You are on page 1of 8

Interview

with Mauritanian human rights activist Biram Dah Abeid

"Time to end Arab racism"


Today in Mauritania, children are still being born into slavery. Not only that, they will
remain slaves for the rest of their lives. It is the most prevalent and most extreme
expression of Arab racism in North Africa, says human rights activist Biram Dah Abeid
and it is time to consign it to the past. By Claudia Mende

Slavery has been officially banned in Mauritania for the past 36 years. In 2007 a new law was
introduced that allowed slave owners to be prosecuted. What types of slavery still exist in the country in
spite of this?

Biram Dah Abeid: Many babies born in Mauritania come into the world as the property of others.
According to the Global Slavery Index, up to 160,000 people in the country are currently living in
conditions of slavery. The black Africans – Haratins – are often the slaves of the country's Arab-Berber
elite, the white Moors, who make up about one third of the population. The Haratins are bonded to the
family of their master, have no right to education, no civil rights, earn no money and are often forced to
do very hard work.

How is this tradition passed on?

Dah Abeid: Traditionally the slaves are not sold; they are given away as children when the master's
children marry and start their own families. Females are the property of the masters from birth, they are
We use cookies on this site to enhance your user experience.
OK, I agree
Decline
expected to gratify his sexual desires and are not permitted to refuse his advances. Alongside this
By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent
traditional bondage, there are also some modern forms of slavery being practised.
for us to set cookies. More info
What's the difference?

Dah Abeid: This involves black Mauritanians and migrants from other African countries. They are
forced to do hard, poorly paid labour and are mistreated by their Arab-Berber masters. The men and
children tend animals and the women are put to work as domestic servants under very harsh
conditions.

The Mauritanian government claims that traditional slavery is rare and restricted to the remoter areas of
the country.

Dah Abeid: That simply isn't true. The government wants to play the whole thing down. Our
organisation, the IRA (Initiative pour la Resurgence du Mouvement Abolutioniste en Mauritanie) has
freed many people from slavery over the years. We've also encountered cases where Haratins were
being kept as slaves in some of the upmarket neighbourhoods in Nouakchott, where the ruling elite live.

This Arab racism towards black people is to be found throughout the Sahel region, between North
Africa and sub-Saharan Africa. But it is very pronounced in Mauritania. Why is that?

Dah Abeid: The lifestyle of the Moors has always been closely connected to slavery. After their arrival
in Mauritania between the 14th and the 18th centuries, they either drove the original inhabitants out to
the south or enslaved them. Since then, it has been the custom to get certain types of "inferior" work
done by black Africans.

And the impact of that is still being felt today?

Dah Abeid: Exactly. Nowadays the Moors are desperate to hold on to their privileges and they do
everything they can to complicate or delay the abolition of slavery. The entire apparatus of the state –
from the president and the judiciary to parliament – is in the hands of the Arab-Berber elite, who are
clinging with all their might to their traditional lifestyle.

Is it actually possible for you to fight for your goals in Mauritania?

Dah Abeid: I was arrested in 2014 and sentenced to two years in prison for organising a nationwide
caravan of protest for the abolition of all forms of slavery. Although I was released early, I was no longer
able to organise any meetings or protests. Human rights protesters are continually being arrested or
thrown into prison. That's why I decided to leave Nouakchott and go to Dakar in Senegal to carry on my
fight from there.

Do you get any support from Islamic authorities?

Dah Abeid: Unfortunately, the religious leaders in Mauritania do not condemn slavery, because they
too belong to the Arab-Berber elite. I have been trying for years to get the Supreme Council for Fatwas
and Complaints to pronounce an Islamic ban on slavery; there came a point however when I had to
stop, because I realized it was hopeless. The ruling elite have used Islam to justify slavery. They see
the enslavement of people as the sixth pillar of Islam – in addition to the five pillars that apply to all
Muslims.

In Mauritania, slavery's last bastion


In Mauritania, north-western Africa, slavery is a fact of modern life. It's estimated that 10-20
percent of the country's 3.5 million people are still enslaved in a system rooted in ethnic
We use cookies on this site to enhance your user experience.
discrimination. OK, I agree
Decline
By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent
for us to set cookies. More info
Gritty capital: twenty-five years of drought have transformed Mauritania from a nomadic to an
urban society. The transition has not been easy and with an unemployment rate of 40 percent,
many Mauritanians survive on less than one dollar a day
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

What does that mean for the opponents of slavery?

