Arab Views of Black Africans and Slavery
Arab Views of Black Africans and Slavery
Arab Views of Black Africans and Slavery
by
John Hunwick
Black Africans were the earliest type of slave known to Arabs, and
were the latest imported into the Arab-Islamic Middle East. One of
the very first black Africans known to have been in slavery in the
Arabian peninsula, and to have become one of the first converts to
Islam., was the Abyssinian called Bill [b. Raba], who was owned
and then freed by Ab Bakr, the Prophet Muammad's father-in-law
and later successor, to whom he gave his freed slave, who then
accepted the Prophet's message and was given the position of
muezzin - "caller to prayer" by Muammad. Soon after North Africa
was occupied by Arab Muslim armies in the late 7th century, black
Africans were traded over the Sahara, and bought by Arab
merchants as slaves - a practice which continued down to the early
20th century.
However, Arabs had no grounds for assuming that all black
people were justifiably to be seen as slaves. The only enslaveable
persons were those defeated in battle against Muslims.The basis of
this may be gathered from what the Qurn said to the Prophet
Muammad in defining what women it was lawful for him to live
with: "We have made lawful unto thee... .those whom thy right hand
possesseth of those whom Allah hath given thee as spoils of war". So
it was captives in battle who might be "owned"- in this case females,
but later applied to both females and males. Since war could not be
fought against other Muslims, only "unbelievers" (kuffr) could be
2
captured and held onto as slaves, and no consideration was ever
given in Islamic teachings to what color of skin made people
enslaveable unbelievers. While the Qurn recognizes that human
beings are of many different types: "We established you as peoples
and clans, so you may know one another", and then defines the most
honored as the most devout, i.e. no ethnic group is automatically
favored by Allh.1 Commenting on this, the Prophet Muammad
said; "White has no preference over black, nor black over white,
except through devoutness.2 On another occasion the Prophet is
said to have said: "The Arab has no virtue over the non-Arab, nor has
the non-Arab over the Arab, nor has the White over the Black, or the
Black over the White except in terms of devotion to God. Surely, the
noblest of you in Gods sight is the most devout."3
Such teachings, however, did not fully influence Arab minds
over their views of black Africans. The first century and a half of
Islam, as the Arabs went forth from the Arabian peninsula to conquer
half of the known world, was marked by an overwhelming sense of
Arab superiority over all other peoples. In this period even to
become a Muslim one had to become a sort of fictive Arab by being
adopted as the client of an Arab tribe.4 The conquered peoples as a
whole were in fact referred to as the clients (mawal), and Islam was
viewed as the property of the Arabs. This, in turn, produced a
reaction among the conquered peoples who rose to defend
3
themselves and declare their equality with Arabs, using the adopted
Arabic language to express themselves, and often
adopting
largely
marginalised.
Equality of the believers, then could have different practical
expressions. What, then, did it mean for black Africans? On this I will
begin with a quotation from the writings of Bernard Lewis, one of
the few contemporary scholars to deal with issues of race and color
in Islam:
While the exponents of religion preached a doctrine of
equality, albeit in somewhat ambiguous terms, the facts of life
determined otherwise. Prevailing attitudes were shaped not by
preachers and relaters of tradition but by the conquerors and slave
owners who formed the ruling group in Islamic society. The
resulting attitude of contempttowards non-Arabs in general and
toward the dark-skinned in particularis expressed in a thousand
4
ways in the documents, literature, and art that have come down to
us from the Islamic Middle Ages...This literature and, especially,
popular literature depicts [the black man] in the form of hostile
stereotypesas a demon in fairy tales, as a savage in stories of
travel and adventure, or commonly as a lazy, stupid, evil-smelling
and lecherous slave. The evidence of literature is confirmed by art.
