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Slavery Is a Human Crime, Not a Civilizational Weapon

 “You’re only getting half the story about slavery.”

Illustration showing chained hands raised against a split historical backdrop of transatlantic slavery, Middle Eastern slavery, and modern forced labor, symbolizing slavery as a global human crime.


That line has been circulating widely, usually followed by a long list of uncomfortable facts about the Arab-Islamic slave trade, modern abuses in Africa and the Middle East, and a concluding accusation that Western societies obsess over their own crimes while giving others a free pass.

There’s some truth in that claim. But truth, when selectively framed, can mislead just as easily as denial.

Yes, most school curricula focus heavily on the Trans-Atlantic slave trade. They should. It was one of the most brutal systems of human exploitation in recorded history. But it is not the only one. Slavery existed across civilizations, continents, and religions long before European ships crossed the Atlantic, and it continued long after abolition movements gained traction in the West.

Acknowledging that broader history matters. What does not help is turning that history into a moral weapon aimed at entire cultures or faiths.

Slavery is not a Western sin. It is not an Islamic sin. It is a human one.

A global institution, not a Western monopoly

Slavery predates Christianity, Islam, and modern nation-states. It existed in ancient Africa, the Roman Empire, Persia, China, and India. Europeans enslaved Europeans. Africans enslaved Africans. Arabs enslaved Africans and Europeans. Vikings traded in slaves. Empires ran on coerced labor.

This is not relativism. It is historical fact.

The Arab-Islamic slave trade, which moved people across the Sahara, the Red Sea, and the Indian Ocean, lasted longer than the Trans-Atlantic trade and involved millions of Africans. That history is under-taught in Western classrooms, and that gap deserves correction.

But longer duration does not automatically mean greater moral weight. The Atlantic system was distinct in ways that matter: it was racialized, hereditary, codified in law, and industrialized to serve an emerging global capitalist economy. Enslavement became permanent, biological, and inescapable. That difference shaped the modern world.

Different does not mean better. It means different. Conflating all systems into one moral pile erases how power actually worked.

Modern slavery and the danger of false causation

Critics often jump from historical slavery to present-day abuses in Muslim-majority countries as proof of civilizational continuity. This is where analysis breaks down.

Yes, slavery was abolished late in Mauritania, and enforcement remains weak. Yes, horrific abuses of migrants occur in Libya today. Yes, labor exploitation under the Kafala system in parts of the Gulf has trapped workers in conditions that resemble servitude. And yes, ISIS committed crimes against humanity, including sexual slavery of Yazidi women, using religious language as justification.

None of this should be denied. But none of it can be explained honestly by religion alone.

Libya’s slave markets emerged after the collapse of the state, not because Islamic law mandates human trafficking. The Kafala system is a labor control mechanism tied to authoritarian governance and economic dependency, not a Quranic commandment. ISIS represented a violent extremist cult that murdered Muslims by the tens of thousands. Treating it as a proxy for Islam is analytically lazy and morally dangerous.

By that logic, Christianity would be responsible for apartheid, the Inquisition, colonial genocide, and Latin American death squads. Serious people know better.

Why American slavery dominates American classrooms

One omission in many viral critiques is striking: the American system of slavery is barely mentioned, except as an example of overexposure.

That omission matters.

American slavery was not just a historical crime. It was foundational. It shaped property law, wealth distribution, race relations, political institutions, and global finance. Its afterlife continued through segregation, redlining, mass incarceration, and persistent inequality. It is still visible in census data and courtrooms.

Countries tend to teach the histories that most directly shaped them. That is not ideological favoritism. It is historical responsibility.

Teaching American slavery extensively does not excuse other systems. It reflects the fact that this particular system built the modern United States.

The real problem is selective outrage

Where these debates go wrong is not in naming ugly facts. It is in how those facts are arranged.

When history is used to rank civilizations instead of understanding power, it becomes a culture-war tool. Victims turn into rhetorical props. Accountability dissolves into finger-pointing.

Selective outrage does not honor the enslaved. It instrumentalizes them.

A serious approach insists on two truths at once: that slavery was widespread across human societies, and that each system must be judged on its own structure, consequences, and legacy. Collapsing everything into “the West versus Islam” satisfies online tribes, not historical reality.

A harder, more honest conclusion

Slavery survives today not because of theology, but because of poverty, war, corruption, and unchecked power. It thrives where states collapse, where workers lack rights, and where accountability is absent.

If we genuinely care about human dignity, we must resist narratives that excuse one system while demonizing another. We must also resist the urge to turn history into a courtroom where entire civilizations stand trial.

Slavery does not belong to one religion or one continent. It belongs to human cruelty, enabled by silence and power.

The only honest way to teach its history is without denial, without scapegoats, and without turning truth into a weapon.

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