Mother Africa didn’t want you

Loading

by Don Surber

Don Lemon had a bad week. It began when a British scholar educated him live on his very own show on the true role of Britain in slavery.
 
And now I am going to introduce him to the fact that had his ancestors not been sold and shipped to America, he would not be a millionaire today. He would be a second-class citizen.
 
Let’s start with Lemon’s first lesson on slavery.
 


 
His guest was Hillary Fordwich, an expert on British royalty who was brought in to talk about the queen and her funeral.
 
Lemon said, “England is facing rising costs of living, and you have those who are asking for reparations for colonialism … and some people want to be paid back and members of the public are wondering, why are we suffering when you have all of this vast wealth? Those are legitimate concerns.”
 
Fordwhich said, “Well I think you’re right about reparations in terms of — if people want it though, what they need to do is, you always need to go back to the beginning of the supply chain. Where was the beginning of the supply chain? That was in Africa.”
 
She then lectured him on how African kings conquered and enslaved people.
 
Fordwich said, “African kings were rounding up their own people, they had them in cages waiting on the beaches, no one was running into Africa to get them.”
 
She also stunned him by pointing out slavery was ubiquitous in the world in the 19th century. She asked, “Which was the first nation in the world that abolished slavery? The British.”
 
2,000 British sailors died intercepting slave ships in the 19th century.
 
And of course, 600,000 Americans died in a civil war to end slavery.
 
Lee Habeeb wrote about abolition in Newsweek. He said, “Some nations would abolish slavery later than others: Cuba (1886), Brazil (1888), Korea (1894), Egypt (1895), Italy (1889), China (1906), Russia (1917), Afghanistan and Hong Kong (1923), Iraq and Turkey (1924), Persia (1929), Ethiopia (1935), Kuwait (1949), Niger (1960) and Saudi Arabia and North Yemen (1962). Legalized slavery, it turns out, endured the longest in Middle Eastern, African and Asian nations. Slavery persists today, with more than 40 million people enslaved—more than at any time in human history.”
 
Which brings me to Sandra Greene, an African-American history scholar at Cornell. She studied at the University of Ghana — in the nation that was the hub of African slave trade — and is well-versed in the subject. African kings sold 12 million slaves to Europeans over 400 years, according to Greene.
 
Millions more were retained in Africa.
 
Greene said, “It’s not something that many West African countries talk about.”
 
Slavery was different in Mother Africa.
 
She said, “They didn’t have racial slavery. The distinction was, and is, by kinship. People there are very clear about an individual’s background, and they retain oral records of who is who within a family. In some families slave origins still matter, even today.”
 
To be fair to Mother Africa, Stepmother USA treated the descendants of slavery as second-class citizens for a century after abolition. But in the last 60 years, the USA has tried to make amends through affirmative action and the like.
 
Mother Africa is a different story.

Read more
 

5 1 vote
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
3 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Way too bad Lemon but i hope it gets worst for him and CNN

Don Lemon is thrown off.
He “forgot” Rule #1 in journalism: NEVER ask a question if you don’t already kknow the answer.

In 1981, Mauritania, on the western coast of Africa, became the LAST country on earth to abolish slavery.1981.
Still, there are no laws on the books there to PUNISH people for trafficking in or owning slaves there.
Blacks are to blame for black slavery wherever it is found in the present …or the past.

There are a few more at CNN who should be sacked as well. CNN is a horrible media source that has zero credibility.