A DIFFERENT KIND OF SLAVE -- IS STILL A SLAVE...

in #life8 years ago

THE IRISH SLAVE TRADE


“The Irish slave trade began when James II sold 30,000 Irish prisoners as slaves to the New World. His Proclamation of 1625 required Irish political prisoners be sent overseas and sold to English settlers in the West Indies. By the mid 1600s, the Irish were the main slaves sold to Antigua and Montserrat. At that time, 70 percent of the total population of Montserrat were Irish slaves. Ireland quickly became the biggest source of human livestock for English merchants. The majority of the early slaves to the New World were actually white.” In 1839, Britain finally decided on its own to end its participation in Satan’s highway to hell and stopped transporting slaves. While their decision did not stop pirates from doing what they desired, the new law slowly concluded THIS chapter of nightmarish Irish misery.  -- Credit: James Martin Article


I grew up in a neighborhood dominated by the Irish. Literally, littered with them… Policed by Irish police, cared for by Irish mothers and ruled by Irish gangs… And still, if I rack my memory.., I have no recollection, except for, maybe -- the "crazy old Irish great grandmother" of someone you barely knew, telling spooky stories to the neighborhood children.., that would invade their dreams and turn them into the most vivid of nightmares.

Warned by our mothers, to stay away from such a woman.., who would speak of such horrible things, to children, no less… They had enough to worry about besides being woken in the middle of the night, by screams from the bedrooms of all that chose to listen. For these were words, that inspired vision, that would sneak up, in the middle of the night and invoke, nothing less than terror.

For if history is to be documented for the purpose of not repeating itself… And not just out of sheer arrogance.., shouldn't we tell it all -- good.., and bad, the horrible atrocities committed by our very ancestors.. It is completely understandable to try and discount, overlook and even forget the beatings, burnings and yes.., the killing. But we do a timeless disservice to all those that lived it. That walked this earth only to be treated as, less than cattle. That suffered such unbearable atrocities at the hands of their neighbors. That were stolen from their homeland, taken from their families -- never to return. 

It is common human nature to cover up.., neglect to tell the whole truth, in an effort to live another day, unmarked by the sins of our past. Calling someone an indentured servant.., instead of a slave, in an effort to ease a guilty conscience and remove the black stain from your soul.., is a dishonor, of such magnitude -- to humanity, itself.


As William Shakespeare, himself, penned.., in what could be the most famous quote in all his works… ""A rose by any other name would smell as sweet…" Or, as we would say, in not so quite a romantic neighborhood… "If it walks like duck and quacks like a duck, it's still a f*cking DUCK!"


It may be hard to think of the Irish as slaves.., but as early as the 1650's 100,000 Irish children were seized from their parents and sold as slaves. Also another, 50,000 Irish women and their children were also.., sold as slaves. It was common, for these slaves to be punished, beyond your wildest imagination… Hung by their hands, feet lit on fire. There very heads stuck on pikes, as a sign of complete control, by their captors.

It seems.., most of this horrendous practice was all about money… The Irish were much cheaper then an African slave -- up to 10x cheaper. Just good business, right? If a female slave was how able to gain her freedom, her children and the children she bore while captive.., were to remain, as slaves, of course. This practice, this calculated legislation.., would lead to the women never leaving, the grips of their masters.

These captive Irish women were not only used for pleasure by their deplorable owners.., they also were bred. Yes, bred.., with African slaves to double or triple the size of the slave owners, very own workforce, resulting in some of the very first "Mulloto." One white and one black parent. This practice could save their owners a pretty penny.

Another common practice, a wickedly human phenomenon.., this one practiced by the slaves themselves… Was eating dirt, for nourishment.., and in some cases, even in an attempted suicide. When caught, they were forced to wear "dirt-eater" masks.

When is it time.., to come clean... To set the record straight about white slavery and the very souls it tortured… You can pick-up any history book in American schools, today… And not find a mention of it, anywhere… We don't seem to have problem teaching our children about the slaves that were brought here in shackles, to serve a master they had never met, in a land they had never been. 


But when it comes to "white on white" slavery… They seem to.., turn a blind-eye. As if, somehow.., this kind of slavery was worse -- something never to admitted. For how can they justify such vile behavior… In a quest for greater profits!


When the British government had decided to terminate their involvement in slavery.., they paid slave owners £20 million in compensation. This grotesquely large remittance was sent to not only the very upper class of British society.., but also over 100 Irish families. who profited off the brutal torture, of there very own. Irish Claimants (slave owners)

To continue, to deny such evil existed.., is it not a sure path to repetition. Have we not been taught history.., in an effort not to repeat it… For if we are to truly evolve as a people, do we not need to cleanse our souls, first. Put to rest, the game of words that dishonor humanity, as a whole. Or are we destined, to wake one day.., to a world of beatings, burnings and death..?

