For some time, a good friend of
mine has been asking me to read the book Caste,
by the journalist Isabel Wilkerson. In
response I have been making my way through it.
Wilkerson argues, essentially, that black Americans, like Jews in Nazi
Germany and the Untouchables in India, have been defined by their societies as
inferior beings, subject to any indignity.
Wilkerson’s book includes 388 pages of text, with sweeping historical
claims in almost every paragraph. It
presents a particular form of critical race theory, which has become mainstream
in the last few years. A full analysis
of her claims and sources would require a book as long as hers. I can’t possibly undertake it, but I think
that I can identify some essential weaknesses in her argument and approach that
undermine her central point: that the
assignment of black Americans to an inferior caste has been, and remains, the
foundation of American social and political life. My own study of history has persuaded
me that this is only half the story. The
many attempts by whites to consign blacks to inferior status have always had to
contend with an opposite view embodied in the founding documents of the United
States, which proclaimed that all men were created equal and, in the federal
Constitution, made no separate mention of whites or blacks, or for that matter
of men and women, but only to “persons.”
American history tells the story of a long struggle between those two
views—one in which victory ultimately goes, again and again, to the universal
one.
Slavery, Wilkerson reminds us
again and again, existed in what became the United States for more than 200
years. (She recognizes that there is a
controversy over whether the Africans who landed in Jamestown in 1619 were in
fact slaves as we came to understand that term.
I have read in another authority that they were only held to service for
the remainder of their lives, and that hereditary slavery as we know it was not
defined in Virginia until the 1650s.)
She says repeatedly that the white colonists created a particularly
cruel form of slavery in which the slaves had no rights and were entirely at
the mercy of their masters. I shall return to that point in a moment, but first
I want to broaden out our perspectives a bit.
Wilkerson wants us to believe not only that caste was a feature of early
American civilization, but also that it was created by the slaveholders, and that
slavery was the only manifestation of caste with which that civilization had to
deal. Those last two arguments, I think,
are highly questionable.
The original slaves who arrived
in Jamestown were on a Spanish ship that had blown off course. The Spaniards and Portuguese had been bringing
African slaves into the Caribbean and South America for many decades by
1621. Slavery was endemic in the ancient
world and was surely practiced in much, if not most, of the globe in previous
times, but the western European states had not only outlawed it, but ended
serfdom, by the 17th century.
When their colonists in the Americas revived it, they tried to stop it,
but the great distances involved made that impossible. Slavery was not, therefore, a phenomenon particular
to the American colonies, and the institution was already fighting against new
intellectual and political trends that eventually defined the modern world as
we know it. Against the background of
those trends, slavery was an aberration—which was why it was not destined to
survive.
Wilkerson also chooses not to
mention where the slaves came from, and how they had become slaves. She refers at one point to the Europeans
having kidnapped them from Africa, but that was not what happened. The Europeans purchased the slaves from
Africa, where warring tribes customarily captured, enslaved and sold members of
other tribes. (The original 1970s
television version of Roots got this
wrong: the producers of a more recent cable television version deserve credit
for getting it right.) Slavery was
eventually abolished in the Americas before it was abolished in West Africa,
and it survived in Mauretania into the late twentieth century. It was not, in short, a sin unique to what
became the United States, or even to the Americas. It is a millennia-old feature of human
civilization, which modern civilization fortunately came to reject and to
eliminate.
This, however, is not all. Like so many other critical race theorists,
Wilkerson insists that the white-black distinction is the fundamental divide
within American society and the key to the identity of both blacks and
whites. It is not merely a caste divide,
it is the only significant caste divide (except, it seems at times, for the divide
between men and women, which she seems to believe is also highly
significant.) In fact, the whole
American experiment attacked caste in the very important ways in which it
structured European society in the early modern period, and the greater
significance of the founding of the United States is that it created a
Constitution and a legal system which did not recognize traditional orders.
Although the European societies
of the 16th-18th centuries were racially homogenous, they
did not treat their inhabitants equally.
