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A CRUSADE AGAINST SLAVERY.

Terrible Treatment of Slaves

[The Spectator, Aug. 4th.]

Tiie auti-slavery meeting held at Prince's Hall ou Tuesday was noteworthy for more reasons than one. The principal speaker, 011 whose behalf, indeed, the meeting was got up, was :> Prince-Bishop of the Roman Church. He was accompanied by another Cardinal, once a dignitary of the English Church, and ever sines ho left her an active propagandist against her. Yet these eminent Bishops of the Roman Church not only addressed a sympathetic audience which for the most part did not belong to their communion, but were, in addition, surrounded on the platform by Bishops and clergy of the Anglican Church, and by representatives of various Noncomformforming bodies. It was a striking exhibition of Christian fellowship in a good cause on the part of men who differ widely on questions of religion ; and it was rendered all the more striking by the fact that the movement, of which Tuesday's meeting was the first public expression, owes its inspiration to no leas a personage than the Pope of Rome. Such an unusual combination of circumstances would have been impossible thirty years ago, and even later. The apparition on a common platform of two Cardinals, specially commissioned by the Pope, with Anglican Bishops and Canons and representative Nonconformists, would have alarmed beyond all bounds the aggressive and obscurantist Protestantism of which the Church Association is now the expiring champion. Another noteworthy feature of the meeting was the singular commentary which it offered 011 recent utterances as to the civilising and humanising influences of Islatn on the pagan population of Africa. We have been assured that Islam is rapidly weaning them from the cruelties and abominations of idolatry, and a dignitary of the Enirlish Church has actually recommended Christians to abandon the field to the more successful propaganda of Islam. Tuesday's meeting was a striking refutation of this shallow and ignorant dogmatism. Cardinal Lavigerie lias had twonty-ftve years' experience of the practical working of Islam in Africa, and his thrilling narrative presents a very different picture from the rosy fictions instilled by wily Moslems into the minds of English travellers who have never seriously studied Islam as a system, and have no personal knowledge of it in practice. To see it merely by cursory visits to lands which have ceased to be under Mussulman rule is as a practical working system, one must study it carefully either in its own dogmatic literature, or in countries where it has free play. It has a free hand, unfortunately, throughout the larger part of Africa, and tho testimony of all dispassionate observers is that it is there an unmitigated curse. Let us pick out, by way of samples, a few of the facta related by Cardinal Lavigerie. ' Slavery, in the proportions that it has now assumed, means the destruction of the tribes of the interior oE Africa. Commander Cameron has declared that half a million slaves at the least are torn from their homes in Central Africa every year, and sold into slavery. Cardinal Lavigerie assures us, on the testimony of his own missionaries, that Cameron's estimate is under the mark. Consider what a drain that single fact represents on the population of the interior of Africa ! For it must be remembered that the number actually sold into slavery is not an exact equivalent of the depopulation that is going on. Many perish in the slave hunts, and more on the horrible march to the coast; and Cameron's estimate applies only to those who resell the coast. The aged, the cripples, tho weak —all, in fact, who cannot walk to the coast, or who would fetch no price there —are ruthlessly slain in the slave hunts. Yet their fate is more enviable than that of those whose lives are spared for the slave-market. The Cardinal gives a harrowing description of the march to the coast. To preventescape, the strongest and most vigorous have their hands tied, and sometimes their feet, in such fashion that walking becomes a torture to them ; and on their noclts are placed yokes which attach several of them together.' In this way they are made to walk all day, bearing heavy loads, and at night a few handfuls of raw rice are thrown to them. That is their only meal for the day. A few days of these hardships begin to tell on the strongest. The weakest soon succumb, and the weakest are naturally among tho women. But terror sometimes nerves even a week frame to almost superhuman efforts ; and the Arab slavo driver adopts a summary method of striking terror into tho hearts of tho laggards. ' In order to strike terror into this miserable mass of human beings, their conductors, armed with a wooden bar, to economiso powder, approach those who appear to be the most exhausted, and deal them a terrible blow on the nape of the neck. The unfortunate victims utter a cry, and fall to the ground in the convulsions of death. The terrified troop immediately resumesits inarch. Terror lias imbued even the weakest with new strength. Each time anyone breaks down, the horrible sccne is repeated,' This butchery goe3 011 even in the case of those who manage to struggle on, as soon as the experienced eye of the slavedrivers sees that their strength will not carry them to the coast. To save food, they receive a smashing blow from the mallet, and are left behind to a lingering death. The march sometimes extends over months, and such is the awful carnage, that if a traveller lost tho way leading from Equatorial Africa to the towns where slaves are sold, he could easily find it again by the skeletons of the Negroes with which it is strewn.' Thi3 prodigal waste of human life has in some districts so thinned the population, that the slave-hunters are obliged to use stratagem to catch their prey. Their bauds prowl in the forests, and pounce upon the hapless women and children who go by. Things have reached such a pass near the great lakes, that now, in tho words of one of the Car-

