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Ian's avatar

I appreciate this article shedding light on the African complicity in the slave trade. But parts of this article go too far and make the Europeans sound like feckless non-agents whom the Africans bullied into buying slaves.

> Europeans were mandated to pay ground rent or tribute whenever they built settlements. Similarly, the Whydah kingdom compelled European merchants to pay customs fees and distribute gifts to the king and his agents. Overcome with greed, one king in 1700 extracted fees equivalent to ten slaves from each European slaver to open the market, and then ordered them to purchase his slaves at an exorbitant price.

The fact that the European traders put up with these terms does indicate the lucrative nature of the trade to them. If the terms were not acceptable they would've walked away! So the exorbitant price must not actually have been all that exorbitant, if the traders nonetheless had the expectation of profit from the endeavor.

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Winston's avatar

Just to share my own experience on how the African Slavery Trade was taught in my class when I was a child in my country, which has been a massive participant in slavery and colonialism in Africa.

My elementary and middle school teachers never hid the fact that Africans were cooperative in this trade as some drawings on our course material depicted explicitly an African tribe trading with whites to exchange people from other enemy tribes for unique resources provided by Europeans.

I’ve no clue how it was taught in other classes and schools but this was likely part of our official governmental curriculum since the late 2000’s. However, it didn't get that deeper than that compared to what you presented in this post.

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