Dah Abeid: They are considered anti-Islamic, because slavery is deemed a holy act ordained by God.
My fellow campaigners and I were excommunicated by the religious authorities and declared to be
outside Islam, apostates, who deserved to die. That is their version of Islam. I am a practising Muslim
and have just recently returned from a pilgrimage to Mecca, but my vision of Islam is based on the
equality of all human beings, a vision to which the idea of slavery is anathema.

Is there any debate on the question of racism against black people in the Arab world?

Dah Abeid: Apart from a few exceptions, the Arab world has not even begun to question its attitude to
sub-Saharan Africa. Arabs see blacks as inferior; so the idea of the equality of all peoples, regardless
of skin colour or ethnicity, is something the Arab societies deny. It is a racist attitude that can be traced
back to the era of the slave trade.

It was not only the Europeans who shipped millions of Africans as slave labour to Latin America in the
17th and 18th centuries. There was an Arab slave trade that was equally involved in bleeding Africa
dry. It is something the Arab world has so far barely even attempted to come to terms with and at the
present time, I don't see any meaningful developments towards ending racism against black people.

There are now a few voices calling for something to be done. So we are hoping that they will multiply
We use cookies on this site to enhance your user experience.
and grow stronger and initiate a debate that will consign Arab racism to history. OK, I agree
Decline
By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent
for us to set cookies. More info
Do you see any African responsibility for slavery and human trafficking?

Dah Abeid: Africans have to stop viewing the slave trade as a purely white phenomenon. There was
an Arab slave trade, but ethnic groups such as the Fula and the Tuareg were also involved. Ultimately,
the African elites must also acknowledge their contribution to this dark chapter of history.

Interview conducted by Claudia Mende

© Qantara.de 2017

Translated from the German by Ron Walker

Biram Dah Abeid, himself the son of freed slaves, has long campaigned for the rights of the Haratins. In
2013 he received the United Nations Human Rights Award for his commitment to their cause.

T
Home
Print
Newsletter

More on this topic

Official "Global Slavery Index" website

Islam and Sharia in Africa: More than just slavery

Tidiane N'Diaye's "The Veiled Genocide": Selective theses on the Arab slave trade

Related Topics

Human rights, Islam in Africa, Prostitution/Human trafficking, Slavery


All Topics »

Related Content

We use cookies on this site to enhance your user experience.


OK, I agree
Decline
By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent
for us to set cookies. More info
Europe's policies in the Middle East

Late-colonial convulsions
22.07.2019

The UK has stopped an Iranian tanker in Gibraltar. Italy and France are supporting opposing parties at
war in Libya. Germany has other priorities. Europe is doing almost exactly ... More »

Book review: Daniel Speck's "Piccola Sicilia"

Little Sicily in North Africa


18.07.2019
We use cookies on this site to enhance your user experience.
With "Piccola Sicilia", Daniel Speck proves himself to be a great storyteller and intercultural bridge
OK, I agree
Decline
By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent
builder. This family saga also spotlights a little-known chapter of Tunisian ... More »
for us to set cookies. More info
Women's rights in the Middle East

Feminists in Tunisia claim civic space


24.06.2019

In 2011, the Tunisian people overthrew their authoritarian regime after decades of oppression. The fact
that women were at the forefront of this movement was soon noticed by the ... More »

Franceʹs new Mediterranean initiative

A G10 summit marked by pragmatism


21.06.2019
We use cookies on this site to enhance your user experience.
With the "Sommet des deux Rives de la Mediterranee" ("Summit of the Two Shores of the
OK, I agree
Decline
By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent
Mediterranean"), French President Emmanuel Macron wants to breathe new life into multilateral
for us to set cookies. More info
... More »

Atheism in the Arab world

Moroccoʹs atheists find a home on the Internet


17.06.2019

The Internet has made it possible for some to declare and even to promote their atheism by criticising
Islam and other religions. Ismail Azzam spoke to some young Moroccans who ... More »

Military dictatorships in the Middle East

The real enemies of the Arab Spring


We use cookies on this site to enhance your user experience.
12.06.2019 OK, I agree
Decline
By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent
for us to set cookies. More info
For people in the Arab world to be able to throw off the yoke of military rule, a new balance must be
struck between political and social forces and the military. Though it is now ... More »

Home Politics Society Culture Topics Dialogues Essays Photo Essays Letters to the Editors

About us Masthead Privacy Policy

We use cookies on this site to enhance your user experience.


OK, I agree
Decline
By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent
for us to set cookies. More info

You might also like