Submitted by Mohammed Degia

On August 1, 1838, enslaved people across the British Caribbean gained their freedom. Contrary to what is often peddled about the singular role of abolitionists in ending transatlantic slavery, there were two main reasons for abolition- economic and rebellions. The British did not in some great moralistic and ethical wave bestow freedom upon the enslaved. The system was altered because slavery had become an economic liability. Furthermore, the planters lived with the constant fear of slaves rebelling and of another Haiti transpiring. In the end, it was better to agree to free the enslaved than to live with this fear or worse to experience a rebellion. I discuss all of this in more detail in a piece I wrote in 2007 which was the 200th anniversary of the abolition of the trans-Atlantic slave trade by Britain.

As we commemorate the emancipation of our Caribbean forefathers, remember that the British in abolishing slavery also provided a large compensation package for the slave owners. The sum of money amounted to £20 million (£15 billion today) or about 40% of the national budget. The formerly enslaved of course received nothing. What is even more perverse is that the loan taken out at that time by the British government to fund the compensation package was not paid off until 2015. Thus, the British taxpayer was until recently, through payments to the holders of the slavery bonds, still contributing to the beneficiaries of slavery. This is the same British government and society that dismisses the descendants of the enslaved condescendingly, lecturing to them that they should move on and stop living in the past. This is the same British government and society that refuses to consider the just demands of Caribbean people for reparations. The same British government that argues absurdly that the slave trade and slavery were not illegal at the time and so they are not obliged to provide compensation for the heinous role they played in one of the worst crimes against humanity. For these people though, it is not a historical matter to be left behind when until February 2015 they were still reaping the benefits of the slavery abolition loan. The height of dishonesty, arrogance and hypocrisy.

In addition, as we celebrate August 1, we must be mindful that 180 years after abolition and 56 years after the decolonisation period in the British Caribbean commenced with Jamaica’s independence on August 6, 1962, we have a long way to go in the quest for true freedom. The legacy of colonialism and slavery endures in our tiny island states. Most of us continue to experience significant socio-economic challenges. Race and class considerations remain central factors in how our societies function. For example, in Barbados, the justice system still operates in two forms- one for the rich and white and nowadays Indian and one for blacks particularly those that are not rich. Just under a year ago, I penned a long article about the harsh realities of race in Barbados beyond the symbolism of its Emancipation statue. Last week, two prominent white Barbadian businessmen were charged with drug offences and anyone following the saga would have seen first-hand the playing out of the politics of race and class that I wrote about.

The Caribbean has much work to do. We need to examine in earnest these mental chains that impede us. An honest, brutal conversation about our past, how it looms large over us and how we must proceed is essential. Our intellectual giants started the process. It is necessary for us to build on it and propel it to the next level. It is also imperative that we do this together as a region. We are one people with a shared history of colonialism, slavery and exploitation. People to people relationships that transcend artificial borders have always been a central feature of our Caribbean reality. In addition, in a world of large and medium powers, we have no choice as small islands but to integrate. Our politicians with their egos and selfish interests have frustrated the institutionalisation of our deep ties. We the people must take the lead.

265 responses to “180 Years of Emancipation- Some Perspective”


  1. So, to sum up – it was all whitey’s evil (except perhaps for the white slaves predating the black ones), nothing to do with the Arab and black tribal initiators and facilitators, and William Wilberforce et al might as well have saved themselves the trouble.

    Things are soooo much better now, oh yes, when leading lights like Fumble and Donnie Inniss and their gangs have had their hands on the tiller, when not in the cookie jar, and white slave masters here have been exchanged for the new slave-masters’ who instead of sending their ill-gotten gains to England have been hiding it in US banks..
    Oh yes indeedy, how things have improved since 1966, look at the new boss, same as the old boss. Paradise not just Lost, but Stolen.

    Stand by for the foaming racists, SSDumbShit and Well Well Wot A Igrunts Parasite I is. to start their screeching.


