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Modern
Slavery in Africa is Largely Ignored
By U.S. Black Leaders and Major Media Tens of Thousands Enslaved in Africa Today Massachusetts News
May 12—The African slave trade continues to this day but few major black leaders in America, including Harvard scholars Cornell West and Henry Louis Gates, want to say much or do anything about it. Major human-rights groups like Amnesty International are also keeping mum. But the anti-Semitic black leader Louis Farrakhan is talking—he and his Nation of Islam deny that slavery still exists in Africa. Jesse Sage, associate director of the Somerville-based American Anti-Slavery Group, told Massachusetts News: “It’s still a mystery to me why all of the people who claim to be such advocates for human rights have ignored this issue for so long.” Sage’s group, which held a press conference yesterday in Boston, has received little support from the African-American community. “It would be empowering for all Americans and
African-Americans in particular to get involved,” said Sage, adding that
there are more people enslaved today “than ever before in human history.”
The latest statistics say there are about 27 million people enslaved worldwide.
The American Anti-Slavery Group (www.anti-slavery.org) works to “document,
publicize, and combat modern-day slavery.”
Modern Slavery Is Edited Out Much of the story of modern slavery in Africa
was in fact cut out of Prof. Gates’s recently released CD-tome on Africa,
Encarta Africana, which he edited. The project claims to be
“the largest CD collection of knowledge about geography, history, and culture
of Africa and people of African descent.”
While Nave said that he was “totally flabbergasted
to find that there was widespread institutionalized slavery” today in Africa,
the final CD-version of the article with his byline reads that only “a
minor underground trade in slaves probably still exists.”
Disappointment With Black Reaction Jok Madut Jok, a professor of history at Loyola
Marymount University, has been studying slavery in the Sudan for the last
nine years. “I am disappointed with the reaction, especially from African-Americans,”
he told Massachusetts News. He blames the poor reaction partly on
the influence of the Muslim African-American community, led by Louis Farrakhan.
Slavery is an International Problem But Richard Newman, a research officer at Harvard’s W.E.B. Dubois Institute, told Massachusetts News that he doesn’t understand “why fighting slavery is the special responsibility of people of color.” “If there is slavery” today, said Newman, “why isn’t it the responsibility of everybody.” Newman then cited a recent study in the Chronicle of Higher Education, which discusses slave labor in Thailand, India, and Indonesia. “Slavery is not an African phenomenon. It’s an international phenomenon,” he said. “It doesn’t make sense to focus on Africa when slavery broadly defined is international.” When asked about why the American Anti-Slavery Group hasn’t been able to gain much support from the African-American community, Newman said there is “a lot of suspicion about the group” because its focus is largely on African slavery. But Sage said that his group tries to focus on Sudan and Mauritania because they are the “worst and most often ignored cases of slavery.” New Anti-Slavery Action? Despite slights by the academic community,
Sage claims that his group sees progress. After listening to Moctar Teyeb
speak, Rev. Ray Hammond of the Black Ministerial Alliance organized a committee
to follow the progress of this issue. Details of the committee’s work have
not yet been made public and Hammond was not available for comment.
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