Friday, 24 January 2014

Freedom from the perspective of a slave

Living in the 21st century has made many of us take freedom for granted. Being raised in a golden age of freedom makes us ignorant on what exactly freedom is. I came to realize this after reading books and watching movies based on the 19th and 20th century in the USA. I understood what it meant when they termed the USA as the land of the free. In these books and movies, the main theme was slavery, the black slaves and what they went through on their day to day activities. Let me first name these movies before I get into my discussion. They are: The help, The butler, 12 years a slave, The color purple and Django.

In the help we see that even in the 60s, the black people had not achieved their freedom yet. Most black women were house helps, who were not allowed to use their master’s washrooms, a need which should really not earn any discrimination.

In the movie the butler, the main character’s father was shot dead right in front of him just after his mother was raped by his master’s son, how cruel is that? On top of that, the white man who did all that was not liable to any criminal conviction.
In the movie, 12 years a slave, we see how the southerners would kidnap free black men from the north and sell them to the cotton farm owners as slaves. If a black man was literate, he would be liable to thorough punishment. Black women were easily traded as sex slaves. They were sexually abused by their masters and in case they got pregnant, the children were beaten out of them. This was to make sure that the Caucasian race remained ‘pure’. This is only a depiction of what happened to the slaves in America, not taking into account, Europe, Middle East and even Africa during the colonial era

The slaves were deprived of their social, physical and psychological freedom leaving them only with the ultimate freedom-spiritual freedom. This is knowing that you are not the body, knowing that you are not the mind, knowing that you are only pure consciousness. It separates you from the body, it separates you from the mind, and ultimately only you are there as pure consciousness, as pure awareness. That is spiritual freedom.

This freedom is what delivered the African American from slavery and the Africans from colonial times because it was really all they had. They knew that they were not just human beings but persons, spiritual beings who did not deserve to be defined by their physical nature but by their spiritual nature. They knew that race was just a collective and the collective has no soul, the collective has no mind. The collective has no body even; it is only a name. It is just a word.


From their spiritual freedom, they were able to gain their other freedoms, physical freedom-that your body is not enchained, that it is not categorized as lower than anybody else’s, that there is an equality as far as the body is concerned.


Their perception of freedom was totally different from that of the 21st century and we ought to ape their attitude. Therefore as we approach the black history month in February 2014, we should get more informed on the struggles that the black people went through all over the world in order to gain independence and be termed as free people.