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The BRUTAL History Of Jamaica's Slave Trade w/ Tom Zoellner 

The Majority Report w/ Sam Seder
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The history of slavery in the Atlantic is a very long and brutal one. In the British Empire, slaves were brought from Africa, and if they survived the middle passage, were sent to Jamaica. From there they could be sold a plantation in what would become the United States, or they stay to work on the sugar plantations in Jamaica. The slave trade made Jamaica the most profitable of Britain's Caribbean colonies and made those involved insanely wealthy. Author Tom Zoellner joins Emma Vigeland to discuss this history.
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Emma Vigeland: Let's just talk about and set the stage for Jamaica's 1831 revolt against slavery. Place us in that time period if you could between the Haitian revolution and the civil war. How ubiquitous was slavery in Jamaica at the time? I mean I think I read in your book nine out of every 10 Jamaicans were enslaved so that's an incredible figure. Just give us some broader context and then we can begin to narrow things down.
Tom Zoellner: Sure at that point British slavery was in its 330th year. It was a lasting and extremely profitable institution for the empire. They raised sugar as a monoculture. That is to say that was really the only thing going on in Jamaica was the production of this nutritionally worthless product which nevertheless fueled an addiction back in the mother country. And in order to raise it required this unspeakably cruel institution. Which was multi-generational in nature which required fear and torture to sustain it. And what had happened was that missionaries Christian missionaries from the mother country, baptist and methodists primarily, had finally gained entrance to what was called the sugar islands. And began to spread the dangerous message that people can be free in a spiritual sense. And this bled over into a more political message that we can be free in a material sense.
Emma: And I want to touch on that because that was an incredible dynamic that you laid out. but let's back up a little bit to talking about how the British see Jamaica in the first place in the 1600s. And how that kind of set up an economy and infrastructure for what we saw 200 years later.
Zoellner: Sure. When Britain deposed its king and appointed Oliver Cromwell the word protectorate, he had an aggressive foreign policy. In particular, something called that he called the western design. Comparisons with the modern-day are always you know tricky. But you know this might be compared to you know us going into Iraq this was this patriotic thing that we're going to seize the Caribbean islands from the Spanish. And the seizure of Jamaica was kind of a comic opera. Nothing went right. But they stumbled into a military victory and claimed what happened to have been for them one of the most profitable islands in the Caribbean. And that was where you really saw slavery ramped up into a commodity-level concern.
Emma: So I mean there was the twin I guess commodities of slavery and the role that Jamaica played in that, which I want to ask you about, and sugar. So what would you say those were the two primary fundamental economic drivers in jamaica for great Britain.
Zoellner: No question those were the twin foundations of the economy.
Emma: And so then talk a little bit more about the slave trade in jamaica's role in the slave trade.
Zoellner: Sure. Jamaica was what was known as the slave depot of the Caribbean. That is to say that kidnapped human beings from Africa were taken primarily first to Jamaica and then traded throughout the rest of the British possessions in North America. The what would eventually become the United States among them. and so the harbor at Kingston and port royal was the first site of the new world that an enslaved person a newly insight person was going to see. And you know there are reports really vivid heartbreaking reports of a kind of catatonia that would descend upon those who were entering a horrific new life at that point. You know they had already survived the middle passage and what they saw in front of them was this riotous explosion of verdure. The whips, gangs, this new language.

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20 авг 2021

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Комментарии : 77   
@kandre7619
@kandre7619 2 года назад
This is a pleasant surprise. As a Jamaican I never expected to see this on TMR. Thx 4 helping to bring attention to this.
@Armed-Forever
@Armed-Forever 2 года назад
Same and same, I heard it was rough
@darkjaguar111
@darkjaguar111 2 года назад
Same here, leave it to TMR to shed some light on Jamaica's history. People need to realize that underneath the "sunny and musical paradise" venire is a island built on blood and sugarcane . Plus, post-slavery Jamaica wasn't exactly a picnic under the British crown before 1962.
@InternetMameluq
@InternetMameluq 2 года назад
They've done a few segments on the history of Jamaica over the years. Greetings from the Dominican Republic.
