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Christianity, Islam and Slavery
Christianity, Islam and Slavery
By Craig Keener
Islam has taken root in many urban centers of the United States
today and is spreading particularly among young urban African-American
men suspicious of White society's promises that have seemed out of
their reach. The current crisis did not begin overnight. Spawned by
the church's neglect, the movement continued to offer its warnings
to an inattentive church until reaching its present proportions.
Islam Takes Root in the African-American Community
Resentful of White Christians' hypocritical practice of racism
and the Black church's unwillingness to overtly challenge it,
heterodox Islamic sects such as the Moorish Science Temple arose
in the early decades of this century. Although such groups diverged
considerably from the Quranic Islam practiced in the Middle East,
they provided a cultural bridge to it for their converts.
In the 1930s, a white Turk named W. D. Fard began recruiting
disciples for his heterodox Islamic sect; his most prominent disciple,
who took the name Elijah Muhammad, claimed that Master Fard revealed
that he was himself God and made other claims that would outrage most
orthodox Muslims.[1] Elijah Muhammad declared that an evil genius,
one Mr. Yacub, planned the creation of the white race by breeding
the lightest of his 59,999 black followers on the island of Patmos,
a process that produced a brown race after 200 years, a red race
after 200 more, a yellow race after 200 more, and finally a race
of "blonde, pale-skinned, cold-blue-eyed devils, savages, nude
and shameless."[2] Malcolm X became the leading spokesman for
Elijah Muhammad's cause until a rift between himself and Elijah
Muhammad, strengthened by revelations of Elijah's extramarital
affairs, led Malcolm to look elsewhere for truth.
Not only Malcolm, but Elijah Muhammad's own son, Warith D.
Muhammad, recognized the difference between the Nation of Islam
and Sunni Islam, and moved toward the latter position. Although
traditional Islam lacked a component of urban appeal that the
Nation of Islam possessed - anti-white sentiment and a myth to
honor it - it provided more integrity and a larger network of
allies (and, perhaps of some relevance, financial support), and
still functioned as a protest against the racial insensitivities
of most U.S. churches. Louis Farrakhan led many of W.D. Muhammad's
followers back to the more original views of the Nation of Islam,
yet more African-Americans today probably seriously follow Sunni
Islam, as represented by W. D. Muhammad and the later Malcolm.
Most adherents now hold to Islam out of sincere conviction of
its truth; dissatisfaction with other traditional religious
options, however, remains a major initial force in commending
this religion to inquirers.
Charges Against Christianity
Muslims have raised many objections to Christianity, for
instance, the charge of its collusion with Western imperialism
in Africa. Yet Islamic expansionism from the seventh century on
was no less colonial than Western imperialism came to be, and
Western colonialism finds far less support in Jesus' teaching
than Islamic expansionism finds in the Quran. Ancient African
kingdoms like the mighty Medieval kingdom of Songhay (which had
Islamic influence) were destroyed by Muslim imperialists from
the north.[3] Other African kingdoms like Nubia and Ethiopia
were forced to stand against Islamic armies for centuries,[4]
to defend the Christian minority in Egypt.[5] These were the
nearest Christian kingdoms that many Muslims experienced,[6]
except for the remnant of Christians in their own territories.
North Africa was predominantly Christian long before Muhammad's
birth.
But one of the most prominent objections made by Black Muslims
is that the Christian West participated in slave trade. Although
we may question how genuine the Christianity of slave traders was,
we cannot deny that professed Christians participated in slave
trade. What we can question is whether Muslims are those best
suited to raise this objection! Muhammad and his earliest
followers did not shrink from the practice of slavery (quite
in contrast to Jesus and the disciples);[7] but Muslim slavery,
like most other kinds of slavery, was originally not racially
based. After the revolt of the Mamelukes [white slaves] in Egypt,
however, black slaves became the preferred commodity.[8]
Arabs, Berbers, and Persians pioneered the long-distance slave
trade,[9] and the Spanish and Portuguese originally purchased
Black African slaves from Arab dealers.[10] The first Africans
in the British colonies arrived before the Mayflower, and were
temporarily indentured servants like many White colonists. In
time, however, colonists found African servants easier to exploit
than European ones (the latter could appeal to authorities in
Europe or, escaping, blend into the local populations). Economic
incentives also led to African-American slavery and its racist
ideological justification.[11] Whereas Arabs introduced this
exploitation, Europeans perfected it.[12] The Arabs had no
tortures comparable to the long journeys across the Atlantic
with slaves chained side by side for months in dark cargo holds.
For every slave brought to the so-called New World, more Africans
were brutally murdered in their capture or died en route multiplied
millions of human beings raped, butchered, or reduced to the status
of animals.