Nobility, clergy, and the common people had different legal status and
were subject to different laws. They
(like black Americans in much of the post-1865 South, as Wilkerson points out)
were excluded from particular occupations, and often from meaningful political
participation. From their very beginning
in the 17th century, the New England colonies, at least, created societies
and political systems without meaningful class distinctions among different
men. Their towns governed themselves in
town meetings in which every man voted, and no one enjoyed immunity from either
taxation or the common law. Although an aristocracy of slaveholders developed
south of the Mason-Dixon line, with fateful political and social consequences
from then to now, the colonists eventually made their revolution in the 1780s
based upon the very radical idea of equal legal and social rights. Today’s
critical race theorists—and many feminists as well—insist upon seeing those
principles as a sham because their impact was not yet universal. In fact such principles had to start with a
more limited application—but the sweeping terms in which the Declaration of
Independence and the Constitution and Bill of Rights stated them were bound to
create pressure for a general one, as indeed they did within another half a
century. Those principles, not slavery
or racial prejudice, gave the founding of the United States its greatest
historical significance. Because of
their power, they inspired Europeans as well, first in France in the 1790s,
where their application did not lead to democracy, and then throughout Western
Europe, to varying degrees, in the nineteenth century. In the twentieth century those principles
played a key role in bringing European colonial empires to an end.
And despite Wilkerson’s ceaseless
attempts to convince of the contrary, those principles did from the beginning of
the United States affect how many Americans saw slavery. They led the northern states to abolish the
institution in the years immediately following the American Revolution. They led the leaders of the Constitutional
Convention—including the Virginian James Madison, a slaveowner himself—to refuse
southern requests to put some explicit recognition of slavery within the
founding document. Despite what Chief Justice Tawney claimed in
the Dred Scott decision in 1857, many northern states accepted black people as
citizens, as two brilliant dissents to his opinion pointed out at the
time. That was not all. In Virginia and Maryland, many slave-owners
set their slaves free in the wake of the revolution, the Congress abolished the
international slave trade as soon as the Constitution allowed it to do so in
1807, and many looked forward to the institution’s disappearance. A great change, alas, occurred with the
advent of the cotton gin, which made slavery far more profitable, and with the
advent of a new, post-revolutionary generation in the South, many of whom
really did decide, as Wilkerson says, that slavery was a positive good and the
foundation of their civilization. In the
1850s the southern political leadership tried to impose that view on the
national government—but the result was the election of Lincoln in 1860, the
secession of most of the slave states, the Civil War, the Emancipation
Proclamation, and the 13th, 14th and 15th
amendments proclaiming equal rights for all—the legal destruction, not the
affirmation, of the principle of caste.
That was not, of course, the end
of racial oppression or inequality in the United Sates, and I shall turn to
Wilkerson’s treatment of later periods in a moment. First, however, I would like to raise some
questions even about her characterization of slavery in the American South,
some of which involve her comparison with the fate of Jews in Nazi Germany. She refers to plantations as labor camps and
claims that their black inhabitants lived under a regime similar to that of
Nazi labor camps. She also says, again
and again, that masters exercised absolute power, amounting to life and death,
over slaves. That was not true. In his classic, beautifully documented
history of slavery, Roll, Jordan Roll,
Eugene Genovese established that the murder of a slave was a serious crime in
the antebellum South, in rare instances even punished with death. And while the Nazis in their labor camps
purposely starved inmates to death (partly because, after the Second World War
broke out, they did not have enough food supply to feed everyone under their
control), the slave population of the southern US was the only such population
in the Americas to show significant natural increase. One can acknowledge these facts without in
any way excusing slavery, just as one can note the statement of W. E. B.
DuBois, a founder of the NAACP, a great historian, and old enough to have known
many former slaves, that “of the humanity of large numbers of southern masters
there can be no doubt.” And this leads me to the biggest flaw in
Wilkerson’s book, her treatment of white folks.
That the United States has given
birth to large numbers of hard core white racists is not open to doubt. Such people enjoyed brilliant political
careers in much of the American South in the late nineteenth and twentieth
centuries—at least until the 1960s—not in spite of their openly professed
racism, but because of it. And such men,
as Wilkerson argues, did impose a lower-caste status on black people for 80
years after the Civil War, including segregation, denial of opportunity, and
denial of political rights—all enforced, intermittently at least, by violence,
including lynchings. The US also produced
racial theorists in both the South and the North who proclaimed white (or
Anglo-Saxon) superiority in the early 20th century. Racist attitudes have been too common
throughout American history and although they are much less common today, they
are still too influential. And Wilkerson, quoting historian James Q. Whitman,
shows how Nazi planners designing the first round of anti-Jewish legislation in
1934 drew upon precedents from southern states. For the last fifty years, however, things have been going in the other direction. Even in the South, the legal badges of caste have disappeared, and nonwhites can be found in the upper reaches of all professions. We simply are not the same country that we were in the 1950s when racial barriers were starting to come down.