@GrahamNickerson
@GrahamNickerson 2 года назад
I'm a Black Loyalist descendant and the shadow of Jamaica on North American history is a story that needs to be told.
@InternetMameluq
@InternetMameluq 2 года назад
@@GrahamNickerson Every country in the Caribbean is grossly under evaluated, and gives us stunning illumination on the impurity of the American project.
@mu6qy
@mu6qy 2 года назад
Scotland held the majority of slave trade there, thats why 70 % of Jamaicans have Scottish names
@leestab10
@leestab10 9 месяцев назад
Yes, but are you aware of Jacobite wars of the 17th century and the expulsion of hundreds to the islands like Jamaica by Oliver Cromwell. In the ship's logs there are descriptions of those expelled. Majority described as 'black' with names like Cameron; Douglas etc There is a lot more to this history that is not told.
@gargomelbogle2700
@gargomelbogle2700 2 года назад
Thank you very informative to me has a Jamaican 🇯🇲 this is very emotional to me .Black my story the untold stories!!🤔
@mikejunior80
@mikejunior80 2 года назад
Jamaica was a colony of the Kingdom of England, Subsequently the Kingdom of Great Britain then the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland from 1655-1962.
@HellenShort
@HellenShort 2 года назад
It was originally a colony of Spain. The English fought them for it.
@LHKKKing
@LHKKKing 2 года назад
300 years
@justbenice72
@justbenice72 Год назад
1655-current
@lewa3910
@lewa3910 2 года назад
This history needs to be taught in british secondary school, we were never taught about our colonial history
@africanrhino8508
@africanrhino8508 2 года назад
So you need to be taught to hate yourself?
@BenDover-tj8vf
@BenDover-tj8vf Год назад
It depends on your age , we had an extensive knowledge of colonial history at school , history is a second class status now sadly
@unruly7516
@unruly7516 Год назад
@@africanrhino8508interesting, you make me sick
@neutronstarpilot4393
@neutronstarpilot4393 2 года назад
I'm reminded of the line from the show American Gods, where Orlando Jones' character talks to the slaves in the ship. "You didn't realise you were black yet, yall thought you was just people" It would be nice to close such dark chapters in human history, but never forgetting is the price and the reminder to never write them again, I would hope.
@HellenShort
@HellenShort 2 года назад
Black people are the only people who have never been compensated for slavery. Every other wronged group has received compensation. People argue that slavery always went on. Not on this scale, not for as long as this, and not as brutal. And not generating the kind of wealth it did for Britain and other European countries. Tens of millions of Africans died. That holocaust isn't even acknowledged. Many more millions died during the crossing. And people were literally worked to death. When the slaves were freed, they had nothing. They were given nothing. The slave owners, who made the equivalent of billions today, were given millions to compensate for the loss of their "property". Again, the slaves got nothing. And western countries that built their wealth on the backs of those people apparently think that's okay.
@rebeccaaugustine8628
@rebeccaaugustine8628 2 года назад
I thought the same thing!
@disct1597
@disct1597 2 года назад
Why does it trigger some people when listening to history, information snd facts…called education btw
@InternetMameluq
@InternetMameluq 2 года назад
If you don't find this history profoundly upsetting you're not listening.
@disct1597
@disct1597 2 года назад
@@InternetMameluq very true,, it triggers racists to deny and white wash history!
@divineenergysource833
@divineenergysource833 11 месяцев назад
I guess it depends on any personal connection or the presence of generational trauma stored in the DNA or whether you have a soul or not
@claudettereid
@claudettereid 11 месяцев назад
i guess white slavery has been hidden to hide emotions
@majesticjourneys7080
@majesticjourneys7080 Год назад
My great grandfather was from Jamaica, never met him. Going to Jamaica soon and hope I can find records of my family. I still have 7% of Scottish Dna floating around because of this history 😮‍💨
@Mrsmerlinsantana
@Mrsmerlinsantana Год назад
One of my ancestors was from Jamaica too.
@kaykaykay892
@kaykaykay892 11 месяцев назад
I hope you find everything and learn a lot. :)
@gatheringleaves
@gatheringleaves 6 месяцев назад
Two of my great grandfathers were from Jamaica!
