Islam and slavery-The persistence of history
Islamic State’s revival of slavery, extreme though it is,
finds disquieting echoes across the Arab world
“SPOILS of war,” snaps Dabiq , the
English-language journal of Islamic State (IS). The reference is to thousands of
Yazidi women the group forced into sex slavery after taking their mountain,
Sinjar, in August last year. Far from being a perversion, it claims that forced
concubinage is a religious practice sanctified by the Koran. In a chapter
called “Women”, the Koran sanctions the marriage of up to four wives, or “those
that your right hands possess”.
Literalists, like those behind the Dabiq article, have interpreted
these words as meaning “captured in battle”. Its purported female author, Umm
Sumayyah, celebrated the revival of Islam’s slave-markets and even proffered
the hope that Michelle Obama, the wife of America’s president, might soon be
sold there. “I and those with me at home prostrated to Allah in gratitude on
the day the first slave-girl entered our home,” she wrote. Sympathisers have
done the same, most notably the allied Nigerian militant group, Boko Haram,
which last year kidnapped an entire girls’ school in Chibok (pictured above).
Religious preachers have responded
with a chorus of protests. “The re-introduction of slavery is forbidden in
Islam. It was abolished by universal consensus,” declared an open letter sent
by 140 Muslim scholars to IS’s “caliph”, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, earlier this
year. “You have taken women as concubines and thus revived…corruption and
lewdness on the earth.”
But while IS’s embrace of outright slavery has been singled out for
censure, religious and political leaders have been more circumspect about other
“slave-like” conditions prevalent across the region. IS’s targeting of an
entire sect for kidnapping, killing and sex trafficking, and its bragging, are
exceptional; forced labour for sexual and other forms of exploitation is not.
From Morocco, where thousands of children work as petites bonnes , or
maids, to the Syrian refugee camps in Jordan where girls are forced into
prostitution, to the unsanctioned rape and abuse of domestics in the Gulf, aid
workers say servitude is rife.
Scholars are sharply divided over how much cultural mores are to blame.
Apologists say that, in a concession to the age, the Prophet Muhammad tolerated
slavery, but—according to a prominent American theologian trained in Salifi
seminaries, Yasir Qadhi—he did so grudgingly and advocated abolition.
Repeatedly in the Koran the Prophet calls for the manumission of slaves and
release of captives, seeking to alleviate the slave systems run by the Greeks,
Romans, Byzantines and Jewish Himyarite kings of Yemen. He freed one slave, a
chief’s daughter, by marrying her, and chose Bilal, another slave he had freed,
to recite the first call to prayer after his conquest of Mecca. His message was
liberation from worldly oppression, says Mr Qadhi—enslavement to God, not man.
Other scholars insist, however, that IS’s treatment of Yazidis adheres to
Islamic tradition. “They are in full compliance with Koranic understanding in
its early stages,” says Professor Ehud Toledano, a leading authority on Islamic
slavery at Tel Aviv University. Moreover, “what the Prophet has permitted,
Muslims cannot forbid.” The Prophet’s calls to release slaves only spurred a
search for fresh stock as the new empire spread, driven by commerce, from
sub-Saharan Africa to the Persian Gulf.
To quash a black revolt in the salt mines of southern Iraq, the Abbasid
caliphs in Baghdad conscripted Turkish slaves into their army. Within a few
generations these formed a power base, and from 1250 to 1517 an entire slave
caste, the Mamluks (Arabic for “chattel”), ruled Egypt.
A path to power
Their successors, the Ottoman Turks, perfected the system. After conquering
south-eastern Europe in the late 14th century, they imposed the devshirme ,
or tribute, enslaving the children of the rural poor, on the basis that they
were more pagan than Christian, and therefore not subject to the protections
Islam gave to People of the Book. Far from resisting this, many parents were
happy to deliver their offspring into the white slave elite that ran the
empire.
Under this system, enslaved boys climbed the ranks of the army and civil
service. Girls entered the harem as concubines to bear sultans. All
anticipated, and often earned, power and wealth. Unlike the feudal system of
Christian Europe, this one was meritocratic and generated a diverse gene pool.
Mehmet II, perhaps the greatest of the Ottoman caliphs, who ruled in the 15th
century, had the fair skin of his mother, a slave girl from the empire’s
north-western reaches.
All this ended because of abolition in the West. After severing the
trans-Atlantic slave trade in the 19th century, Western abolitionists turned on
the Islamic world’s, and within decades had brought down a system that had
administered not just the Ottoman empire but the Sherifian empire of Morocco,
the Sultanate of Oman with its colonies on the Swahili-speaking coast and West
Africa’s Sokoto Caliphate.
With Western encouragement, Serb and Greek rebels sloughed off devshirme .
Fearful of French ambitions, the mufti of Tunis wooed the British by
closing his slave-markets in 1846. A few years later, the sultan in Istanbul
followed suit. Some tried to resist, including Morocco’s sultan and the cotton
merchants of Egypt, who had imported African slaves to make up the shortages
left by the ravages of America’s civil war. But colonial pressure proved
unstoppable. Under Britain’s consul-general, Evelyn Baring, Earl of Cromer,
Egypt’s legislative assembly dutifully abolished slavery at the end of the 19th
century. The Ottoman register for 1906 still lists 194 eunuchs and 500 women in
the imperial harem, but two years later they were gone.