Unfortunately, because of the way that
Wilkerson cherry-picks her evidence, her book (and not only hers) gives the
impression that white racists are not only common in America, but they are and
always have been typical, or even archetypal, speaking for the essence of what
it means to be white in America. If that
were true, we would have had a Constitution defining citizenship as a white
prerogative, we would not have fought the civil war, and we would not have
passed the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments—much
less the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Wilkerson’s selectivity extends even to
anecdotes from her own life. Early in
the book (p. 59), she describes a series of interviews she did at leading
retail establishments in Chicago for a story she was writing for the New York Times. “The interviews,” she writes, “went as
expected until the last one.” The last
interview subject knew that he had an appointment with a reporter from the Times, but refused to believe that it
was her, because she was a black woman.
That was rude, ignorant, and racist—but why is he so much more
significant than all the other subjects who cooperated willingly and evidently
without surprise? Only because he is the
one she can cite as evidence of white America’s hopeless, enduring racism,
coded subconsciously, she claims, into all our brains. There are other such incidents in the book,
and they are infuriating—but are they typical?
The same tendency to filter data
through a damning lens occurs in other parts of the book. On p. 111, in a
chapter on endogamy—restrictions on interracial marriage—she states that 41 of
the 50 American states eventually passed laws making intermarriage a
crime. Although she elaborates on this
in a source note on p. 409, she does not give any source for the
statistic. An
excellent Wikipedia page actually shows that 44 states had such laws at one
time or another—but it also shows that 12 of those states had repealed those
laws in the 19th century, and fourteen more between 1946 and
1967. Only 16 such states—all former
Confederacy or border states, plus Oklahoma—still had such laws when the
Supreme Court finally struck them all down in 1967.
Some months ago, I heard Coleman
Hughes, an extraordinarily wise young man, remark that under the new orthodoxy
on race, certain breakthroughs for black people are held to be impossible—but when
they occur nonetheless, we are told that they have not changed anything. Wilkerson’s long discussion of the election
and re-election of Barack Obama fits this pattern. He won, she argues, partly because of the
economic crisis, and partly because his white ancestry allowed members of “the
dominant caste”—that is, all white people—to identify with him. Then, she says, came an enormous backlash
against him, fueled by white anxiety over the loss of power. The Republican opposition to Obama was
certainly intense, but it would have been at least equally so against Hillary
Clinton, his major rival for the nomination, had she been elected. And it did not prevent Obama, of course, from
winning a solid re-election victory in 2012.
Wilkerson responds to that by documenting the extreme reaction of Rush
Limbaugh and a few other whites. And frankly—there is no way I can avoid saying
this—she welcomes the election of Donald Trump as proof of her view of the
hopeless racism of white America, its terror, as she sees it, of the moment in
2042 (predicted) when whites will no longer be in the majority. The book evidently went to press well before
the 2020 election, in which a substantial swing of white voters back towards
the Democrats outweighed a shift
towards Trump among nonwhites and gave Biden a very solid plurality of seven
million popular votes. I doubt however
that it would have changed her attitude. “Regardless of who prevails in any
given election,” she writes, “the country still labors under the divisions that
a caste system creates, and the fears and resentments of a dominant caste that
is too often in opposition to the yearnings of those deemed beneath them.”
“Caste is a disease,’ she writes,
“and none of us is immune. It is as if
alcoholism is encoded into the country’s DNA, and can never be declared fully
cured.” This is also the view of Ibram X
Kendhi, who believes we
need a Department of Antiracism composed of “experts” like himself to vet
all federal, state and local legislation for signs of racism, and of Robin
DiAngelo, who views racism, as Coleman Hughes has noted, like original sin. They call for massive re-education campaigns
at least moderate our supposedly incurable disease. The question for me is, is this supposed
cultural, deeply embedded psychological racism the key to understand the United
States? Or have we always had within our
own political and intellectual tradition all the tools we need to fight it? That is the question that we must all now fight
out, and I have been delighted to find that there are younger Americans, black
and white and Hispanic and Asian, who also reject the prevailing orthodoxy.