In Arab, Persian and Turkish paintings blacks frequently appear,
sometimes as mythological figures of evil, sometimes as primitives
or performing some other menial task, or as eunuchs in the palace
or in the household. Yet in spite of these attitudes and the resulting
disabilities imposed upon men of African birth, they nevertheless
managed to make a significant contribution to mediaeval Islamic
civilizationand not only in their labor and services. 5
have
restricted
their
opportunities
for
making
such
contributions. The Arabs had black Africans living among them from
before the days of Islammainly, it would appear as slaves. Some of
the African women bore children from Arab fathers but the males
among them seem to have had some trouble being accepted as full
members of the tribe, despite the weight given to patrilineal descent.
The sons of African mothers and Arab fathers, as well as slaves who
had been given their freedom, were, or became, thoroughly arabised
5
B. Lewis, The African Diaspora and the Civilization of Islam, in M.I. Kilson & R.I.
Rotberg, The African Diaspora (Harvard University Press, 1976), 48-9.
5
in language and culture and sought to participate with pure-bred
Arabs on an equal footing. They were often to find, however, that
their skin color stood in the way. Some took up the art of poetry, the
quintessential Arab medium of artistic expression, and these black
poets form the subject of a fascinating book by the Egyptian scholar
fiAbduh Badaw called [in translation] The Black Poets and their
Distinctive Characteristics in Arabic Poetry.(al-Shufiar al-sud wakhaisuhum f l-shifir al-fiarab)
These poets were often known as the ravens of the Arabs
(aghribat al-fiarab) because of their black color, and as one satirist
pointed out, ravens were traditionally considered bad omens, and
were especially associated with the parting of lovers. On the
relationship of their color to their social status and to their poetic art,
Badaw has this to say:
[T]here was a sharp sensitivity over color among the black
poets before Islam. This was because they were a depressed and
downtrodden group and because they were excluded, sometimes
roughly, sometimes gently, from entering the social fabric of the
tribe. Thus they lived on the edge of society as a poor and
depressed group. They were only acknowledged under conditions
of extreme pressure, as we know from the life of [the poet]
fiAntara. Although this poet was the defender of his tribe and its
supreme poetical voice, his own tribes attitude towards him
continued to pain him and weigh on his mind. The name son of a
black woman stuck to him, even when returning from victory in
battle.
6
Although the tone of uneasiness becomes softened among the
poets of the time of the Prophet as a result of Islams raising the
morale of the black man, yet the sensitivity over color is not
altogether different. The poets saw themselves and their people as
downtrodden and although this sense of being downtrodden
varied from century to century and from poet to poet, yet the
black man could not refrain from being a voice of protest against
the life around him and the tragedy of his own situation. Later we
see [black poets] exploding in the face of those who allude to their
color as may be seen in the poetry of the three angry poets alayqun, Sunay & fiAkm [of the early 8th century]. For them it
was not enough just to defend themselves. We see them taking
pride in their blackness and in the history of black people and the
lands they came from and attacking the Arabs on the points on
which they prided themselves. 6
[End of quotation]
Here ia an example of this. One of these poets who was insulted
in some obscene verses by the Arab poet Jarr responded in the
following way:
Though I be frizzle-haired, coal-black of skin,
My generosity and honor shine yet brighter.
Blackness of skin does me no harm
When in battles heat my sword is flailing.
Would you claim glory where there is none?
7
The Ethiopians are more glorious than you.7
As contacts with sub-Saharan Africa expanded, Arabs in the
broadest sense simply labeled such populations as sdn, i.e. blacks",
though peoples from some regions of Africa who were taken into the
Middle East in slavery were given broad ethnic labels such as the
Zanj from East Africa or the abasha/ Abyssinians from the Horn of
Africa. Eventually some Arab writers made attempts to draw up an
ethnography, relating peoples they had encountered to some
scheme of humanity they were familiar with, initially grounded in
what they viewed as religious authority. Wahb b. Munabbih, a south
Arabian of part Persian origin (d. 728), who was considered an
expert in Jewish legend (isrliyyt), is credited the following
statement:
Ham, the son of Noah was a white man, fair of face. GodMighty and
Exalted is He changed his color and the color of his descendants because
of the curse of his father. He went off and his offspring followed him and
they settled on the sea shore. God increased and multiplied them, and
they are the Blacks (al-sdn).8
8
Shem and Japheth and their descendants, i.e. Arabs, Europeans, and
central Asians. In fact the Old Testament and the Torah do not say
Ham was turned black, but Arab thinking began to equate blackness
with slavery.
