The Arab slave trade,[1][2][3] was a slave trade in which slaves were mainly transported across the Sahara. Most were moved from sub-Saharan Africa to North Africa to be sold to Mediterranean and Middle Eastern civilizations; a small percentage went the other direction.[4] Estimates of the total number of black slaves moved from sub-Saharan Africa to the Arab world range from 6-10 million. The trans-Saharan trade routes conveyed a significant number of this total, with one estimate tallying around 7.2 million slaves crossing the Sahara from the mid-7th century until the 20th century (in 1956 in Saudi Arabia) when it was abolished.[5][6]
One of the oldest slave trades in history was the Arab trade of Zanj (Bantu) slaves in Southeast Africa. This trade began 700 years before the European Atlantic slave trade.[11] Men taken as slaves were often used as servants, soldiers, or workers. Women and children were mainly used as servants and concubines. However, according to Islamic law and Muslim jurists castration of slaves was deemed unlawful this view is also mentioned in the Hadith.[12][13]
Most male slaves were castrated.[14] It is estimated that as many as 6 out of every 10 boys bled to death during this process.[14]
During the Arab slave trade,
Europeans were among those traded by the Arabs.[10] The term Saqaliba (Arabic: صقالبة) was often used in medieval Arabic sources to refer specifically to Slavic slaves traded by the Arab traders, but it could also refer more broadly to Central, Southern, and Eastern Europeans who were also traded by the Arabs, as well as all European slaves in some Muslim regions like Spain including those abducted from military raids on Christian kingdoms of Spain.[15][16] During the era of the Fatimid Caliphate (909–1171), the majority of slaves were Europeans taken along European beaches and during conflicts.[10]
Modern slavery in Africa
In Mauritania slavery was abolishedlegally in 1980.[17] But MuslimBerbers still own an estimated 90,000 African slaves.[17] This is despite the fact that African Mauritanians converted to Islam over a hundred years ago and the Qur’an does not allow Muslims to enslave other Muslims.[17] Slaves are used for farmlabor, concubines and domestic servants.[18] The children remain the property of their masters. They can be bought, sold, or exchanged for trucks, camels or guns.[17]
Slavery in Sudan is active again with the Muslim north waging war against Animists and Christians in the south. In these raids almost all slaves are taken from the tribes in the Nuba Mountains.[17] Government sponsored Arab militias often kill the men and enslave women and children. Those taken slaves are forced to convert to Islam.[18] Those that refuse are put to death.[18] The trafficking in women and children in Western and Southern Africa violates the 1948 UNUniversal Declaration of Human Rights.[19]
References
↑Bean, Frank D.; Brown, Susan K. (2023-03-01). Selected Topics in Migration Studies. Springer Nature. p. 27. ISBN978-3-031-19631-7. Trans-Saharan slave trade was conducted within the ambits of the trans-Saharan trade, otherwise referred to as the Arab trade. Trans-Saharan trade, conducted across the Sahara Desert, was a web of commerical interactions between the Arab world (North Africa and the Persian Gulf) and sub-Saharan Africa.
↑Iddrisu, Abdulai (6 January 2023). "A Study in Evil: The Slave Trade in Africa". Religions. 14 (1): 122. doi:10.3390/rel14010122. Africans experienced three distinct types of slave trades: (1) The European Slave Trade that took Africans across the Atlantic from the mid-fifteenth century until the end of the nineteenth century; (2) the Arab Slave Trade across the Sahara and the Indian Ocean that predated European contact with Africa; and (3) domestic slavery.
↑Gakunzi, David (2018). "The Arab-Muslim Slave Trade: Lifting the Taboo". Jewish Political Studies Review. 29 (3/4): 40–42. ISSN0792-335X. JSTOR26500685. In West Africa, the Arab slave trade encompassed a vast region from the Niger valley to the Gulf of Guinea. This traffic followed the trans-Saharan roads.
↑Bradley, Keith R. "Apuleius and the sub-Saharan slave trade". Apuleius and Antonine Rome: Historical Essays. p. 177.
↑Segal 2001, p. 55-57. sfn error: no target: CITEREFSegal2001 (help)