15 comments:
Professor
Wilkerson's thesis of caste: does not pass the smell test.I agree with much of your criticism. America, and the rest of the world has always been brimming with racism of all colors and flavors, not caste as such.But this is a great jab at Wilkerson, a proponent of negro racism (in disguise) against the white one against. Still, this discussion remains mired in a myopic US domestic race dichotomy tunnel vision she is trading on to even analogize the US situation to the Hindus. That caste system has existed nowhere else.Claiming that the North was better and less racist is both specious and Whiggish, and more importantly it weakens your argument against her megaWhiggish caste society claim.
Here was how the North, which had properly and politically wanted to rid itself of negroes permanently by electing Lincoln, handled them after: "Before 1800, free African American men had nominal rights. In some places they could vote. But free blacks gradually lost the rights that they did have. Through intimidation, changing laws and mob violence, whites claimed racial supremacy, and increasingly denied blacks citizenship. In 1857 Dred Scott declared blacks were not citizens of the United States. Segregation was rampant, especially in Philadelphia, where Negroes were excluded from concert halls, public transportation, schools, churches, orphanages, and other places. Negroes were also forced out of the very few semi skilled trades they had been working. soon after the turn of the century, African American men began to lose the right to vote -- a right that many states had granted following the Revolutionary War. New Jersey took the black vote away in 1807; in 1818, Connecticut took it away; in 1821, New York took away property requirements for white men to vote, but kept them for blacks. only a tiny percentage of black men could vote. In 1838, Pennsylvania took the vote away entirely. The only states in which black men never lost the vote were Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts.The northwest was worse. Ohio (land o Lincoln!), the state constitution of 1802 deprived blacks of the right to vote, to hold public office, and to testify against whites in court. Over the next five years, more negro restrictions. They could not live in Ohio absent a certificate proving free status, post a $500 bond "to pay for their support in case of want," were prohibited from joining the militia. In 1831 negroes were excluded from serving on juries, excluded from poorhouses, insane asylums.In Illinois there were severe restrictions on free negroes entering, and Indiana barred them altogether. Michigan, Iowa, and Wisconsin were no friendlier. Negroes in northwestern states never exceeded 1 %. Between 1820 and 1850, negroes were frequent targets of mob violence. Whites looted, tore down, and burned negro homes, churches, schools, and meeting halls, stoned, beat, murdered negroes. Philadelphia was the worst most frequent mob violence. Officials refused to protect negroes from white mobs and blamed negroes for inciting the violence with their "uppity" behavior." PBS Great post nevertheless. All the best
I thnk isms are inherent in all of us. As a man I understand myself better than women and have to struggle to find common ground and so on for racial, ethnic, religious differences. However, the more contact we have with others the less we are bothered by this as we learn to get along productively in a social or work environment of a very mixed sort. After a while barriers break down, even if it means that the next generation learns to better cooperate or even intermarry and release prejudices. One sees how a woman or black can be just as good a boss or surgeon for example and remain themselves in their identity perhaps as mother or culturally. White male job market participation plummets as factories close and need for higher education and female oriented service jobs climb. Why this atmosphere of oversensitivity to oppression just now as the system of white male control is slowly declining for good? Do those who have long suffered discrimination want to accelerate this natural decline, kick them while they' re down? Impatience is natural but this transition to a more diverse nation will certainly occur. Perhaps the real cause is that since 2001 or 2008 we have been suffering from the various crises which have been papered over, massive military involvements and popped financial bubbles resulting in incpome going to the wealthy and the middle class, of all races, declining. So fighting over a shrinking pie causes antagonism between races, sexes. Trump's solution was to champion the cause of the rust belt and the dems that of the urban classes, while Bezos and co. laugh all the way to the bank, literally trillions wealthie as mass liquidations and foreclosures ensue.