Another theorization of the nature of black people of Africa also
charterized them as inferior beings based on a Greek view of the
climatization of the known world and the relationship of climate to
intelligence. This theory divided the world north of the equator into
seven latitudinal zones, the ideal one being the 4th or middle zone
corresponding to the Mediterranean area, while the farther one got
away from this zone, the more extreme the climate became, and the
less civilized its inhabitants.
The great 14th century historian Ibn Khaldun did not find
acceptable the theory of blackness being related to descent from
Ham, and denied the soundness of the claim, as follows:
Some genealogists who had no knowledge of the true nature of beings
imagined that the Blacks are the descendants of Ham, the son of Noah,
and that they were characterized by black color as a result of a curse put
upon him by his father (Noah), which manifested itself in Hams color and
the slavery that God inflicted upon his descendants. Concerning this they
have transmitted an account arising from the legends of the story-tellers.
The curse of Noah upon his son is there in the Torah. No reference is
made there to blackness. His curse was simply that Hams descendants
should be the slaves of his brothers descendants.9 To attribute the
blackness of Negroes to Ham, shows disregard for the nature of heat and
9
The brothers being Shem and Japheth. Shem is considered to be the ultimate ancestor of the
Arabs, and Japheth of the Europeans .
9
cold and the influence they exert upon the air and upon the creatures that
come into being in it. 10
with well-
ibid, i, 169-70. Ibn Khaldn does not, however, seem to have rejected the genealogical
explanation for the origins of African peoples. In his Kitb al-fibar, which the Muqaddima forms an
introduction to, he names abash, Nba and Zanj as sons of Ksh [b. Kanfin] b. N, on the authority
of al-Masfid and Ibn fiAbd al-Barr. See the Beirut edition of 1956-61, IV, 410.
10
proportioned limbs, well-compounded humors, and a pale brown color,
which is the most apt and proper color. They have been well baked in
wombs that do not expel them [prematurely] with a blondish or reddish
color, with grey-blue eyes and whitish eyebrows such as occurs to the
wombs of the Slav women or those like them or comparable to them. The
wombs of their women do not overcook them until they are burnt, so
that the child comes out something black or pitch-black, malodorous and
pungent-smelling, with peppercorn hair, unbalanced limbs, a deficient
mind, and depraved passions, such as the Zanj, the Ethiopians, and other
blacks who resemble them. The Iraqis are neither unbaked dough nor one
cooked and burnt, but between the two.11
11
Ibn al-Faqh al-Hamadhn, Mukhtasar kitab al-buldan, ed. M.J. De Goeje, Leiden, 1885, 162.
Translation by JOH, partly based on that of Bernard. Lewis in his Islam from the Prophet Muammad
to the Capture of Constantinople, Oxford, 1987, II, 209.
11
The equatorial region is inhabited by communities of Blacks who are to be
numbered among the savages and beasts. Their complexions and hair are
burnt and they are physically and morally deviant. Their brains almost
boil from the suns excessive heat The human being who dwells there
is a crude fellow, with a very black complexion, burnt hair, unruly, with
stinking sweat, and an abnormal constitution, most closely resembling in
his moral qualities a savage, or animals. He cannot dwell in the 2nd zone,
let alone the 3rd and 4th, just as the people of the 1st zone live not in the
6th, nor those of the 6th in the 1st, or the equatorial region, because of the
difference in the quality of the air and the heat of the sun. God knows
best!12
12
See Shams al-Dn Muhammad b. Ab Tlib al-Dimashqi (d. 1327), Nukhbat al-dahr f fiajib
al-barr wa l-bahr, ed. A. Mehren, Leipzig, 1923, 15-17.