In Defense of Christians
Yet Christians provided resistance. William Wilberforce and
the Clapham Sect, in fervor fueled by the Wesleyan Revival, pushed
the abolitionist cause through the British Parliament, leading to
the abolition of slavery in the British Empire.[13] The evangelical
revival movement fueled the abolitionist cause in the United States
as well, and abolitionist revivalists such as Charles Finney and
the evangelicals at Oberlin College helped galvanize popular support
for abolitionism; others, like the Tappans, defied their culture
still more directly by demanding integration.[14] Black Christians
in the north contributed still more to the abolitionist cause one
may sample Frederick Douglass (an ordained A. M. E. Zion deacon),
Sojourner Truth, and the great heroine of the underground railroad,
Harriet Tubman.[15]
Some Black Christians, in fact, practiced a resistance more
vibrant than that of the Nation of Islam. Whatever else we may say
of it, slave revolts were led by such figures as Nat Turner,
a Baptist preacher; Denmark Vesey, with much A. M. E. support;
Gabriel Prosser, envisioning himself as a new Samson; and the White
visionary John Brown.[16] The Black minister David Walker called
hypocritical White Christians "devils" in 1829, although (unlike
the original Nation of Islam) he allowed for exceptions.[17]
Islam provides no analogous abolitionist imperative. Just as
Britain and France were finally working to shut down the Atlantic
slave trade, it was picking up in East Africa, and most of the
slaves were being sold to kingdoms in Arabia and the Persian Gulf.[18]
The Arabian peninsula in 1962 became the world's final region to
officially abolish slavery,[19] yet even afterward Saudi Arabia
alone was estimated to contain a quarter of a million slaves.[20]
As many as 20 million Pakistanis (mainly Christians and lower-caste
Muslims) are now being held in bondage.[21] Arab Muslims in the
northern Sudan have been systematically starving the Black African
adherents of traditional African religions and Christians in the
south;[22] raids have also been taking slaves, a practice Sudan
had once abolished.[23] In the Islamic Republic of Mauritania,
Arab-Berber Muslims from the north hold possibly over 100,000
Black African slaves from the south;[24] "aside from the shantytowns
and a strip of land along the Senegal River, virtually all blacks
are slaves and they are more than half the population."[25]
One African-American writer specializing in African history
thus laments the confusion of many US youth, who "are dropping
their white western slave masters' names and adopting, not
African, but their Arab and Berber slave masters' names!"[26]
Indeed, because "the importation of Black slaves into Islamic
lands" over 1200 years may have involved more slaves than the
European slave trade did, some African writers have suggested
that both the West and the Middle East should pay reparations
to Africa.[27]
Conclusion
Islam has gained many of its converts in the African-American
community by pointing to historic weaknesses in professed
Christianity, such as Christian participation in the slave trade.
While this charge, like most other charges, reflects a very
selective reading of the historical evidence, these charges are
rendered believable by the state of much of the church in North
America. Can inner city Black youth believe a gospel that plainly
teaches racial reconciliation when examples of it are nowhere
to be found in the inner cities? Articles like this can provide
an apologetic on paper, but the real apologetic will be far more
costly. Until North American Christians learn to live the gospel
of reconciliation they preach, paying any necessary price to
bridge the gaps historically formed by White racism, Islam will
continue to appear credible by contrast to a Christianity that
is often indistinguishable from the rest of North American
culture.
References
- See e.g., The Autobiography of Malcolm X, p. 208.
- Autobiography of Malcolm X, pp. 165-68; Malcolm renounced
this view when he recanted the beliefs of the Nation of Islam
(Autobiography, p. 169).
- See Chancellor Williams, The Destruction of Black Civilization
Great Issues of a Race from 4500 B.C. to 2000 A.D. (Chicago
Third World Press, 1987), pp. 207-9; Lerone Bennett, Before
the Mayflower; rev ed. (Baltimore, MD Penguin, 1966), p. 17;
cf. W.E.B. Du Bois, The World and Africa: An Inquiry into the
Part which Africa Has Played in History, rev. ed. (New York
International Publishers, 1965), p. 212.
- John H. Taylor, Egypt and Nubia (Cambridge Harvard University
Press, 1991), p. 64; Williams, Destruction, pp. 145-46, 149;
Du Bois, World and Africa, pp. 147, 215; William Y. Adams,
Nubia: Corridor to Africa (Princeton Princeton University Press,
1977), pp. 539-44; idem, "Medieval Nubia," pp. 120-125 in Africa
in Antiquity 1. The Arts of Ancient Nubia and the Sudan - The
Essays (Brooklyn, NY Brooklyn Museum, 1978), p. 125.