Your historical rebuttal is excellent. Cherry picking is not history. Usually ideologues win elections and work to divide peoples who would otherwise get along. Most wars would be avoided if commonsense prevailed but vocal people are not the nice, accomodative ones. Getting angry is usually a trait of meaner, short thinking people. Well thought out balanced answers speak for caution and reserve. Usually however lots of violence and bloodshed must ensue before the average man rises up in groups to stop the madness driven by crazy extremists, Trumpists or antifas. A few bad apples on the police force does not justify disbanding it for example. The universities and schools becoming places of indoctrination since the 60s for cultural marxism and in a top down manner through press and boardrooms imposing these ideas on the population, soviet light style is a sign of the times. Average white urbanite liberals are fighting back against ectremist ideologues, insisting on seeing everything in life through a certain lens, boook bannings, cancel culture, indoctrination sessions. It becomes all too much. The extremists are " jumping the shark" and will pay the price with a long period of shameif they are stopped soon and if not with a counterrevolution and equal animosity even from boring moderates. A revolution eats its children, as they say.
Professor
Just try to tell Jews that their almost prehistoric endogamy is bad.
Let Wilkerson try to convince Hindus, including those who have read David Reich's book, that their hyper localist endogamy and caste system are bad.
Let her try to convince the Chinese or the Japanese, or the Koreans, or the Vietnamese, that they may be merely equal, and not better genetically, than any other race whatsoever.
Let her try to convince any native Africans that they are not superior to American or South American negroes or mulattoes. See what the answer is.
Keep giving that a try.
All the best
Not having read Wilkerson's book, I'm not in a position to judge it. But I think Kaiser's rebuttal shows a kind of American euphemism and evasion about slavery which can't simply be confined to its most infamous racists.
To begin with, was it really "distances," that prevented British and French colonial powers from stopping slavery in their colonies? Several times Kaiser emphasizes that slavery was not unique to the American Republic, being common to Africa as well. And I am reminded that as a consequence of these and other deviations from Western civilization, almost the entire continent was colonized. As for Asia, from the Ottoman Empire to China the sovereignty of their states depended less on any legal standing, but on the inability of European states to agree on the division of the spoils. By contrast, I don't recall the great and good of the 19th century being upset with the Mexican war.
There is a tendency to confuse a distaste of slavery with an effective abhorrence of it. There is also a tendency to elide opposition to slavery with equal citizenship, when the history of African-Americans is one of being repeatedly reminded of the difference. It is one thing to say that anti-slavery and the civil rights movements represents the most generous fulfillment of the ideals of the American revolution. But much of American political thought has been dedicated to the idea that such generosity (indeed precisely this generosity) is dangerously utopian and worse than any injustice. And a perusal of Alan Taylor's "The Internal Enemy," should make it clear that elite Virginians were souring on manumission by the late 1780s even before the cotton gin. Washington's own emancipation didn't even convince his own nephew, who was not just some entitled wastrel, but a justice for the Supreme Court for a quarter-century. And the alternative to slavery was almost never equal citizenship, but colonization. (It's hard to think of an idea so poorly thought out, supported for so long and by so many otherwise intelligent people.)
There is a focus on "inevitability." Yet had the South concentrated after 1861 on using the Republic's anti-majoritan features it could have delayed emancipation for decades. That they choose independence was not (simply) because of vainglory, but because that after 85 years they though they were strong enough to form a new confederation. And they nearly succeeded. Assassinations made both the first and second Reconstructions a lot easier. Among some Americans it is not so much that the American Revolution can be redeemed, but that it has always been redeemed, and African-Americans should be grateful for the experience. Let's consider another aspect. It is not just the Franco groupies at National Review who hate the French Revolution. For a much broader section of American opinion, the Terror does not only discredit the entire Revolution, but anything about the Enlightenment they do not like. This isn't just the stuffy Whig/Gilded Age middlebrow culture. At the fall of the Berlin Wall Francois Furet was the hero of both the New York Review of Books and the New Republic. Let's consider a historian Kaiser has praised in the past, Liah Greenfeld. In "Nationalism: Five Roads to Modernity," she argued that Britain and the United States got it right, and France, Germany and Russia got it wrong, out of envious spite. So let us compare the American and French Revolutions. Those who prefer the former have not just praised its "moderation," but the way it tampered democratic enthusiasm and protected property. (Not mentioning that for the USA's first 89 the most valuable property were slaves.) One would think that in making a moral comparison of the two revolutions, the presence of slavery would have to be considered. As I recall, Greenfeld devotes what, a couple of pages, a few inadequate footnotes to the subject?
Skimpole offers some interesting history but doesn't actually rebut any of the points in David Kaiser's piece.
