I suppose the "professor" doesn't know that black Africans captured other black Africans and sold them at the coast as slaves. Black countries had wars centuries before they knew about white people.
She "knows" a lot of stuff that isn't true, as Reagan said.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-53444752
…..
The slaves were being transported by middlemen, along with a consignment of tobacco and palm produce, from Nwaubani Ogogo's hometown of Umuahia to the coast.
My great-grandfather apparently did not consider it fair that his slaves had been seized.
Buying and selling of human beings among the Igbo had been going on long before the Europeans arrived. People became slaves as punishment for crime, payment for debts, or prisoners of war.
The successful sale of adults was considered an exploit for which a man was hailed by praise singers, akin to exploits in wrestling, war, or in hunting animals like the lion.
Igbo slaves served as domestic servants and labourers. They were sometimes also sacrificed in religious ceremonies and buried alive with their masters to attend to them in the next world.
Slavery was so ingrained in the culture that a number of popular Igbo proverbs make reference to it:
Anyone who has no slave is his own slave
A slave who looks on while a fellow slave is tied up and thrown into the grave with his master should realise that the same thing could be done to him someday
It is when the son is being given advice that the slave learns
The arrival of European merchants offering guns, mirrors, gin, and other exotic goods in exchange for humans massively increased demand, leading people to kidnap others and sell them
I suppose the "professor" doesn't know that black Africans captured other black Africans and sold them at the coast as slaves. Black countries had wars centuries before they knew about white people.
She "knows" a lot of stuff that isn't true, as Reagan said.
Yes. Example
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-53444752 ….. The slaves were being transported by middlemen, along with a consignment of tobacco and palm produce, from Nwaubani Ogogo's hometown of Umuahia to the coast. My great-grandfather apparently did not consider it fair that his slaves had been seized. Buying and selling of human beings among the Igbo had been going on long before the Europeans arrived. People became slaves as punishment for crime, payment for debts, or prisoners of war. The successful sale of adults was considered an exploit for which a man was hailed by praise singers, akin to exploits in wrestling, war, or in hunting animals like the lion. Igbo slaves served as domestic servants and labourers. They were sometimes also sacrificed in religious ceremonies and buried alive with their masters to attend to them in the next world. Slavery was so ingrained in the culture that a number of popular Igbo proverbs make reference to it: Anyone who has no slave is his own slave A slave who looks on while a fellow slave is tied up and thrown into the grave with his master should realise that the same thing could be done to him someday It is when the son is being given advice that the slave learns The arrival of European merchants offering guns, mirrors, gin, and other exotic goods in exchange for humans massively increased demand, leading people to kidnap others and sell them
Another article… http://edition.cnn.com/WORLD/9510/ghana_slavery/