- William Leo Hansberry, Pillars in Ethiopian History, ed. Joseph
Harris (Washington, DC Howard University Press, 1981), pp. 131-32;
Williams, Destruction, p. 148; Du Bois, World and Africa, p. 186.
- Cf. Williams, Destruction, p. 149.
- On slavery and the New Testament, see e.g., Craig S. Keener,
Paul, Women & Wives (Peabody, MA Hendrickson, 1992), pp. 184-224.
- See Williams, Destruction, pp. 77, 153.
- This is commonly noted, e.g., by Bennett, Mayflower, pp. 34-35.
- Because of Nation of Islam propaganda, William Dwight McKissic,
Beyond Roots (Wenonah, NJ Renaissance Productions, 1990) p. 52,
notes his astonishment when he learned that "Arab Muslims" were
the first "to target Blacks...for slavery," and that many Black
Africans had converted to Islam only to gain kinder treatment
from their masters.
- See especially Bennett, Before Mayflower, pp. 29-37; cf. C. Eric
Lincoln, Race, Religion, and the Continuing American Dilemma
(New York Hill & Wang, 1984), p. 135.
- Wesley's evangelical preaching against slavery also compared
European slavery with Islamic slavery unfavorably (La Roy
Sutherland, The Testimony of God Against Slavery [Boston Webster
& Southard, 1835], p. 91).
- Cf. e.g., The New Encyclopaedia Britannica, 15th ed. (Chicago
University of Chicago, 1992), 12654; Eerdman's Handbook to the
History of Christianity (Grand Rapids Eerdmans, 1977), p. 561
(cf. p. 556 "In the 1790s the evangelical was marked out as
much by a desire for the abolition of the slave trade as by an
interest in missions").
- This is often documented; cf. e.g., Nancy A. Hardesty, Women
Called to Witness Evangelical Feminism in the 19th Century
(Nashville Abingdom, 1984); for a sample of abolitionist
preaching, see Sunderland, Slavery.
- Cf. e.g., James Cone, For My People Black: Theology and the Black
Church (Maryknoll Orbis, 1984), pp. 123-25.
- On slave resistance and religion, see especially Gayraud S. Wilmore,
Black Religion and Black Radicalism: An Interpretation of the
Religious History of Afro-American People, 2nd rev. ed. (Maryknoll,
NY Orbis, 1983); Albert J. Raboteau, Slave Religion: The "Invisible
Institution" in the Antebellum South (New York Oxford University
Press, 1978).
- Wilmore, Black Religion, p. 40.
- Norman Robert Bennett, Mirambo of Tansania, ca. 1840-1884
(New York Oxford University Press, 1971), p. 16.
- Robert William Fogel and Stanley L. Engerman, Time on the Cross:
The Economics of American Negro Slavery (Boston Little, Brown &
Company, 1974), p. 13.
- Jorge I. Domínguez, "Assessing Human Rights Conditions," pp. 21-116
in Enhancing Global Human Rights, by Jorge I. Domínguez, Nigel S.
Rodley, Bryce Wood, Richard Falk, 1980s Project/Council on Foreign
Relations (New York McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1979), p. 91.
- Tom Masland, Rod Nordland, Melinda Liu, and Joseph Contreras,
"Slavery," Newsweek May 4, 1992, pp. 30-39, p. 37.
- Cf. many reports, e.g., in Africa News, July 6-19, 1992, p. 16;
Newsweek, Oct. 12, 1992, p. 49; ESA Advocate, Oct. 1992, p. 6;
World Press Review, March 1989, pp. 28-29; June 1991, p. 36.
- "Forgotten Slaves," World Press Review, Jan. 1991, p. 57;
"Slavery," Newsweek, May 4, 1992, p. 32.
- "Slavery," Newsweek, May 4, 1992, p. 30.
- "Slavery," Newsweek, May 4, 1992, p. 32.
- Williams, Destruction, p. 23.
- Bethwell Ogot, "The Muslim Trade," in the Daily Nation of Nairobi,
Kenya, responding to Ali Mazrui and citing substantial historical
data (reprinted in World Press Review, Aug. 1993, p. 23).
Craig Keener is a minister in the National Baptist Convention, USA
and teaches at Hood Theological Seminary ( A. M. E. Zion Church). He
has a Ph.D. from Duke University and is the author of The IVP Bible
Background Commentary.
This article was originally published by Horizons International
in ReachOut, Vol. 7. No. 3&4, 1994, pp. 20-22. Reproduced
with permission of the publisher.
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