The Islamic world is astonishingly silent on its gruesome history of slavery

Any talk of reparations that doesn’t include the Arab countries and Turkey is dishonest

Justin Marozzi writing in the Sunday Telegraph. His book ‘Captives and Companions: A History of Slavery and the Slave Trade in the Islamic World’ was shortlisted for the 2025 Baillie Gifford Prize

In his new book, The Big Payback, the British comedian Sir Lenny Henry has called on the UK Government to pay £18tn in reparations for slavery to black British people.

Having spent the past five years researching a history of slavery and the slave trade in the Islamic world, what struck me especially about Sir Lenny’s intervention (apart from the figure of £18tn, which is equivalent to between six and seven times the size of the UK’s economy), was the continued dominance of the transatlantic trade in public discourse about slavery.

While the West has engaged in critical discussions over this egregious phenomenon for many years, the same cannot be said for swathes of the Middle East: a region in which slavery and the accompanying trade endured without pause from the seventh to the 20th centuries.

As the Sudanese-British journalist Zeinab Badawi has argued in An African History of Africa, while Arab societies benefited enormously from enslaved African labour for more than a millennium, there has been little, if any, meaningful examination of the subject in Arab states, and no public debate on reparations. “The silence must be broken,” she writes.

The reality is that there is barely any public discussion in Arab countries, Turkey or Iran, of the historical practice of slavery, let alone the issue of reparations.

The inability or unwillingness to reckon with the legacy of slavery is not a marginal issue. The Atlantic trade accounted for between 11–14 million enslaved Africans, the corresponding trade with the geographical heart of the Muslim world, centred on North Africa and the Middle East, was probably responsible for 12–15 million, possibly as many as 17 million if India is included. That is without Malaysia and Indonesia.

Such reckoning as does exist remains in its infancy. In 2015, when Qatar was under pressure for its treatment of migrant workers ahead of the 2022 World Cup, it turned Bin Jelmood House, once a holding area for enslaved East Africans waiting to be sold, into a museum memorialising slavery.

The museum says it explores the role Islam played in providing guidance for the humane treatment of the enslaved and the ultimate abolition of slavery‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬. “The story in Qatar begins in enslavement but ends in shared freedom and shared prosperity,”‬‬‬‬‬‬ it declares. This gloss fails to address the appalling reality of slavery and its legacy.

In Istanbul I interviewed a young Turkish historian who described how a professor brushed her off when she sought his advice on a doctoral thesis on Ottoman war captives. “Our ancestors treated their slaves very well,” he told her. “Don’t waste your time with this.”

In some quarters, merely discussing the history of slavery in the Islamic world, never mind broaching reparations, brings about immediate accusations of Islamophobia.

After my introduction to the historical, legal and theological underpinnings of slavery in the Islamic world, I was disappointed but not surprised to hear that one student had complained to the university. While academic freedom was very important, he wrote, it would be “potentially harmful to students” if the lectures continued.

In a stronger reaction I was accused of Islamophobia and likened to the “compromised academics” of 1930s Germany who enabled the genocide of the Jews.

Yet any meaningful and historically worthwhile international debate on reparations must necessarily include Arab states and Turkey. As a 2003 conference in Johannesburg on the “Arab-led Slavery of Africans” noted, there was a “collective amnesia about Arab enslavement of Africans,” despite it representing the largest and longest “removal of any indigenous people in the history of humanity”. Tidiane N’Diaye, the Franco-Senegalese anthropologist, calls it a “veiled genocide”.

In the more autocratic Middle East, however, the conversation has yet to even begin.

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3 Responses

  1. From the perspective of those that are expected to pay in any reparation scam, the taxpayers, “I didn’t keep any slaves and you didn’t pick any cotton!”.

  2. I ran across this essay the other day. In it Muslims are asked what makes them doubt Islam. One thing that works by a landslide is that Islam is immoral.

    “The survey question: “If you are a Muslim, what causes you to doubt your religion the most from the following options:”

    Moral arguments against Islam. Result: 49%

    Weakness of the Islamic “civilisation”. Result: 24%

    Scientific arguments by Atheist apologists (e.g. Darwinism). Result: 20%

    Arguments for the truth of another religion. Result: 7%

    The author conclusions: “The results are fascinating: the primary vulnerability of Islam is its immorality. Yes other factors have significance to, but this single factor is twice as significant as any other single factor.

    And trying to persuade a Muslim that Christianity is true and Islam is false is of very low significance, at just 7%. If you try that approach as the only method at your disposal, then you are wasting your opportunities. Try to let go of your own preconceptions, and address the reality of this survey.”

    From: Email to Bishops: Can Christianity defeat Islam?
    hellish2050.substack.com

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