Alligatorob
SF VIP
This is an interesting article and raises some hard questions about what can or should we do about our past sins of slavery.
A quote:
"My family, the Trevelyans, owned about 1,000 slaves on five different sugar plantations in Grenada in the 17th and 18th centuries.
When slavery was abolished in 1834, our family, along with 46,000 others in the UK, received compensation from the British government for the loss of our property.
We received about £3m in today's money. The enslaved got nothing.
In fact, they had to work for their owners for free for another eight years - another form of enslavement."
Of course things in the US went differently. As I have said here before my ancestors were slave owners, and they lost those slaves in the US Civil War, no government compensation.
It is pretty clear to me that the effects of slavery and its aftermath are still impacting many black people today. Hard to explain the socioeconomic differences between descendants of slaves and their white counterparts today any other way. Exactly how and why that's the case is harder to understand. This is of course a generalization based on averages, many individual slave descendants are doing quite well, and many individual white people are not.
Even harder to know what can or should be done about it. Interesting and important question, I believe.
Earl and Countess of Wessex: Why Grenada wanted to talk to royals about slavery
A quote:
"My family, the Trevelyans, owned about 1,000 slaves on five different sugar plantations in Grenada in the 17th and 18th centuries.
When slavery was abolished in 1834, our family, along with 46,000 others in the UK, received compensation from the British government for the loss of our property.
We received about £3m in today's money. The enslaved got nothing.
In fact, they had to work for their owners for free for another eight years - another form of enslavement."
Of course things in the US went differently. As I have said here before my ancestors were slave owners, and they lost those slaves in the US Civil War, no government compensation.
It is pretty clear to me that the effects of slavery and its aftermath are still impacting many black people today. Hard to explain the socioeconomic differences between descendants of slaves and their white counterparts today any other way. Exactly how and why that's the case is harder to understand. This is of course a generalization based on averages, many individual slave descendants are doing quite well, and many individual white people are not.
Even harder to know what can or should be done about it. Interesting and important question, I believe.