| I Must
Abolish All Forms of Involuntary Servitude.
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| "The Power that holds Africa is not divine", Garvey. | Ghana: The gods still, even today - exact a heavy toll, the involuntary of young women. Enslaved to repay the sin of their parents. |
(from
Amazon.com) Reviews The author, Samuel Cotton, January 26, 1999 Black American' Journey into African slavery today. Hello: My name is Samuel Cotton, and I am the author of Silent Terror. I am writing to thank you, as those suffering in the wretchedness of slavery thank you, for showing an interest in the plight of today's black slave. The publishing of Silent Terror has been long awaited by the enslaved Africans of Mauritania--an Islamic Republic located in Northwest Africa. Long awaited, for it will mark the first time, that the slaves of Mauritania will have a voice in contemporary literature. Silent Terror exposes the centuries old practice of buying, selling and breeding of black Africans by Arab-Berbers in a country that is 100% Muslim. It it, therefore, a story of how racial hatred supercedes religious brotherhood. It is also my story, the story of an African-American's struggle to come to grips with the legacy of slavery and the brutal revelation that slavery continues to thrive in Africa today. The work examines the problems encountered when an activist attempts to bring this terrible knowledge of contemporary slavery to the American public. The story began for me as an investigative journalist working on a piece for the City Sun, a weekly black newspaper based in New York City. As I research my subject I stumbled across a research piece by Human Rights Watch/Africa which stated: "The institution of slavery continues today in Mauritania,
especially in the countryside. They work long hours for no remuneration. They are denied access to education and do not enjoy the freedom to marry or to associate freely with other blacks. They escape servitude, not by exercising their "legal" rights, but mainly through escape. Ignorance of their rights, fear of recapture and the torture that often follows, and the lack of marketable skills in an impoverished country discourage a substantial number of slaves from trying to escape." This data and a wealth of other credible sources of information would spur me on to write a series of essays and news articles that would create a controversy in the black community. When the essays were published, they would anger the Nation of Islam and trigger a series of debates on radio and television with that organization. The NOI under Minister Louis Farrakhan stated that there was no slavery in Africa and that it was all a lie. The black Muslims stated that the charge of African slavery by Arab Moors was simply a Jewish plot to separate and divide the black and Arab community and stop the growth of Islam, particularly, in the black community. To answer these charges I would travel to Africa and work undercover for 28 days conducting ethnographic research and creating a film and audio record of contemporary African slavery under the Arabs of Mauritania. There in Mauritania, I would be transported back into the past. I would interview slaves, runaway slaves, anti-slavery leaders and free African abolitionists. I would be forced to come to grips with my African past, not in some nostalgic fantasy, but in all of stark and brutal reality. Silent Terror captures, with interviews and photographs, that painful journey to Africa and the important events that transpired after my return to the United States. Samuel Cotton Mali The Black man must reclaim every blade of grass and every grain of sand - from the Mediterranean to the Cape
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Silent Terror: Read this book, Silent Terror, and weep
for the injustice we have committed against our brothers.
Slavery Search this site for more on
It's the year 2000.
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| The
practice that liberated us to chattel slavery in the Americas still
thrives in Africa. How will I be free when my brother and sister are not? "....Slavery and the Slave-Trade constitute a gross and flagrant violation of human rights against African peoples and a crime against humanity." - excerpted from the draft resolution by African Nations presented to the 54th session of the UN Commission on Human Rights. Sounds more like a confession to me. |