  2. On the mark again 45, but have you noticed the indian has been looped into the evil white mans cabal, Yes it played out very bizarrely last week the people who had bail money got out how strange lol Not that they were all processed the same ….they are bad and the system is flawed because they all could not make bail …Was it 180 years ago already 9 generations ago and seems like just yesterday well for some any way. Look you have ran the country for 50 years or so and into the ground by most accounts but when it is time for all bajans to unite and save the island they love and call home some people want to divide it down racial lines. Wake up bajans some people make money when things are bad by sowing seeds of mistrust in everything and everyone. I like to call it the sharpton principal….when people are getting along it isnt good for business.


  3. What ‘180 years of emancipation’ what?!!?
    Emancipation remains an elusive concept.

    Blacks simply moved from being content to be treated like animals…
    to being told that they ‘can be equal’ to the demons who treated them like animals.

    Wunna don’t even know what ’emancipation’ looks like….
    Conceptualising “real emancipation” is a bridge too far for brass bowls.


  4. Well said indeed la\wson – why is it that the race relations industry has been so unsuccessful? Simply because the last thing they want is to do themselves out of a job. The Al Sharpton’s, Jesse Jacksons, David Lammys and Diane Abbotts of this world are are acting like lawyers (which of course they mostly are) encouraging warring couples to go for the jugular rather than reconcile, or have any sort of amicable outcome. FOLLOW THE MONEY.


  5. Our minds have been carefully shackled, a worse kind of slavery. How we learn; educate our children. A constant establishment diet of what? It will be hard to turn it around, generation gone for sure.

    https://youtu.be/QrY9eHkXTa4


  6. bt on emancipation I think bob marley had it right, what was it again ..puff.. puff ..pass


  7. @lawson

    Is this the single redeeming quality you remember Brother Bob?


  8. No there are many I loved the music the rhythm I liked the way he seemed to enjoy life but most of all that he embraced capitalism but knew health meant everything


  9. Right now we got drugs and money laundering …. collapse of economy and God knows what.

    Do we really need to spend time with this again …. perhaps ever again?

    Twisted up history is twisted up history!!


  10. @John

    We cannot cherrypick the issues that continue to affect us. We have to deal with the current state. In other words if there is a medical condition the prescription must fit the diagnosis?


  11. “Blacks simply moved from being content to be treated like animals…
    to being told that they ‘can be equal’ to the demons who treated them like animals.”

    FACTS!


  12. Singers and Players of Instruments are sending out God’s message.
    Religion has been hijacked by Devils to hold down God’s Children.

    Real Israelites are not God’s chosen people they are God’s favourite people.
    There are no white European prophets of God.


  13. SSDumbshit, you should seek immediate medical attention.


  14. I’m the song that my enemies sing

    Though it’s better to be far away

    Discomfort they bring

    I remember what my father said

    To keep a smile 🙂 on my face

    To catch flies don’t be in haste

    Oh the look in my eyes

    Sometimes take my enemies by surprise

    But it’s not everyday that the spirt of God strike with man

    Yet the bible says evil can never stand

    Yet I’m the song that my enemies sing

    I’m bewildered all the day

    But I know just one thing

    How long will my enemies shine

    Yet I’m the song that my enemies sing all the time

  15. Bernard Codrington Avatar
    Bernard Codrington

    @ David BU

    What if the diagnosis is wrong?
    I believe the funds paid over to the slave owners were raised by a loan. The latter was repaid in 2015 to the lenders to the British government, not to former slave owners and their descendants. The reparation was a one off payment in 1833.

    The call for reparations to the descendants of slaves has no legal standing. Does it have an ethical / moral standing? That is debatable. Is it practical? To whom? And for what ?
    I think as a people we should move on. We are doing the work of the devil. We are wasting opportunities to improve our wealth and well being. We should really take heed of Mandela’s philosophy.

    The worse form of slavery is not physical;it is psychological. Who is manipulating whom? And why? Who are the net beneficiaties?


  16. David
    August 8, 2018 8:07 AM

    @John
    We cannot cherrypick the issues that continue to affect us. We have to deal with the current state. In other words if there is a medical condition the prescription must fit the diagnosis?

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Some medical conditions need more urgent attention than others!!