12
hence their intelligence is dim, their thoughts are not sustained, and their
minds are inflexible, so that opposites, such a good faith and deceit,
honesty and treachery, do not coexist among them. No divinely revealed
laws have been found among them, nor has any divine messenger been
sent among them, for they are incapable of handling opposites together,
whereas divine laws consist of commanding and forbidding, and creating
desire and fear. The moral characteristics found in their belief systems are
close to the instincts found naturally in animals, which require no learning
to bring them out of the realm of potentiality into that of reality, like the
braveness to be found in a lion, and the cunning in a fox.13
15
and Jlins16
13
Ibid, 273.
An early 10th century encyclopaedist who actually visited visited East Africa.
15
A philosopher and contemporary of Masfid .
16
I.e.Galen, a 2nd century Greek physician.
17
ibid, i, 169-70. Ibn Khaldn does not, however, seem to have rejected the genealogical
explanation for the origins of African peoples. In his Kitb al-fibar, which the Muqaddima forms an
14
13
He goes on to explain that heat expands the animal spirit (i.e.
the emotional side of human nature) and gives the example of the
merry drunkard whose animal spirit is heated by wine and the man
who breaks into song when immersed in a hot bath. Hence it is to be
expected that people who live in hot climates will be merrier than
those who live in colder climes, and to make his point he contrasts
the cheerful Egyptians with the gloomy Moroccans. So, though
he endorsed the stereotype of the light-hearted, light-footed
emotional black African, he sought to deny that such characteristics
are due to inherent mental inferiority and to give these alleged racial
characteristcs what he considered a scientific explanation related
to climate.
We have come some way from theories about Slavs being
undercooked in the womb and black Africans being overdone, but
these quote/ unquote scientific explanations for color or other
characteristics do not alter the fact that in medieval Arab eyes
extreme whiteness and extreme darkness of skin were considered
aberrations from the norm and were to be connected with extremes
of climate These extremes, in turn, were thought responsible for
other departures from the golden mean which was, by definition,
what prevailed in the Mediterranean lands.
For all his inquiring mind and his attempt to apply scientific and
materialistic principles to the explanation of human behaviour and
social organization, Ibn Khaldn still could not escape from the
clutches of the ancient theory of the division of the world into seven
introduction to, he names abash, Nba and Zanj as sons of Ksh [b. Kanfin] b. N, on the authority
of al-Masfid and Ibn fiAbd al-Barr. See the Beirut edition of 1956-61, IV, 410.
14
climatic zones, and in fact sought to use this as a basis for what he
thought was a scientific explanation for the alleged characteristics of
different peoples. But this was, in reality, nothing more than a new
way in which to rationalize stereotypes and to make prejudices
respectable. In his celebrated Muqaddima, or Prolegomena to his
universal history, he gives an explanation for what he (and no doubt
the majority of his Arab contemporaries) considered to be the
barbarous characteristics of the black Africans of the 1st zone and
their reflection in northern Europeans of the 7th:
The inhabitants of the zones that are far from temperate, such as the 1st,
2nd, 6th and 7th, are also farther removed from being temperate in all
their conditions. Their buildings are of clay and reeds, their foodstuffs are
sorghum and herbs. Their clothing is the leaves of trees which they sew
together to cover themselves, or animal skins. Most of them go naked.
The fruits and seasonings of their countries are strange and inclined to be
intemperate. In their business dealings they do not use the two noble
metals [silver and gold], but copper, iron, or skins, upon which they set a
value for the purpose of business dealings. Their qualities of character,
moreover, are close to those of dumb animals. It has even been reported
that the Negroes of the first zone dwell in caves and thickets, eat herbs,
live in savage isolation, a do not congregate, and eat each other. The same
applies to the Slavs[i.e. northern Europeans in general] . The reason for
this is that their remoteness from being temperate produces in them a
15
disposition and character similar to those of dumb animals, and they
become correspondingly remote from humanity. 18
ibid, i, 168-9.
ibid, i, 172.