For almost a century the Middle East, on paper at least, was free of
slaves. “Human beings are born free, and no one has the right to enslave,
humiliate, oppress or exploit them,” proclaimed the Cairo Declaration on Human
Rights in Islam in 1990. Early jihadist groups followed the trend,
characterising themselves as liberation movements and, as such, rejecting
slavery.
But though slavery per se may be condemned, observers point to the
persistence of servitude. The Global Slavery Index (GSI), whose estimates are
computed by an Australian NGO working with Hull University, claims that of 14
states with over 1% of the population enslaved, more than half are Muslim.
Prime offenders range from the region’s poorest state, Mauritania, to its
richest per head, Qatar.
The criteria and data used by GSI have been criticised, but evidence
supports the thrust of its findings. Many Arab states took far longer to
criminalise slavery than to ban it. Mauritania, the world’s leading enslaver,
did not do so until 2007. Where bans exist, they are rarely enforced. The year
after Qatar abolished slavery in 1952, the emir took his slaves to the
coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. Government inspections and prosecutions are
rarities. “The security chiefs, the judges and the lawyers all belong to the
class that historically owned slaves,” says Sarah Mathewson of London-based
Anti-Slavery International. “They are part of the problem.”
No labour practice has drawn more international criticism than the
kafala system, which ties migrant workers to their employers. This is not
slavery as IS imposes it; migrants come voluntarily, drawn by the huge wealth
gap between their own countries and the Gulf. But the system “facilitates
slavery”, says Nicholas McGeehan, who reports for Human Rights Watch on
conditions in the desert camps where most such workers live. The Gulf’s 2.4m
domestic servants are even more vulnerable. Most do not enjoy the least
protection under labour laws. Housed and, in some cases, locked in under their
employer’s roof, they are prey to sexual exploitation.
Irons and red-hot
bars
Again, these workers have come voluntarily; but disquieting echoes persist.
Many Gulf nationals can be heard referring to their domestics as malikat
(slaves). Since several Asian governments have suspended or banned their female
nationals from domestic work in the Gulf out of concern for their welfare,
recruitment agencies are turning to parts of Africa, such as Uganda, which once
exported female slaves. Some domestic servants are abused with irons and
red-hot bars: resonant, says Mr McGeehan, of slave-branding in the past.
Elsewhere in the region, the collapse of law and order provides further
cover for a comeback of old practices. Syrian refugee camps in Jordan provide a
supply of girls for both the capital’s brothels and for Gulf men trawling
websites, which offer short-term marriages for brokerage fees of $140-270 each.
Trafficking has soared in Libya’s Mediterranean ports, which under the Ottomans
exported sub-Saharan labour to Europe. Long before Boko Haram kidnapped girls,
Anti-Slavery International had warned that Nigerian businessmen were buying
“fifth wives”—concubines alongside the four wives permitted by Islam—from
neighbouring Niger.
Gulf states insist they are dealing with the problem. In June Kuwait’s
parliament granted domestic servants labour rights, the first Gulf state to do
so. It is also the only Gulf state to have opened a refuge for female migrants.
Qatar, fearful that reported abuses might upset its hosting of the World Cup in
2022, has promised to improve migrant housing. And earlier this year
Mauritania’s government ordered preachers at Friday prayers to publicise a fatwa
by the country’s leading clerics declaring: “Slavery has no legal foundation in
sharia law.” Observers fear, though, that this is window-dressing. And
Kuwait’s emir has yet to ratify the new labour-rights law.
Rather than stop the abuse, Gulf officials prefer to round on their
critics, accusing them of Islamophobia just as their forebears did. Oman and
Saudi Arabia have long been closed to Western human-rights groups investigating
the treatment of migrants. Now the UAE and Qatar, under pressure after a wave
of fatalities among workers building venues for the 2022 World Cup, are keeping
them out, too.
Internal protests are even riskier. Over the past two years hundreds of
migrant labourers building Abu Dhabi’s Guggenheim and Louvre museums have been
detained, roughed up and deported, says Human Rights Watch, after strikes over
unpaid wages. Aminetou Mint Moctar, a rare Mauritanian Arab on the board of SOS
Esclaves, a local association campaigning for the rights of haratin ,
or descendants of black slaves, has received death threats.
Is it too much to hope that the Islamic clerics denouncing slavery might also
condemn other instances of forced and abusive labour? Activists and Gulf
migrants are doubtful. Even migrants’ own embassies can be strangely mute, not
wanting criticism to curb the vital flow of remittances. When Narendra Modi,
India’s prime minister, visited the UAE this week, his nationals there
complained that migrant rights were last on his list. Western governments
generally have other priorities. One is simply to defeat IS, whose extreme
revival of slavery owes at least something to the region’s persistent and
pervasive tolerance of servitude.
No comments:
Post a Comment