  17. Bernard Codrington Avatar
    Bernard Codrington

    That should be “beneficiaries”


  18. Still down here in slavery

    Marcus Garvey tried to release us from slavery

    (still everything remains the same)

    They removed the chains but they use us with brains

    (Still down here in slavery)

    I can feel the pain and I’ve seen the strain

    (Running down my forefathers name)

    It’s more than 400 years ago

    (We were brought here in many chains)


  19. @BC
    If the British slave owners were compensated for the loss of their “assets” i.e. slaves, shouldn’t the slaves be paid for their unpaid “labour”? Or was the labour voluntary?


  20. Slavery and Colonialism gave birth to Industrialisation and Global Trade Capitalism

  21. Bernard Codrington Avatar
    Bernard Codrington

    @ Sargeant at 9 :28 AM

    Purely on logic.

    You stated that the slaves were assets of slave owners. Therefore the labour belonged to the slave owners.

    Anthropologically, the slaves would have come from slave owning societies. The slaves would have been conscious of this system.

    Europe at a stage of its history was slave owning. The feudal system was a derivative of this. Most economic historians of the 17th and 18th centuries would have evidenced that the working classes in UK would have been worse off economically than the slaves in the West Indies.

    We have a tendency to look at the past through the lens of current day philosophies/ideologies . And that is dangerous.

    I recommend that you read Dr Eric William’s book Capitalism and Slavery. Slavery was just another economic version of the Capitalism.


  22. Zion is the place that we want to go no sin cannot enter there

    So let your hands and your heart be clean to rally around the red gold and green

    Blackman get up and know yourself now is the time blackman


  23. Low1Q45..even I am getting tired of your low intellect…you can clearly see three 555s., but in your warped thinking, because I dont want to insult dyslectics…ya calling them two SSs….that is all I need to expose and show up ya stupidity…and as long as Lawson is agreeing with your nonsense and am sure laughing at you..ya know ya wrong.

    the UK been playing fast and loose with Black lives for centuries…making up wicked shit as they go along to absolve their own criminality against the Black race ..they are still doing it, the difference now is everyone knows they are evil and are not about to indulge them anymore…so they are twisting around out there looking for another opening.

    The biggest enemies blacks in the Caribbean now have because of those enlightening changes in this new age of enlightenment to british evil and skullduggery…are their own black leaders and their shitty little pimp titles and false status which are stains passed on by the wicked, blighted British legacy still clinging to them like the stench of rotten fish..


  24. When I look over Africa what did I see all I and I brethren want to be free

    Creation I and I stand

    When I look in Ethiopia see I get infiltration

    They try to cast a spell on I I shall not die

    Creation I and I stand

    Every since Creation I and I stand

    Creation let Jordan river roll

    Creation civilisation in this dispensation


  25. It is nice to see an Asian writing about the abolition of our Caribbean forefathers from African chattel slavery. Gosh. I must register for more of that history.


  26. Ya moron WW, SS – Schutzstaffel. The cretin exhibits clear parallels with Nazi racism, as do you, you sad POS.


  27. Afroasiatic world was united in peace before Yuropean devils with screw faces raped black women

    I’m not looking at colour
    I’m looking at you

    I look I see people look like trees
    Each bear a different fruit
    that’s how it’s been for centuries

    I’m colour blind I’m fine
    With traces I have no time

    ((►)) I See You

    ((►)) Colours Dub


  28. ((►)) Culture Dub

    ((►)) Jah Jah Light


  29. Bernard Codrington,

    Capitalism and Slavery (written as a PhD thesis in 1938 and published as a book during the war) is not as sound as Black Jacobins (published in 1938 by fellow Trinidadian, of Barbadian heritage) CLR James. But something is better than nothing.

  30. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Hal Austin August 8, 2018 10:57 AM
    I am surprised but delighted to see that you are recommending CLR James’ The Black Jacobins, seeing that it is a brilliant Marxist analysis.