16
contacts with the great ruler of Mali, Mansa Ms during his early
14th century pilgrimage. He had also met other West Africans in
various places in North Africa, including emissaries of rulers, and
could not comfortably dismiss them and their countries as barbarous.
Secondly, it must have been something of an embarrassment to have
to admit that the Arabian peninsula, the home of the Arabs and the
cradle of Islam, lay partly in the 1st zone and partly in the 2nd
zoneregions that were supposed to be, by reason of their harsh
climates, zones of barbarism whose people were remote from
civilisation and humanity.
What new theories could he propound to deal with such
contradictions? In regard to the Arabian peninsula he produced a
climate modification theory under which it was argued that because
the Arabian Peninsula was surrounded by water on three sides, this
reduced the dryness of its air and hence the intemperance of
character that the dry heat would otherwise cause. As we have seen,
a combination of heat and dryness in the air was thought to dessicate
brains and produce perverted temperaments.
His explanation for the evident fact that the peoples of Sahelian
West Africa (the only ones he had direct knowledge of) were
civilized people with kingdoms, dynasties, crafts etc.in short all
those attributes that made for a balanced, temperate way of
liferelies on a completely different type of argument. Indeed, the
whole theory of the effect of climate on human character and culture
was thrown overboard in favour of an argument based on religion.
Following the passage quoted earlier on the barbarity of the
inhabitants of tropical Africa and northern Europe, he further
17
castigates these peoples for being "ignorant of prophecy" and lacking
in a religious law, meanng they are not Muslims nor do they belong
to a religion recognized by Muslims as being of divine inspiration,
such as Christianity or Judaism. For al-Dimashq the very barbarism
of such peoples, induced by climatic factors, was the reason why they
had not been favored with prophecy. Ibn Khaldn, however, does
not view their barbarism as irredeemable; on the contracy, they may
escape it through the adoption of a revealed religion. Hence he could
then make exceptions to the rule of barbarism for denizens of the
climatically extreme zones who had adopted Christianity, such as the
Ethiopians and certain peoples of Europe or those who had become
Muslims, such as the people of Mali, Senegal, and the Middle Niger
area. In short, faith was to be the touchstone of civilized humanity
and, as far as West Africa was concerned, what served to exclude
some of its peoples from their otherwise natural categorization as
barbarians was, in the eyes of Ibn Khaldun, their profession of the
faith of Islam.20
The bond of the brotherhood of the faith not only meant that a
black man/woman who was a Muslim ought no longer to be
regarded as a barbarian, but that s/he should no longer be regarded
as an inferior in any way when compared to an Arab.
20
cf. the conclusions reached by Drissa Diakit, reviewing medieval Arab authors writing about
black Africa: [L]a religion, les coutumes et moeurs des peuples Sudan [sont] gnralement
prsentes . . . comme une ngation de la vie, sans valeur, signe dignorance, de sauvagerie, de
maldiction divine. Les valeurs relles suivent les traces de lIslam qui . . . lve les Sudan . . . au
nombre des hommes civiliss. [L]es Sudan nont acquis les vertus fondementales de lHomme que par
linfluence du monde arabo-islamique. See his Le pays des noirs dans le rcit des auteurs arabes
anciens, Notre Librairie, 95 (oct-dc. 1988), 16-25.
18
There was, however, a different approach to one group of black
Africans, who were not, in the main, Muslims. that is the people
known as Habasha - a name no doubt semantically related to the
English term Abyssinia [ Habashinia]. Although medieval Arab
writers might sometimes use the term simply as an equivalent of the
term sdn (i.e. black Africa), its primary focus was on the area we
now call Ethiopia. A considerable literature was produced on the
virtues of Ethiopians, even though many slaves originating from that
area were owned in the Arab world (particularly in Arabia and
Egypt). The reason for this is no doubt that Ethiopia was a refuge for
Muslims who were persecuted during the Prophets lifetime, and the
king of Ethiopia at that time was thought by some to have embraced
Islam. The Prophet Muhammad glorified him by naming him as one
of the three blacks, or Ethiopians, who were, in his words masters
(sdt) of Paradise, one of the others being his adopted freed slave
and first muezzin of Islam, Bill.
