Men, women, and children were forced into slavery from all over Africa, which is a land of widely varying cultures and unique tribal groups. In addition to this natural diversity, slaves were separated intentionally from their friends and families to discourage rebellion and communication. However, slaves in the Americas overcame the language barrier by speaking in their own pidgin language. Music, hymns, and religious hopes they developed also added to their new culture far different than that of white America. This difference allowed slaves of many backgrounds to unite as a single entity and drive against slave owners. For example, slaves would break their tools in order to delay production and farming.…
Albert J. Raboteu’s, Slave Religion: The ‘Invisible Institution’ in the Antebellum South, seeks to provide an overview of the history and institution of slaves in American history. By providing samplings of hymns, songs, and stories of first hand accounts, Raboteu provides the reader with earnestness and a desire for self-reflection. In this paper I will provide a brief summary of Raboteu’s major themes and a short response.…
With regards to religion, many slave owners, such as, Zephaniah Kingsley and Judge Wilkerson believed that religious expressions were a form of independence and would threaten slave control. They believed that their slaves’ would become more empowered and have more bravery and be more difficult to handle and more disobedient. However, other slave owners believed that it should be used as an instrument of control. When slaves were actually able to attend Christian services, it was by a white minister who taught them to obey their masters in order to be saved by God. However, if they disobeyed them, they would not be saved, but destined for damnation.…
They were treated inhumanely, and were not looked at as human beings but as possessions that were inferior. African slaves resisted their enslavement by running away, fighting back, poisoning food, and plotting riots. They were beaten, whipped lynched and abused for simply trying to escape for freedom.…
This book not only goes into details about the labor that the slaves partook in on a daily basis that kept America up and running, but also about the cultural aspect of bring slaves into the country. Bringing African’s over to America brought a whole new culture to America. Although white men enslaved African’s they continued to embrace their culture. They brought a new religion, language, music, and several skills that have uniquely blended the American culture that it is today.…
African Americans can trace their religious roots back to African religions, Judaism, Islam and Christianity. Christianity for the majority of African Americans became the dominated religion because of evangelism by Europeans. Instead of keeping the enslaved Africans submissive and in line Christianity enriched and strengthened the lives of African Americans to seek their freedom. Several of the insurrection and antislavery movements were born in the African American church. From its inception the African American church has been an institution of hope as well as a refuge against a cruel system of slavery and oppression. It was the African – American church which became the arena and platform for social, political, cultural and economic life for the…
“Music is a moral law. It gives soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination, and charm and gaiety to life and to everything,” quoted by Plato. Music is a way in where you can escape all things in life. It’s like your exit out of all matters. You play it when you’re mad, sad, happy, or just simply need a little uplifting. There are different genres of music. You have pop, rock, classical, R&B, hip hop, contemporary gospel, jazz, blues, and much more. However, gospel has been transformed throughout time. Stated by Dr. William Reynolds, “Christian song is never static, never quite the same from one generation to another” (Doucette 6). It’s common for each generation following the next to change the sound of how a song was…
The blues is the music made by slaves. It was the first type of music, and it was created by normal people when they were forced into slavery many centuries ago. When more than 12 million African slaves were taken over to America countries to work they used to have everything taken away from them. Their rights, their names and their possessions were all stripped from them. However the one thing slave owners could not take away from the African slaves was music. Therefore the slaves sang while they worked, they sang different types of songs. There were work songs, coded songs and traditional songs. The work songs were sung to help them while they worked traditional songs to keep their traditions with them and coded songs would have secret messages of how to escape. One example of a coded song is ‘Wade in the Water’. This told the slaves that they should wash themselves in the water to get rid of scent so when their owners came after them with dogs, the dogs would not be able to smell them. There is an old legend that a man called Robert Johnson went to the cross roads and sold his soul to the devil in order to be a good guitarist. The blues started when slavery started. Blues is the name for the music of the past because it used to be like when people are upset they are known as being blue. The blues then went on to become greater music, more people started getting involved and it has evolved to become the music we have today.…
When the word slavery comes to mind in the present day most people think of it as something that has passed, a long and tragic historical event that involved the capture and exportation and exploitation of human beings as forced labor with no freedom of movement or choice. Slavery brings to mind the forcible deportation of Africans into the new world, associated with colonization and empirical money making ventures, like sugar, coffee and cotton. Yet, the reality of the situation is that slavery exists today, and on an even greater scale than it did during the empirical era.…
In the Old South, it was understood that Christianity was not only used to save heathen souls, but also to keep the slaves suppressed and kept them from striking back against their masters.(Page 14) Southern white slave owners would pick and choose only certain bible lessons for the slaves to be shown. The owners felt that by restricting the knowledge of the slaves, they would be able to keep them inhibited. Words of the bible were twisted to mean different things to the slave population. Slaves were told that if they did not obey their masters and perform their allotted tasks that God would burn them in the flames of an eternal hell. To be good children of God the slaves were to accept their lot, be meek and faithful, patient and submissive, even if their masters were cruel. Slaves were taught to leave it to God to punish. And if they behaved great would be their reward in heaven. (Page 14)…
The enslavement of African Americans was undoubtedly a cruel institution. Nowadays, it is looked upon with shame. However, there was a time when it had its staunch supporters. Southern slave owners would always defend this institution, despite the firestorm of criticism it faced, justifying it with legal, religious, and economic arguments.…
What they would do is lick their slave and they would not let their slave pray or sing. They weren’t even allowed sometimes to go to church. A lot of slaves didn’t even know how to read and write.…
Throughout American history, African Americans fought to establish their own culture. Even though they were silenced by white laws and stereotypes, African Americans created their own distinct culture, to a certain extent from 1800 to 1860. By mixing their African American traditions and Christian ideas, they formed a religion, their own version of Christianity. African American rebellions, though small and infrequent, were used to express their beliefs on slavery and add to their distinct culture. And, with the constant fear of being split up by being sold, African American families managed to form within plantations through marriages and children. Despite being limited by slavery, African Americans still managed to form a unique culture through their religion, fight for freedom, and family.…
Slaves endured slavery and discrimination with leisure time activities and slaves churches. Slaves were tortured for almost the whole day with barely any time to rest. Their fingers feel numb, their eyes feel tired, and their legs feel broken. They worked without pay. They started to work in the morning until dawn. The men had to work harder than the women. The women worked as housemaids, cooks, babysitters, and doctors. The slaves were living in dilapidated huts and hoses. Every Time the slaves disobeyed, they faced extreme torture. They were sometimes used as a horse to plow the field.…
Aside from what the owners and overseers thought, slaves lived their own lives. They made friends, fell in love, played and prayed, sang, told stories, and engaged in the necessary chores of day to day living. These things as well as family and religion were also important to the slaves.…