  31. @PLT,

    I knew CLR or Nello as we called him, through his widow Selma, still one of my closest political friends. They once lived at 20 Staverton Road, in NW London, as I regularly visited their home. To cut a long story short, I once sat at the feet of the great man. As to your surprise, you should get to know me better. By the way, CLR was not a fan of Castro.

  32. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Bush Tea August 8, 2018 6:58 AM
    “Wunna don’t even know what ’emancipation’ looks like…”
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++
    This is perhaps the most succinct description of the Barbados condition that I’ve encountered since returning home over a year ago.


  33. Nazi??? me??? really???

    lol


  34. I do agree with the author like cane toads in austrailia, stotes in barbados or asian ladybugs to the uk trying to solve a problem without looking at the long term effect can have a detrimental result So whats the answer keep bickering 9 generations on or everyone of all stripes who call themselves bajan pull together and save this rock.


  35. C.L.R James in his own words ” ..Fidel Castro and the Cubans are not at all Black people, Fidel isn’t Black at all but the attitude of the revolution and what they are doing is essentially a West Indian revolution similar to what Toussaint L’Ouverture did”.


  36. @Ping Pong

    What you gone and do?


  37. @ David
    Ping Pong versus Hal Austin is the equivalent of child molestation….
    Don’t allow it on the blog….
    LOL
    ha ha ha


  38. @BC
    I used quotation marks around the word “assets” because that’s how the British saw the relationship between “slave” and “owner”. When the “owners” had to surrender their “assets” the British Gov’t compensated them for their losses.

    BTW It is surely a novel defense for slavery to suggest that since slaves came “from slave owning societies” they were psychological adapted to accept being enslaved. If the feudal system was akin to slavery does that mean that Europeans were also part of “slave owning societies” and it begs the question why did the Europeans venture to Africa to capture slaves when they had a ready supply on their doorstep? Can you cite a historian who concluded that “the working classes in the UK would have been worse off economically than slaves in the West Indies”?

    The Americans promised 40 acres and a mule to enslaved farmers (which never materialized), what happened the day after Aug. 1834 when slavery was abolished? Slaves were still required to work without pay but when full abolition came the British compensated the slave “owners”.

    I’m not a proponent of Reparations but surely we can argue that slaves and their descendants who gave their sweat, blood, tears and lives to enrich others deserved some sort of compensation and this is true whether it is looked at through lens of yesterday or more contemporary times.


  39. @Bush Tea

    Looks like Ping Pong has no problem reading AND allowing Google to be his friend.


  40. @Sargeant

    A conclusion to be drawn from your comment is that a call for reparation from you would not at all unreasonable.


  41. There is NO question of the need for reparations …. or indeed of the inevitability…
    The folly is in the asinine attempts to ‘value’ this price to be paid – in terms of ‘money’ or indeed, any such shiite…

    It is laughable to listen to brass bowls who have NO IDEA of even their own true value or potential – discussing ‘settlement’ with the very demons who treated such unimaginable, potential vessels of GOLD…like animals and converted them to brass bowls parros…

    Like parros seeking to sell off their parents’ hard-earned assets (and their own integrity as natural heirs) to some drug dealer for a cocaine fix….. we have jokers pursuing a ‘deal’ with demons …a deal that is WAY out of their pay grade and their intellectual league.

    When reparations REALLY commence, it shall be a sight for ALL to behold…..and shall be commensurate with the colossal crime that was perpetuated.

    As Bob Marley said….
    Time will tell.


  42. @David
    My apologies. I admit that Google and You Tube are wonderful tools but these are not replacements for informed thinking. I am desperately trying to find my notes made on meeting Mr C.L.R. James many years ago (around 1980- 81) in Trinidad. I was then a young giddy headed Marxist leaning supporter of Maurice Bishop and the PRG. Mr James was an autodidact and thus one of the most original and provocative philosophers of the 20th century. He actually tutored Eric Williams when Williams was writing his doctoral thesis which became Capitalism and Slavery. It seems today that it is only old men who dream and have visions of a more meaningful tomorrow. Young people today seem so cynical, so blase about the world. I can only offer the words of Martin Carter of Guyana:

    This is the dark time, my love,
    All round the land brown beetles crawl about
    The shining sun is hidden in the sky
    Red flowers bend their heads in awful sorrow
    This is the dark time, my love,
    It is the season of oppression, dark metal, and tears.
    It is the festival of guns, the carnival of misery
    Everywhere the faces of men are strained and anxious
    Who comes walking in the dark night time?
    Whose boot of steel tramps down the slender grass
    It is the man of death, my love, the stranger invader
    Watching you sleep and aiming at your dream.