Charles Kaiser
Pfofessor
I have been pursuing notes re the public forum power of big media. I do not slam the Fox News site, only because it is too low a hobby to shoot ducks in a barrel.
The NYT today takes aim at the Catholic church, but all denominations are implicated by implication in the abortion issue.
Why does the NYT pick on this to call out again and again?
Mainly because it wants what little is left of religious power for itself, because it can use the constitution itself to slam any religious position to get more of their power, and because both its liberal Jewish and orthodox Jewish base are joined on this issue.
It dovetails nicely with the NYT other biggie, BLM.
Let's just put it this way, to illustrate the NYT position on abortion, Roe v Wade, and women's liberty, analogizing women as put upon oppressed persons, call them Stokelys if not of color, by the largely white right:
"Let my fetus go."
This note is dedicated to Croc, re the NYT.
All the best
Professor
Skimpole, warts and all, like Energyflow sometimes, does a good chunky rant!
Charles K here not.
It is gallant he defends you.
Blood is thickere than water.
All the best
Professor
To listen to your intramural remonstrances with Wilkerson, one would still nevertheless come away proudly thinking that the only racists in the world are white racists you look at in the mirror, and the 6 or 7 billion unwhite folks elsewhere are merely oppressed vengeful reparations hungry only partially liberated postcolonial anti racists, unracists.
All the best
Professor
Since the beginning, arguably, with Jefferson's Declaration, but certainly since the accession of FDR, American liberalism has stood opposed to racial distinctions and to any significant societal distinctions that aren't ostensibly socially rather than racially generated, and stood in favor of existing so called skin deep racial distinctions melting together by David Reich's pacific racial mixing.
These liberals stand radically and increasingly militantly against any talk of distinct races, a la The Amherst Common Language Guide, despite the fact that Reich's own liberalist slanted research conclusions render their position indefensible.
Wade points out that on moderen and progressive scientific conventional biological classification principles, human races should really stand to each other not only not as one indistinguishable species, but rather as distinct sub species.
Wade edited the Science desk at the NYT, and is not a slouch.
All the best
Professor
Just a caveat if anyone bothers to read Reich.
His discussions are quite complex. Both the research on Africa and India require close inspection.
Although Africa is now, only in recent millenia, a highly genetically diverse continental race population, it was not so much so for countless thousands of years. Caste still exists within Africa populations.
Reich does not like Wade, but Wade makes some important points against Reich's ideological biases.
All the best
Professor
Fn
Wade's Before The Dawn, an early work in this rapidly emerging field, is still very much worth reading. I consider it a must read.
All the best
Professor
Fn2
In the old days, it was either left nurture liberals, or right creationists, arguing mainly either with or against against either stripe of archaeologists and/or anthropologists or philosophers of religion or "critical" biblical studies.
Now it is geneticists, paleogeneticists, and genomics in the mix.
Whole different ball game.
All the best
Professor
Here is just an angle, regarding ritual and societal ritual purity and impurity, associated with what were in some societies called untouchables aka the unclean, to reflect on, for a moment, in Wilkerson's text context.
The Kings of ancient, and probably prehistoric, Hebrew groups, very early on, split ruling functions from priestly ones.
One ostensible ground, among several certainly, was the ritual uncleanness of the warrior elite as a group, call it a nobility, of violence in war and defense, as well as enforcing penal laws involving execution of offenders and the handling of corpses.
This is only a flawed thumbnail sketch of a lot of varied history.
But the concept of an untouchable was also connected with ritual impurity associated with a kind of role within ancient as well as modern societies.
All the best
Professor
Let's ignore Wilkerson for a moment.
Re castes, guilds, nobility, Genghis Khan, and genetics, see David Reich, Who We Are, Index, India, Yamnaya, ANI, etc.
See also Wade, Before The Dawn, A Troublesome Inheritance, Genghis, Giocangga, McDonnell, A History of Britain from the Genome's Viewpoint, surnames.
All the best,
Professor
Re castes...
Let us advert to a condition of bondage very similar to slavery.
Almost half the European colonists who landed here were put in it, on auction blocks identical to Africa slave block auctions, for bondage from 4 to 7 years, often under conditions of bondage identical to those of negro slaves.
See Colonists In Bondage, written by a highly respected CIA historian, Abott Emerson Smith. See also Bailyn, Voyagers.
All the best
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