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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
An Important First Broadside, August 11, 2004
This book had some very helpful information, and very surprising information, which I was delighted to learn. Unfortunately, I didn't learn as much as I would have liked because of the writing style.
This is honestly in part due to translation, which Gordon can't be blamed for. There were parts of the book where one could tell that there was an obvious translation error from the French, where the word or phrase wasn't used quite the correct way it is supposed to be used in English. However, numerous times Gordon also contradicts his own thoughts, making for confusing reading. As he himself admits, much of the research itself is contradictory, but he could have done a better job of weeding through the research, and his editor a better job of clearing up contradictions before publication.
I still recommend this, because it is such important information, and there is so little out there. This book should be seen as important first broadside in understanding an important part of our history. There was so much information here that I had never before known. I had no idea the slave trade continued across Sahara until 1920's, and slavery still allowed in the Middle East until 1970's. Gordon gives amazing details on the horrible atrocities committed under this institution, like emasculation of children. His scholarship is quite good- he rightly faults past researchers who were so against slavery that they made the problem bigger than it was. So, for instance, Gordon shows how the emasculation death rate of 99% is exaggerated by far, it being closer to only a 90% death rate.
It is interesting that most of the slavery under Islamic rule was household help and concubines, leading to very few field workers in the history of Arab Islamic slavery, the opposite of the Trans-Atlantic slave trade. This also made women more expensive than all men, except for eunuchs. Gordon rightfully shows that though Islamic slavery lasted far longer than the Atlantic slave trade, some 1000 years, it was generally kinder, with slaves usually treated more as family members- although certainly not always. It is after all an evil institution. And though whites were often enslaved as well, there was definite racism with blacks being considered inferior slaves, doing harder work, and in the end, the only slaves.
And I had no idea that there were benefits to colonialism. For, since slavery is approved in Qur'an and by Mohammed (pbuh), it was a long-established practice that no Islamic country was willing to remove on it's own. There was no indigenous anti-slavery movement that grew up as did in the West, such as the Anti-Slavery Society or among the Quakers. It was only through the pressure of the European countries, through colonialism and then subsequently economic pressure, that finally convinced every Islamic country in the world (with the exception of Mauritania) to finally officially give up slavery.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
good study in arab slavery, April 2, 2002
Murray Gordon's expressed purpose in writing Slavery in the Arab World was to raise awareness about an issue which has been neglected in academia in recent years: the vast arab slave trade, which for millenia dwarfed any other slave operations in the world. the book contrasts arab slavery, which granted some minimal rights to its slaves, to european slavery, which, although it lasted briefly compared to arab slavery, was arguably harsher in its treatment of slaves. the book traces the history of slavery from the dawn of islam, to the 1960's, when it was abolished in the gulf states, noting that slavery still persists in some african nations. it is fairly easy to read, and contians a great deal of information on the topic.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
WELL RESEARCHED AND SCHOLARLY, June 23, 2003
Gordon murray has produced a great pioneeing scholarly work into a known but least talked about aspect in history. And that is the arab slave trade in africa. he shows how in africa like other places throughout the world there was already a established slave system, that was similar to european serfdom and other forms of servitude practice throughout the world. he also shows how slavery was embedded in the arab world before islam. and how islam became the rationale for slavery and the basic attitudes of arabs towards africans. some good but most negative. the eastern slave trade was mainly dominated by arabs and other asians (persians, turks, east indians) but the africans from the interior as well as the swahillis along the coast played very signifigant roles in this trade. he also shows how there was diaspora of africans throughout the arab world. this book is excellent for anybody who is interested in the eastern slave trade. i highly recommend it.
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