1957, Nkrumah was the first President of Ghana and the first Prime Minister of Ghana. An influential 20th-century advocate of Pan-Africanism, he was a founding member of the Organization of African Unity and was the winner of the Lenin Peace Prize in 1963. Portrait of Kwame Nkrumah,Ghana`s first President Nkrumah was born into the Nzima ethnic group who resided in the southwester...
ALKEBULAN = Africa How Europeans changed the name of Africa The Original name for Africa is ALKEBULAN: Arabic for "the land of original people" Alkebulan is the oldest and the only name of indigenous origin. It was used by the Moors, Nubians, Numidians, Khart-Haddans (Carthagenians), and Ethiopians. Africa, the current name adopted by almost everyone today was given to this continent by a European invader by the name of Louis Africanus. Like all other methods of manipulation, the Romans sought to completely disconnect the indigenous Africans from their culture, deities, and knowledge. History of Louis Africanus and Alkebulan's name change Publius Cornelius Scipio battled Carthage– a powerful city-state in northern Africa which had established itself as the leading maritime power in the ancient world. The First Punic War broke out in 264 B.C. when Rome interfered in a dispute on the Carthaginian controlled island of Sicily. The war ended with Rome in...
Jesus Christ was a black man- according to the bible Before I begin, let me say this article is not about religion, but about history. I am not a religious person, I am not interested in religion. It's high time black people got to begin un-learning lot of the information packed into our minds courtesy of long years of slavery and colonialism. It is time for the black race to rise and claim what is ours. History has been distorted extensively to downplay the contributions of black people to humanity. One glaring distortion is about the character called Jesus Christ in the bible, whom the ancient artists drew as a black man, ancient sculptors carved him as a black man, and even the bible itself described him as a black man in many passages. Before I go further, let me inform you that if you're a serious seeker and you're interested in digging deeper for the whole truth and nothing but the truth, no matter where it may lead to, then you'll need to first find out What...
The Impact of Colonialism on Africa's Economic Development The imposition of colonialism on Africa altered its history forever. African modes of thought, patterns of cultural development, and ways of life were forever impacted by the change in political structure brought about by colonialism. The African economy was significantly changed by the Atlantic slave trade through the process of imperialism and the economic policies that accompanied colonization. Prior to the "Scramble for Africa," or the official partition of Africa by the major European nations, African economies were advancing in every area, particularly in the area of trade. The aim of colonialism is to exploit the physical, human, and economic resources of an area to benefit the colonizing nation. European powers pursued this goal by encouraging the development of a commodity based trading system, a cash crop agriculture system, and by building a trade network linking the total economic output of a re...
From Nkrumah to NEPAD: Has Anything Changed? by Catherine Schittecatte Political Science and Global Studies Program , Vancouver Island University, British Columbia Introduction Kwame Nkrumah’s foresight lay in his understanding that historical and global patterns of exploitation would not be easily broken in post-independence Africa. Given that understanding of Africa’s situation, many of his policies, from domestic development plans to Pan-Africanism, were intended to gain not only political but, most importantly, economic independence for Ghana and the continent. These views were related to Africa’s position in the global economy and, in particular, its economic ties to the West. As such, a second aspect of that vision was the ability of the newly independent continent to de-link itself from past colonial masters and new neo-colonial ones. A third related and most significant component was the strength and feasibi...
The Top 20 Silly Questions Non-Africans Ask About Africa Overseas- South Africa as Case Study. Myths and stereotypes about Africa and its people continue to thrive in some countries. We count down the top 20 actual questions foreigners have asked South Africans. Although our country has been welcomed back to an increasingly globalised world after the end of apartheid, some foreigners continue to harbour romantic ideas about life in Africa. Certainly, one would not expect anyone outside South Africa’s borders to have an in-depth knowledge of the country or its history, but it’s surprising how many crazy myths and stereotypes about Africa and its people continue to thrive. Not even the publicity surrounding Nelson Mandela and his involvement in the anti-apartheid struggle have succeeded in enlightening some people about the multiracial nature of SA society. As a result, South Africans living or travelling abroad often face some...
The Dead End of African Literature By Obiajunwa Wali A truly educated African who predicted the death of African languages in literature In order to truly understand the context of this article, please first read: How Britain and the CIA fooled Wole Soyinka and Chinua Achebe to destroy African languages in literature. PERHAPS, THE MOST IMPORTANT ACHIEVEMENT of the last Conference of African Writers of English Expression held in Makerere College, Kampala, in June 1962, is that African literature as now defined and understood, leads nowhere. The Conference itself marked the final climax of the attack on the Negritude school of Leopold Senghor and Aime Cesare. For some time now, African writers of English expression like Ezekiel Mphahlele, Wole Soyinka, and Christopher Okigbo, have treated this kind of literature which expresses sterile concepts such as "negritude" or the "African personality" with the utmost derision. ...
Should be 1831.
ReplyDelete"The slave revolt that most terrified white slaveholders was that led by Nat Turner in Southampton County, Virginia, in August 1931."