Before the advent of Trans Atlantic slave trade, African societies considered themselves distinct with no common African-black identity among the different ethnic groups. They invaded neighbouring enemy groups and took captives for local slave ports. These endemic war fares and hostilities offered fertile ground to slave trade with the European world as the captive slaves were considered "other", not part of the people of the ethnic group or "tribe". Therefore, African kings held no particular loyalty to them. African leaders maintained and controlled the supply of captives to the Atlantic slave trade. African leaders were influenced by Europeans who offered them the prospect of acquiring guns and annexing neighbouring groups. They also became very wealthy from the trade. Therefore, for most African kingdoms, it was more beneficial to engage in slave trade than not to. For example the Kingdom of Dahomey became one of the most prosperous nations: total receipts from slave exports were an estimated £250,000 per year by 1750. However, in the long run, the scale of the Atlantic trade caused instability and collapse in many African states as a result of competition with each other. The Trans Atlantic Slave Trade offers lessons that can be applied to contemporary Africa.
1. The need for African unity. While addressing the Organization of the African Union, Kwame Nkrumah made a clarion call that Africa must unite or perish. The Trans Atlantic Slave Trade flourished and weakened African states in the long run because African societies viewed themselves as distinct from one another with no common African identity. One of the lasting legacies of this trade is modern day racism. The idea that one people is inferior to another as a result of 400 years of bondage and servitude. This kind of racial prejudice affects all black people. Therefore, it is only right for black Africans to recognize themselves as a people. The late Steve Biko, author of Black Consciousness, emphasized the need for Africans to have a consciousness of themselves as a black people of African descent regardless of ethnicity, tribe or kinship ties.
Furthermore, Professor Kanyeihamba, Ugandan former supreme court justice, asserts in his book Constitutional Law and government in Uganda, that contemporary Africa is made up of sovereign countries with colonial boundaries that were delineated following geographical features rather than tribal and ethnic ties among the people. These superficial boundaries do not serve African unity. The 2018 African Continental Free Trade Area treaty that seeks to allow free movement of Africans and intra-African trade is a great step forward towards African unity.
2. African leaders must have a vision for Africa for all Africans rather than a few compradors and cronies who serve external imperialists interests. Selfish African leaders had a myopic vision of Africa that only benefited themselves and the ruling class that could own slaves. The post colonial African state has often been used as a tool for primitive accumulation of capital for private gain by the ruling class, at the expense wider national interests of the African people. Corruption, patronage, nepotism have characterized contemporary Africa contributing to high rates of unemployment, African immigrants (economic survivors) are forced to move to Europe, Asia often with attendant on ocean seas and human trafficking. This negative aspect of freedom and limited choices draws parallels with the forced migration of Africans during the trans Atlantic slave trade. To avoid a repeat of such forced migrations African leaders must focus on absorbing African labour into their emerging economies.
The trans-Atlantic Slave Trade was an ugly chapter in the history of Africa. The abolition of the trade began in 1807 when England decided that it was illegal to use slave labour and led campaigns to eradicate the practice. However, it should be noted that England had already benefited greatly from this trade and it was no longer deemed necessary. This is owing to the fact that the industrial revolution had already taken hold and slave labour was no longer necessary to produce commodities. The trade had also started experiencing disruptions from pirates in the oceans of the pacific who no longer served the interests of the crown and the British nobility. This illustrates the realpolitik approach that African countries must always adopt to safeguard their interests rather than rely on the 'good will' of the external world. Africa must unite in order to play a greater role on the international plane. After all, it was the disjointed nature of African societies that rendered them prone to slave trade in the first place.
The trans-Atlantic Slave Trade was an ugly chapter in the history of Africa. The abolition of the trade began in 1807 when England decided that it was illegal to use slave labour and led campaigns to eradicate the practice. However, it should be noted that England had already benefited greatly from this trade and it was no longer deemed necessary. This is owing to the fact that the industrial revolution had already taken hold and slave labour was no longer necessary to produce commodities. The trade had also started experiencing disruptions from pirates in the oceans of the pacific who no longer served the interests of the crown and the British nobility. This illustrates the realpolitik approach that African countries must always adopt to safeguard their interests rather than rely on the 'good will' of the external world. Africa must unite in order to play a greater role on the international plane. After all, it was the disjointed nature of African societies that rendered them prone to slave trade in the first place.
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