diniil'n missionaries, ' every woman, every child that strays ten minutes away from their village has no certainty of ever returning.' And the people who are the victims of this cruel oppression lire, according' to the Cardinal, kind, industrious, amiable and might be made under happier influences, the means of making those parts of Africa one of the most prosperious regions of the globe. The country is very fertilo, and abounds in natural resources. It possesses tlireo zones—first, the lowlands along the seaboard of the Mediterranean, Atlantic and Indian Oceans. Towards the interior are two plateaux, one above ibe other, raising 2000 ft. and 4000l"t., respectively. These table-lands attract (he rains which feed the great bikes, out of which flow the four groat African livers, with their allluents. Under civilising influences, the country muht be made one of the richest in the world, and it is large enough to oflYr room for home time to cumo to tho surplus population of I^urope.

Bui; the first condition is the extinction of thijt power which some socialists would poinutido us is the predestined missionary :irul eiviiiser of the population of Africa— l.lie power of Islam. The testimony of Cardinal Lavigerie on this point, is decisive. 'It is this population—numerous, and happy, and peaceable—which Islam is exterminating at this moment by the means of her .-lave hunters, and by virtue of her doctrine tha + . the blacks are an inferior and cursed race, whom they aro nt liberty to treat woruo than we treat our animals. . . . . May God

preserve me from accusing, without compulsion, any man, and especially any people But I cannot resist saying to-day that, of the errors so fatal to Africa, the saddest in that which teaches, as Islam does, that humanity is made up of two distinct species ; one, that of believers, destined to command ; the other, that of the cursed, as they stylo them, destined to servo ; and in t?«e latter they think that the Negroes constitute the lowest grade, and are on a par with cattle,' ' Having reached by their conquests the heart of a continent peopled by Negroes, the Moslems have therefore betaken themselves to the work which is justified by their doctrines.' So much fur the bons-ted benefits which Islam has bestowed on Africa. From every point of view it has been a curso, and nothing else. 'Itis a highly debatable question,' the Times thinks, ' whether Mahommedanism is responsible to the degree which the eloquent Cardinal maintains.' The Times rests its scepticism on sonic passages in the Koran Which recommend kindness to slavos. It is irrevalent to quote the Koran in this controversy, for that book, so full of contradictions, is not the guide of lifo for Moslems. The vast majority of them cannot read it, and know little about its teaching. Their rule of conduct is the traditional teaching of Islam in every Moslem school and village, and that is perfectly consistent with all the horrors of slavery. Besides, the Koranic precepts quoted in the Times refer to Moslem slaves, and have no bearing whatever on nun-Moslem, still less on Negro slavery. Cardinal Lavigerie insists—and Cardinal Manning agrees with him—that the progress of Islam in Africa cannot be effectually resisted except by force. Force is its own conquering weapon, and by force it must be opposed. We see 110 reason to question tile Cardinal's judgment in that matter. But how and by whom is the force to be applied? Hia Eminence does not suggest any specific policy. Like the Crusader that he claims to be, he leaves to the secular Governments of Christendom the responsibility of devising a scheme. It is plain that cruisers along the coast do very little to stop the nefarious traffic. Our hope must lie iu establishing centres of civilisation here and there in the interior of Africa, and thus organising the natives, so that, with modern weapons in their hand 3, they may be able not only to hold their own against the armed emissaries of Islam, but in course of time to drive them out of the country.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WT18881103.2.42.6

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Waikato Times, Volume XXXI, Issue 2546, 3 November 1888, Page 1 (Supplement)

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,701

A CRUSADE AGAINST SLAVERY. Waikato Times, Volume XXXI, Issue 2546, 3 November 1888, Page 1 (Supplement)

A CRUSADE AGAINST SLAVERY. Waikato Times, Volume XXXI, Issue 2546, 3 November 1888, Page 1 (Supplement)

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