The titles of a number of writings in the medieval period express
the superiority of black (or at least dark-skinned) people over
whites (or light-skinned) people. One of the earliest was by a
famous Iraqi writer of the 9th century, al-J, whose short treatise
was called The Glory of Blacks compared to Whites. In the 12th
century another Iraqi writer, Ibn al-Jawz, wrote a book with the title
Illumination of darkness concerning the merits of the Sdn and the
Ethiopians. In the 15th century, a celebrated Egyptian writer, alSuy, wrote a book called Raising the status of the Ethiopians.
Another work of his deals with preferences for skin color - light,
dark and brown, forming an anthology of verse in praise and satire
19
of women of different skin colors. This clearly indicates that color
was an issue in the medieval Arab world, but some of the poetry
emphasises the admiration for black women, as may be seen from
these poetic quotations :
Pearl is the name of many a black girl
How amazing it is to have a black pearl.
Night of union with a black woman is shiny bright
How amazing to have a night that is white.21
Thus, although black Africa was largely a region of the mind
creating negative images of black people, personal contact, especially
with women as concubines, could produce love and appreciation.
Another poet in love with a black woman called Tuktum humorously
praises her color, comparing it implicitly to the blackness of musk
and of darkness:
I love black women for Tuktums sake.
For her sake I love all who are black.
Show me anything with scent that's as sweet as musk,
Or better for resting than after dusk.22
In fact, attitudes towards black women were generally more positive
than they were towards black men, even if the women were of slave
origin. More female slaves were taken across the Sahara to North
Africa than men, and such women were then retained as concubines
by Arab men. Some were even made mothers of children for rulers.
21
Al-Suy, Nuzhat al-fiumr fl-tafl bayn al-b wal-sd wal-sumr, Cairo, n.d.,44. Poet is
Muammad b. Ynus al-Bsn.
22
Quoted in fiAbduh Badaw, al-Sud wa l-haara al-fiarabiyya [Blacks and Arab Culture] ,
Cairo, 1976, 161. The poet is Yafiqb b. Rfifi,
20
In such cases the children born were considered free, since their
fathers were free, and patrilineality was the social norm in Arab
society. In one case such a child, a male, became a successor to his
ruling fatherSultan Amad al-Manr, whose mother was a Fulani
concubine, and he ruled Morocco 1578-1608.
Such tolerance for wholly black persons, even when technically
"free" was not so common in Morocco. In fact, the notion that to be
black meant to be a slave became a commonly held belief. Sultan
Amad al-Manr began to set up a black slave military force for his
kingdom after the conquest of the Songhay empire and the
exportation of men considered to be slaves. Nearly a century later
Mly Ismfil b. al-Sharf decided to do a similar thing, and initiated
such a force by searching for descendants of those who had been part
of the earlier slave army. The search, however, collected anyone
viewed as a "black" throughout certain areas of Morocco. This
included some who were said to be artn, that is free blacks who
had lived in Saharan oases, being perhaps original inhabitants of such
areas, but many of whom later migrated into Moroccan locations
including some citiesnot least of which was Fez. Objections from
scholars of Fez were rejected by Mly Ismfil, who argued that he
had proven that such persons (or their ancestors) had originally been
slaves, but had deserted their owners and scattered themselves
around the country. Such an argument clearly bases itself on the
assumption that to be black is to be a slave. Finally several thousand
blacks were purchased or captured and trained as soldiers forming a
group known as "fiAbd al-Bukhr" ("Slaves of al-Bukhr"), and then
black women were gathered and the ruler arranged marriages
21
between these women and the armed blacks so as to eventually
produce later generations of black "slave origin" men to continue
serving in a military force.
