The Transatlantic Slave Trade – Dear Irish People…

By SheelaR

I’m half descended from Irish immigrants, so I feel like I can say this…

Dear Irish People,

Please stop comparing your ancestors experience with indentured & penal servitude with that of my african ancestors, who endured hundreds of years of chattel slavery by European slave traders. You’re entitled to own the atrocities that the Irish endured, but you don’t get to draw lines of comparison with those of african ancestry. There is no comparison. You don’t have a clue. Instead of repeating ignorance about slavery that you’ve casually learned from friends, family, and Google scholars…go to the library; it will change your life.

This “What about us” mentality is getting old. As much as I love my Irish ancestry, I’m growing tired of the willful ignorance that so many of Irish ancestry seem to wallow in when it comes to slavery. I’ve attached several links below. The is no rhyme or reason to be ignorant of well-documented history in 2016, especially if you’re going to have an opinion about it…

Slavery Timeline
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/africa/features/storyofafrica/9generic3.shtml

 1444 – First slaves brought to Portugal from northern Mauritania 
 1444-5 – Portuguese make contract with Sub-Saharan Africa 
1471 – Portuguese arrive in the Gold Coast 
1482 – Portuguese begin building Elmina Castle on the Gold Coast 
1488 – Bartholomew Diaz goes round the Cape of Good Hope 
1490 – First Portuguese missionaries go to Congo 
1500 – Sugar plantations established on island of Sao Tome two hundred miles from                        coast of West Africa 
1510 – First slaves shipped to Spanish colonies in South America via Spain 
1516 – Benin ceases to export male slaves, fearing loss of manpower 
1518 – First direct shipment of slaves from Africa to the Americas 
1780’s – Slave trade at its peak 
1652 – Dutch establish colony at Cape of Good Hope, South Africa 
1700 – Asanti begin to consolidate power 
1720’s – Kingdom of Dahomey expands 
1776-1783 – American War of Independence 
1787 – ‘Thoughts and Sentiments on the Evil of Slavery’ by Quobna Ottobah Cugoano                      published by the Foundation of the Society for the Abolition of Slave Trade 
1789 – French Revolution. ‘Life of Olaudah Equiano’ published 
1791 – Slave uprising in Haiti (Saint Domingue) led by Toussaint L’Ouverture 
1804 – Danes pass law against slave trade Haitian independence 
1807 – British law passed declaring buying, selling and transporting slaves illegal (ownership continues) 
1808 – North America abolish slave trade 
1814 – Dutch outlaw slave trade 
1823 – Founding of Anti-slavery Committee London 
1834 – British law passed declaring ownership of slaves illegal 
1839 – Amistad slave ship rebellion 
1848 – French abolish slavery 
1860-65 – American Civil War 1865 – 13th Amendment abolishes slavery in America 
1869 – Portugal abolishes slavery 
1886 – Slavery abolished in Cuba 
1888 – Slavery abolished in Brazil 
1873 – Slave market in Zanzibar closed 
1936 – Slavery made illegal in Northern Nigeria
http://web.cocc.edu/cagatucci/classes/hum211/timelines/htimeline3.htm
An open mind is more conducive to learning than a closed one.

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