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Shifting Boundaries between Free and Unfree Labor: Introduction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 October 2010

Carolyn Brown
Affiliation:
Rutgers University
Marcel van der Linden
Affiliation:
International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam

Extract

In 1905, Henry Nevinson, at the time a well-known British journalist, visited Angola. He discovered that the slave trade was still going on in secret in that region, many years after it had officially been abolished. Deep inside Southern Africa slaves were caught; they were forced to walk hundreds of miles to the coast until they arrived at Katumbella, where “the slaves were rested, sorted out, dressed, and then taken on over the fifteen miles to Benguela, usually disguised as ordinary carriers.” In Benguela's main street,

there is a government office where the official representative of the “Central Committee of Labor and Emigration for the Islands” (having its headquarters in Lisbon) sits in state, and under due forms of law receives the natives, who enter one door as slaves and go out of another as serviçaes. Everything is correct. The native, who has usually been torn from his home far in the interior, perhaps as much as eight hundred miles away, and already sold twice, is asked by an interpreter if it is his wish to go to [the island of] San Thomé, or to undertake some other form of service to a new master. Of course he answers, “Yes.” It is quite unnecessary to suppose, as most people suppose, that the interpreter always asks such questions as, “Do you like to fish?” or “Will you have a drink?” though one of the best scholars in the languages of the interior has himself heard those questions asked at an official inspection of serviçaes on board ship. It would be unnecessary for the interpreter to invent such questions. If he asked, “Is it your wish to go to hell? ” the serviçal would say “yes” just the same. In fact, throughout this part of Africa the name of San Thomé is becoming identical with hell, and when a man has been brought hundreds of miles from his home by an unknown road and through long tracts of “hungry country”—when he also knows that if he did get back he would probably be sold again or killed —what else can he answer but “yes”? Under similar circumstances the Archbishop of Canterbury would answer the same. The serviçal says “yes,” and so sanctions the contract for his labor. The decencies of law and order are respected.

Type
Shifting Boundaries between Free and Unfree Labor
Copyright
Copyright © International Labor and Working-Class History, Inc. 2010

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References

NOTES

1. Nevinson, Henry W., “The Slave-Trade of To-day (III),” Harper's Monthly Magazine, 111/665 (October 1905): 668676, esp. 670, 672Google Scholar.

2. Interview with Mazi Anyionovo Nwodo, Uhuona, Ugbawka, August 18, 1988.

3. For a detailed discussion, see “The Labor Question Unposed” in Cooper, Frederick, Decolonization and African Society: The Labor Question in French and British Africa (Cambridge, 1996)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

4. See Brown, Carolyn, “Testing the Boundaries of Marginality: Twentieth Century Slavery and Emancipation Struggles in Nkanu, Northern Igboland, 1920–29,” Journal of African History 37 (1996): 5180CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

5. Cooper, Decolonization and African Society, 25.

6. PRO, CO 583/44, Address of the Governor General, Proceedings of the Second Meeting of the Nigerian Council, December 29, 1915.

7. Lugard, Lord, The Political Memoranda: Revisions of Instructions to Political Officers on Subjects Chiefly Political and Administrative, 1913–1918, 3rd ed. (London, 1970), 218Google Scholar.

8. Ibid., 224.

9. Banaji, D.R., Slavery in British India (Bombay, 1933)Google Scholar.

10. Miers, Suzanne and Roberts, Richard, The End of Slavery in Africa (Madison, WI, 1988), 1213Google Scholar.

11. The canoe house was a commercial enterprise headed by a palm oil trader and included his wives and children as well as scores of slaves and poor free clients. Slave labor was used for manning huge eighty-man canoes that brought truncheons of palm oil from interior villages to the merchant's storehouses on the Niger Delta coast. See Dike, K.O., Trade and Politics in the Niger Delta (Oxford, 1956)Google Scholar.

12. Renault, François, Libération d'esclaves et nouvelle servitude: Les rachats de captifs africains pour le compte des colonies françaises après l'abolition de l'esclavage (Abidjan and Dakar, 1976)Google Scholar.

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14. International Labor Organization, Forced Labor Convention.