I certainly hope not...


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Thank you, @macksby, for shedding a light on something most people are oblivious to. I had heard of this, but definitely not from school. What else is edited out of our history books? Whatever "they" don't want you to know.

A moving post from someone close to the source.

Thank you, @fairytalelife... Exactly, they will tell us, what they want us to know... There are people right now, in our education system, constantly trying to rewrite history, to bring about a point of view that falls in line with their own. It is only, inquisitive minds, such as yours, that search out the truth.

Interesting history. Slave trading still exists today. Now they're calling it Human trafficking. Young children are sold by impoverished parents in a desperate attempt to feed remaining family. The children are taught that they are indebted to the buyer for freeing them of their poverty,doing an honorable thing to serve. It is considered a disgrace to the family if the child should leave the master. This is a terrible secret that our sophisticated society doesn't want to acknowledge.

Thanks @roswellrockman -- it is surely a tragedy no child should ever have to endure.

Great article it has motivated me to write my first post on steem .
While reserching the james martin credit you gave .my search results came back with many irish slaves sold to Australia.i see were they are coming from ,but most of the irish came as convicts but wernt housed in a prison but used to work farms and do labour for the new colany ,so in a sense they were slave labour not slaves once there sentence was done they were free .granted there life was unbelievably inhumane they were flogged and the people they worked for were called there masters.but they did have rights and could complain to a magistrate
What i did not no while researching your artical was the amont of political prisoners that were exported to Australia ,from England herself and from the many irish uprisings at the time as well as the scotts and incredibly a Canadian incedent now i no why Australia has such an incredibly strong labour Union movment .So my first article will be about things i did not no about my country stay tuned this might take a while i work days lol
Cheers thanks for the read

Thanks @jatech - glad you did some research... And there are many opinions and points of view concerning this matter. Just good to see people talking about it. Looking forward to post!

“To continue, to deny such evil existed.., is it not a sure path to repetition. Have we not been taught history.., in an effort not to repeat it… For if we are to truly evolve as a people, do we not need to cleanse our souls, first. Put to rest, the game of words that dishonor humanity, as a whole. Or are we destined, to wake one day.., to a world of beatings, burnings and death..?"

You raise great points @macksby! Many look back in time with rose-colored glasses but the past was a tough place to be in many different respects. They always say the winners write the history books and historical revisionism is potent propaganda that often backfires on the whole of humanity eventually. I’ve read some pieces on child labor at the turn of the century and it’s almost unbelievable the inhumane conditions and hours children as young as 5 or 6 would have to endure in factories, mines, and even as bicycle messengers.

I totally agree with you we must own up to everything, have an honest discourse as a species and then move on. Political Correctness on the surface while feeling a different way in our hearts is why we so often find our evolution as a society stuck or painfully slow.

Your post is a great conversation starter!

Thank you, so much @ericvancewalton! Where else but on such a platform as Steemit, could be such a place to broach this issue and hopefully inspire some healthy and spirited debate over such issues, as our very own history. As in, each of our own personal lives -- confronting your past transgressions and owning them is a sure path towards growth. Thanks again, for such an insightful comment.

The main arguments against calling the Irish slaves is that they weren't chattel, had some kind of rights, often sold themselves into indentureship, and their children were not indentured by default. There are no manumission records for Irish 'slaves' because their status was not that they could be manumitted, they were protected to some extent by law, they could not be bred to increase stock like African slaves were, they kept their Right to Life which African slaves did not have. But things on paper are often not the same in reality.

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The imagery in this post also has been debunked

Being forced by threat of violence into indentureship is slavery. That is generally what we call slavery today, and it was slavery then too, just not on paper, and not equivalent to chattel slavery.

Thank you, for your well thought out and researched comment @jamtaylor, it is very much appreciated... Whether there was or was not "Irish Slaves" has many opinions and a wide range of varying view points. But as you state in your comment -- "things on paper are often not the same in reality." We are all too well aware, that the people charged with documenting history are usually a little more "generous" to their own point of view. Im just glad this piece has invoked some healthy and much appreciated conversation. Thanks again.

The only problem is Irish slavery is a myth that was recently created to create a false equivalency for African American slavery:

https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2016/04/19/how-myth-irish-slaves-became-favorite-meme-racists-online

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