Sorry
seems to be the hardest word
“Tony
Blair” and “apologise” are not words which, silkily together,
slip off the tongue. So there was a tremor of excitement at the
prospect that he was about to mark the bicentenary of the legal
abolition of the slave trade in this country by offering a full,
constructive apology for Britain’s part in that trade. A number of
organisations and individuals who had been campaigning for such an
apology held their breath, probably in realistic cynicism rather than
hopeful expectation. And this is what Blair said: “It is hard to
believe that what would now be a crime against humanity was legal at
the time…Personally, I believe the bicentenary offers us a chance
not just to say how profoundly shameful the slave trade was – how
we condemn its existence utterly and praise those who fought for
its abolition – but also to express our deep sorrow that it ever
happened, that it ever could have happened and to rejoice at the
different and better times we live in today”.
This
prime example of the subtle arts of New Labour’s speech writers was
a long way short of a proper apology as it expresses sorrow that
slavery ever happened rather than that Britain played such an
important part in it, with the consequent enrichment of this
country’s commerce and industry. Slavery did not just “happen”;
it was an important part in the development of British industry and
trade, bringing in the wealth which gave rise to cities like
Liverpool and Bristol and the establishment of Britain as the
dominant power in world capitalism. In that cause, what did it matter
that a few million people from places like West Africa suffered and
died, through appalling cruelty, neglect and disease.
Slave
Ships
The
slave trade was made possible when, among the birth pangs of
capitalism, the mercantile states developed ships more capable of
riding out the most savage of weather together with navigation
techniques which, although in their infancy, served to guide ships
across the world. As slavery throve it nourished the plantations in
the Americas - where the cultivation of cash crops such as tobacco
and sugar was labour intensive – and the industries in Britain
which made the goods to be exchanged for the slaves. Also prospering
were the African rulers whose part was capturing the slaves and
delivering them to the misery and terror awaiting them in the ships.
Before 1698 the Royal African Company had a legal monopoly on all
trade between Britain and Africa but as the slave trade developed the
traders of Bristol, through the Society of Merchant Venturers, moved
to get a share of what they foresaw as a highly lucrative business
and, with the support of other ports, they eventually succeeded in
breaking the Royal African Company’s control. It was all done
properly, with due regard to the legal processes through Parliament;
along the way it was overlooked that the squabbling was all about
trading in human beings.
The
British merchant navy was ideally positioned for this and at the
height of the slave trade thousands of its ships participated,
including the fearsome middle passage when the slaves were taken from
the Atlantic coast of Africa to the Caribbean islands or America.
There has been no exact estimate of the numbers of slaves involved;
between 1450 and the beginning of the 19th. Century it ran
into tens of millions, of which British ships carried more than
300,000 a year, all meticulously documented with cargo manifests and
bills of lading.. The slaves were shackled and packed tightly into
the ships’ holds, in conditions such that as the ship approached
the end of its journey its smell of combined blood, faeces, vomit and
putrescent bodies preceded it like some morbid bow wave. The high
death rate during the voyages, while regrettable to the owners, was
accepted as a depreciation of their stock, as might happen in any
other business. In one case when a ship was badly delayed by fierce
headwinds the captain threw 133 of the 440 slaves overboard, then
claimed it as an insurable loss. The matter was contested by the
insurance company and argued out in court by lawyers in their wigs
ands gowns and heard by a judge, who decided in the captain’s
favour, just as he might have done if the cargo had been cotton goods
or weapons or whatever.
Campaign
The
campaign to get Tony Blair to apologise for this atrocious episode in
human history was concerned with the significant contribution it made
to the rise of the British ruling class to pre-eminence in world
capitalism and the historical damage to the slaves’ descendants.
Esther Stanford, the secretary of Rendezvous of Victory, an
Africa-led pressure group, presses for a national commission to
examine the resultant injuries in education, family life, culture and
economic standing and prospects. “It will cost” was how she
summed it up, as if she really is optimistic that the conclusion of
the commission would, against all precedent, be other than a cover
up. It was apparent that the careful wording of Blair’s statement
was designed to avoid encouraging any claim for reparation. After
all, he may have reasoned, British participation in slavery was
abolished two hundred years ago; the British ruling class were
enriched over centuries through their wars, colonising and
repression. A great deal of blood was been spilt and misery caused in
the process. Why should they start thinking about reparation now?
Then
what about the other countries which were also enriched by the trade
– countries like Holland and Portugal? And those which prospered
through accepting and working the slaves – like America and Brazil? And
then there were the native rulers in Africa, who fought wars to
capture slaves and did not hesitate to sell their own subjects? The
journeys of those slaves, from the interior to the ports, were
notable for a cruelty which was as savage as they experienced during
the voyage. Meanwhile the working people of Britain were not being
enriched; some of their suffering was described by Lord Shaftesbury,
when he recounted to the House of Lords the condition of children he
had seen at the factory gates: “…sad, dejected, cadaverous
creatures. In Bradford especially the proofs of long and cruel toil
were most remarkable. The cripples and distorted forms might be
numbered by hundreds, perhaps by thousands”. Those people, and
thousands of other elsewhere in similar circumstances, were as much
victims of the rise of industrial capitalism, as the slaves. In a
letter written in 1833, the campaigning poet Robert Southey commented
on the condition of the working class in Britain: “The slave trade
is mercy compared to it”.
No
Apology
If Rendezvous of Victory wish to pursue a claim for
compensation for
the slave trade a likelier defendant would be the descendant class of
those who prospered as a result of the trade - including the Church
of England and the older universities. The working class were not
enriched by the trade and in any case they have nothing with which to
compensate the slaves’ descendants. A more realistic campaign would
be aimed at compelling Blair and his ministers to apologise for the
crimes which the ruling class have committed against humanity. And
while they are about this mountainous task they might also say a few
remorseful words about what their government has been responsible
for. No hint of a retraction emerges from Number Ten about the
Weapons of Mass Destruction lie, compounded by the Dodgy Dossier.
There has been no regret expressed for the tens of thousands killed
in Iraq as a direct result of the invasion there and of the chaos
into which that country descends, day after day, while the government
claim that Iraq is a stable democratic state with an ecstatic future.
New Labour mouthpieces continue to rant about their alleviating
poverty, in face of evidence to the contrary. A recent study by
Shelter revealed that one in seven children in this country are in
temporary or unsatisfactory housing – in other words are homeless,
which means they are twice as likely to suffer poor health. To put a
figure on it, there are 1.6 million children whose standards of
housing make them more likely to have respiratory problems such as
asthma and bronchitis.
Capitalism
ruthlessly exploits its underclass of workers, without any reason for
apology or reparation. It cannot be otherwise. Without apology, we
campaign to end the system.
IVAN
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