  43. Bernard Codrington Avatar
    Bernard Codrington

    @ Sargeant at 8 : 27 PM

    In this life starting from any premise we can argue anything. To any man anything can look reasonable. It is the acceptability of the premise , the acceptability of the rules of logic and acceptability of the conclusion by both parties that matter. There will be no reparation,even if we can define it.

    I prefer to spend the rest of my life dealing with the things that can improve the wealth and welfare of my brothers and sisters. Trying to correct perceived past wrongs is not only an exercise in frustration it is a distraction and wastes time and resources .

    Meanwhile new perpetrators continue to enslave and exploit . The past are for lessons. On this trajectory we are destined to repeat history.

    Finally facts are facts. It was the culture for Africans to kill or enslave their captives. Most of the slaves that reached the West Indies were bought from their African captors.


  44. @Ping Pong

    Good one!


  45. Bernard…you keep making excuses for white enslavers who are still white enslavers and you remain part of the problem..if you do not address what the UK and Europe DID to the Black race, it will be repeated because generations of blacks WILL forget and allow it to happen again, just look at the state of your black leaders, vulnerable, spineless, easily bribed, still easily misled by the descendants of white enslavers, we are looking for a change in the present ministers mindset etc, hopefully they are now too afraid to leave their people so defenceless, but I won’t hold my breath..

    You on the other hand need to stop trivializing black slavery perpetrated by white people , because it is the best source of income Europe ever had and they will never forget it and will always look for a a way to upgrade it and make it unrecognizable, but make no mistake, they will never stop trying to get back those glory days of wealth and greed, no matter how they have to cloak it to fool unaware black leaders and weak minds like yourself.

    It’s abhorrent that you want to put make up on what whites did, it’s repulsive that you would enable such criminality against black people and blame it on those who had nothing to do with the 400 yeas of slavery of African people AND their descendants in the west AFTER Europeans left Africa on each slave ship trip…whites must be held accountable for their evil ways, you trying to give them a free pass is not helping the situation, but can been seen as giving the green light for another wave of genocide against black people…to be blamed on someone else..look at your face in the mirror, you could very well be the springboard to the new wave of enslavement of the black race, you are giving them the next opening and opportunity they are searching for with your backward collusion..

    Check ya damn self.. and I make no apologizes for saying that.


  46. “we have jokers pursuing a ‘deal’ with demons …a deal that is WAY out of their pay grade and their intellectual league.”

    I have a real problem with the current lot claiming to be all these scholars making these claims to be negotiating for reparations that are over due to the descendants of slaves…none of them in my mind are intellectually equipped to tackle negotiations with those who are well equipped and centuries trained to be deceitful.


  47. The continuing ignorance on display by the purblind racist Well Well Wot A Stoopid Woman I is is beyond parody.

    Who are the modern slavers? Blacks, Arabs, Asians, and Irish ‘travellers’, and only one of those groups are white. Even the far-left misnamed ‘Independent’ cannot avoid the truth.

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/modern-slavery-cases-uk-crime-prosecute-government-police-cps-a8483326.html


  48. sigh…I must really give you some sleepless nights lowIQ45..

    if white europeans had not brought SLAVERY and enslaved Africans to the west..there would be no modern day slavery blighting the west today…they devised and created the curse of slavery that still haunts them and the west today….themselves.

    See who else you and Bernard can blame for that..

    See if ya can process that in ya warped and challenged little minds.

    There were tribal wars and skirmishes among Natives in the Caribbean and North America but there was no slavery in the west until white europeans blighted the region with it, so having to clean up modern day slavery is their just desserts.


  49. Besides…ah just love watching them squirm..lol

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