Black History: Slave Names

Crossposted from Left Toon Lane, Bilerico Project & My Left Wing


click to enlarge

The vast majority of African-Americans in the United States were enslaved prior to the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment to the US Constitution. During enslavement, slaves' names were assigned by their owners. Others received a name based on what kind of work they were forced to do. Some African-Americans have last names such as Cotton, reflecting when they were made to pick cotton as slaves.

After emancipation, many freedmen and -women took the surnames of their former owners as their own. Some blacks in the U.S. took on the surname Freeman, while others adopted the names of popular historical or contemporary figures of social importance, such as former presidents Washington, Jefferson, and Jackson.

A number of African-Americans and Jamaican Americans have changed their names out of the belief that the names they were given at birth were "slave names." An individual's name change often coincides with a religious conversion (Muhammad Ali and Louis Farrakhan, for example) or involvement with the black nationalist movement (e.g., Amiri Baraka and Assata Shakur).

Some organizations encourage African-Americans to abandon their "slave names." The Nation of Islam is perhaps the best-known of them. In his book, Message to the Blackman in America, Nation of Islam leader Elijah Muhammad writes often of "slave names." Some of his comments include:

"You must remember that slave-names will keep you a slave in the eyes of the civilized world today. You have seen, and recently, that Africa and Asia will not honor you or give you any respect as long as you are called by the white man's name."

"You are still called by your slave-masters' names. By rights, by international rights, you belong to the white man of America. He knows that. You have never gotten out of the shackles of slavery. You are still in them."

Other organizations, such as the Black nationalist US Organization also advocate for African-Americans to change their "slave names."

Nevertheless, the overwhelming majority of African-Americans bear "slave names."

Disclaimer:

When I went to school, we were never taught Black History. We never learned about the Black leaders, the long, agonizing history that brought most Blacks to America. Those atrocities were glossed over in favor of mindlessly boring topics like the X Y Z Affair.

This series of cartoons will review Black history as told from a Black mother to an interracial child. This series will be ugly, course, horrific and truthful. I will mostly abandon the commentary for an article on Black history.

This series is not about Obama or Hillary. I want to you to try to imagine how Black families tell their children of the atrocities their ancestors, all of them, suffered because of the color of their skin. Try to imagine how Black families counsel their children when someone calls them "nigger" for the first time. Can you imagine the bone crushing emotion that must well up? Can you imagine the agony, frustration and anger?

Can you imagine being the Black preacher who tries to paint a picture of a just God every Sunday? Especially in a country that claims where the notion of racism is a thing of the past, the job is difficult.

These strips may at times be entertaining and sometimes they may not - mostly not.

I don't want you to laugh so hard you cry, I want you to cry so hard you do something about it.



Display:


This diary has been a victim of (none / 0)

R-E-C-C-E-D.

This is a new bacteria-caused disease that has been spreading like wildfire through hospitals.

Symptoms of this disease are:

a lack of negativity
decent content
not being an outright lie
not linking to RW news sources (without a proper disclaimer and only using RW sources when normal sources are unavailable)

To cure this disease, go and write a hit piece on either candidate, or go tell me to "Go Cheney yourself"

This has been an alert from the annoyed medical student coalition Chapter 9347.

As a note I really enjoy your work stormbear, you have an audience of at least one here.


Student Guy=JoeMentum. No really Student Guy=JoeMentum, after all JoeMentum was an embarrassment so is Student Guy. This sig is FAIL!!
by Student Guy on Mon Apr 07, 2008 at 11:11:46 AM EST

Re: Black History: Slave Names (none / 0)

Good, useful diary!  Very, very sad cartoon.

What's in a name?  History!

How people get their names is a fascinating topic, a window into the migrations and oppressions of people around the globe.  Jews are another group of people whose names were often assigned or changed due to governmental edicts or the desire to escape oppression.  

The study of names is called onomastics .


by Radiowalla on Mon Apr 07, 2008 at 11:44:07 AM EST

Re: Black History: Slave Names (none / 0)

A handful of African names have survived. I mean real African names, not Arab names imported by Muslims black or otherwise.

Snoop Dogg carries one, Broadus. It's found in the U.S. and the West Indies, and comes from the Bantu language, meaning a nice extra, a bonus, a lucky happening.

Monday also comes from Bantu where it's usually transcribed as Munde. It took on the same spelling as the English day of the week and could 'hide' from slave-owners and bigots.

Half a century ago I knew a black guy named Yandi, or Yandy, a Bantu name. At the same time I knew a white girl from the Deep South named LaWanda, raised in the old way by a mammy. Hmmmn. Luanda is the capital of the African country Angola. The name Angola is most famous in this country as the name of the huge prison (a former plantation) in Louisiana. Nice, hunh? But Angola also survives as the root of the sea islander's Gullah language -- get it? -- an-gullah.

"Boom Shakalaka! Here comes the chief rocker!" The rapper got it right: shakalaka means make way for the Big Man. The children's song, "Here we go loop-de-lay, here we go loop-de-lah," that's not nonsense, that's Bantu.

You might be interested in this out-of-print book: The Bantu Speaking Heritage of the United States
by Winifred Kellersberger Vass. This former missionary, who lived all her life in Bantu-speaking Africa, combed through place names and folk songs to find surviving words and phrases saved by the slaves.


by Woody on Mon Apr 07, 2008 at 03:39:03 PM EST


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