Mly Ismfil, as referred to earlier, tended not to accept that
any black Africans were free people.Those he obtained for his
military force were called "Slaves of al-Bukhr" because, he said,
displaying a copy of al-Bukhr's adth collection, both he and they
were "slaves to the Sunna of the Messenger of God (Muammad)", an
expression that seems to assume that the recruited blacks were
Muslims.
The notion that blackness of skin meant that a person was a slave
continued tobe assumed by many Moroccans down to the late 19th
century. Evidence for this comes from the experience of a Muslim
scholar [Muammad al-Sans b. Ibrhm al-Jrim] [ Tanbh ahl alughyn fial urriyyat al-sdn]from the Timbuktu region who visited
Morocco apparently in the 1880s, and later wrote a small book (in the
mid-1890s) about his experience, and said at the beginning: "I found
there some uncivil Maoroccans who claimed that all blacks (sdn)
were absolutely slaves, and that they did not deserve to be free; how
would they deserve that being black-skinned?" . He then devoted the
main part of his book to arguments against such a claim, arguing for
the fundamentally free nature and human equality of black Africans,
basing himself on sayings attributed to the Prophet, one of the most
convincing of which is when the Prophet said: "O people, your Lord
is One, and your ancestor is one. The Arab has no virtue over the
non-Arab, nor has the non-Arab over the Arab, nor has the White
22
over the Black, or the Black over the White except in terms of
devotion to God".
The late 19th century Moroccan historian Ahmad b. Khalid alNasiri also strongly protests against enslavement of black Africans,
and condemns Moroccan attitudes and practices:
Thus will be apparent to you the heinousness of the affliction that has
beset the lands of the Maghrib since ancient times in regard to the
indiscriminate enslavement of the people of the Sdn and the
importation of droves of them every year to be sold in the market places
in town and country, where men trade in them as one would trade in
beastsnay worse than that. People have become so inured to that,
generation after generation, that many common folk believe that the
reason for being enslaved according to the Holy Law is merely that a man
should be black in color and come from those regions. This, by God's life,
is one of the foulest and gravest evils perpetrated upon Gods religion, for
the people of the Sudan are Muslims having the same rights and
responsibilities as ourselves.
Even if you assume that some of them are pagans or belong to a religion
other than Islam, nevertheless the majority of them today as in former
times are Muslims, and judgment is made according to the majority.
Again, even if you suppose that Muslims are not a majority, and that
Islam and unbelief claim equal membership there, who among us can tell
whether those brought here are Muslims or unbelievers? For the basic
assumption in regard to the human species is freedom and lack of any
23
cause for being enslaved. Whoever maintains the opposite is denying the
basic principle.23
23
. al-Nasiri, Kitab al-istiqsa' l-akhbar duwal al-Maghrib al-aqsa, Casablanca, 1955, v, 131.
. See El-Said Badawi /7 Martin Hinds, A Dictionary of Egyptian Arabic, Beirut: Librairie du
Liban, 1986
25
. See, Arabic Literature of Africa (ALA), IV, 504.
24
24
1741), coming from Katsina (modern Nigeria), settled in Cairo after
pilgrimage and was befriended by the father of historian fiAbd alRamn al-Jabart , to whom he bequeathed his library, and in whose
household he died.26
There were certainly other black African scholars who visited
for short or long periods Arab lands in North Africa and the Middle
East.In addition, many enslaved black Africans ended up in North
Africa, often converting to Islam either before final arrival, or after
serving a master for some time. Although many such converts were
probably emancipated, how they were later regarded is not known,
although the Moroccan ruler Mly Ismfil tended not to accept that
any black Africans were free people.
There have been different Arab ways of looking at black
Africans over the centuries, Muslims, either scholars or women,
being least disfavored, but otherwise African physical appearance
has tended to implicate inferiority and enslaveability, as it has done
frequently in Europe and America.
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