@spectrumwavesmusic
@spectrumwavesmusic 2 года назад
how can i get an interview about a topic want to talk about
@hughlowe4431
@hughlowe4431 10 месяцев назад
Reparations needed
@xtaintedx3l0vex
@xtaintedx3l0vex 2 года назад
powerful stuff here
@claudettejenny4419
@claudettejenny4419 11 месяцев назад
THANKS BE TO GOD FOR HIS GOODNESS GRACE AND MERCY WE OVERCOME AND PUT THE DEVIL TO SHAME
@soniawilliams5198
@soniawilliams5198 Месяц назад
wickedness, sheer wickedness
@gatheringleaves
@gatheringleaves 6 месяцев назад
For any Jamaican looking to find out more info about their ancestors who were enslaved the Jamaican slave registers kept from 1817 to 1832 are a great place to start, although a lot of info is left out, its a good starting point in my opinion
@josephrobinetteobidenjr.2971
@josephrobinetteobidenjr.2971 2 года назад
Slavery never ended
@Thatonekid327
@Thatonekid327 2 года назад
I searched this up be cuz lm a jamaican and my mom and my dad treat me like a lion and they call me lazy and say this is the real world so yeah
@shinyfrenchfry
@shinyfrenchfry 2 года назад
Good interview. Guy sounds like Nick Cage
@DumbAssSpeakingWithMansVoice
@DumbAssSpeakingWithMansVoice 2 года назад
Who owned the slave ships??
@Armed-Forever
@Armed-Forever 2 года назад
Aliens
@kimmnguni
@kimmnguni 2 года назад
Britain
@kimmnguni
@kimmnguni 2 года назад
The devils
@disct1597
@disct1597 2 года назад
@Aaron Dickson Were they British?
@yourrealdad816
@yourrealdad816 2 года назад
Shhh
@gabbyellis7064
@gabbyellis7064 Год назад
IM AM SAD BC IM JAMAICAN
@waynesimon2425
@waynesimon2425 6 дней назад
Never be Sad because you are an Israelite from the tribe of Benjamin.. Learn your true history.
@TurtleTimeVoiceOvers
@TurtleTimeVoiceOvers 2 года назад
Golden toilets = golden coaches
@billybigwig1154
@billybigwig1154 2 года назад
Great show. Left is best
@alexvandu1
@alexvandu1 2 года назад
GO jamaica. The land of wood and water
@prettypurple7175
@prettypurple7175 7 месяцев назад
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@ahfimiwonawun
@ahfimiwonawun 12 дней назад
I don’t know what he means by christian missionaries from the “mother country” spreading the spirit of freedom to Jamaica and other islands. We already had the spirit of freedom. People were fighting for freedom every step of the way from being captured in Africa and marched in the coffle lines, fighting for freedom on the coasts of Africa before being forced onto the ships, fighting for freedom on the ships and fighting for freedom in the concentration camps in the americas as well. Out of all the rebellions and wars against slavery in Jamaica(and Jamaica had more rebellions than all of the other english colonies in the caribbean combined) , only one was lead by a christian convert. All of the others were lead by nonchristians.
@jayoils123
@jayoils123 Год назад
9 out of ten people was enslave???? You mean 10/10
@warlockpaladin2261
@warlockpaladin2261 Год назад
Just remember, there no shortage of Ivy Leaguers who are eager to say that Americans started the slave trade in 1619.
@africanrhino8508
@africanrhino8508 2 года назад
Wow, this is really relevant to anything going on today.
@dionterussell3620
@dionterussell3620 2 года назад
It's 100 percent history!
@Silvashoots
@Silvashoots 2 года назад
the person you should be talking to is TARIQ NASHEED.
@rigsby86
@rigsby86 2 года назад
For what? We'd be calling him a nazi if he were white
@heru-ptahmaat-ra4852
@heru-ptahmaat-ra4852 Год назад
For what? He don’t even like Jamaicans… mf spend half his time talking down on Africans and Caribbean’s because we aren’t ADOS
@user-bs5qr5ie4s
@user-bs5qr5ie4s Год назад
She should be talking to actual Jamaican historian
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