President John Mahama of Ghana during the U.N. General Assembly last year. Ghana introduced a U.N. resolution to recognize the trans-Atlantic slave trade as the “gravest crime against humanity” this week.Dave Sanders for The New York Times
This past week the United Nations General Assembly backed a resolution declaring the transatlantic slave trade "the gravest crime against humanity" and calling for reparations. Welcoming the vote, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said that the wealth of many Western nations was "built on stolen lives and stolen labour". From the 15th to 19th Centuries, around 12-15 million African men, women and children were captured and trafficked to the Americas to work as slaves.
The vote in the 193-member world body was 123-3, with 52 abstentions. Argentina, Israel and the United States were the three members voting against the resolution. The United Kingdom and all 27 members of the European Union were among those that abstained.
Before the vote deputy U.S. ambassador Dan Negrea said that while the United States opposes the past wrongdoing of the transatlantic slave trade and all other forms of slavery, it does not recognize a legal right to reparations for historical wrongs that were not illegal under international law at the time they occurred. These are weasel words, absurd really. Everything that happened in Nazi Germany was legal yet we recognize the horror of the Holocaust/Shoah and that the "laws" were immoral and indefensible. The suppression and genocide of Indigenous peoples around the world was legal in most instances but a number of countries, including Canada, have recognized that these laws were wrong and have introduced processes for reconciliation including reparations.
I've noted that the Church of England has embarked on creating an 110 million pound reparation fund because of its links to slavery, once owning a company that transported 34,000 slaves in crowded, unsafe and inhumane conditions over a 30-year period. This is a project that is controversial and while some say it is not enough others criticize diverting money from critical work to ensure the survival of the denomination.
Before the vote John Mahama, the president of Ghana, said that American schools were being discouraged from teaching about slavery and racism. He called the resolution “a safeguard against forgetting.”
The UN Resolution is not legally binding and it may be imperfect in it's wording but it gives a voice to countries profoundly changed by slavery, along with the descendants of those who were enslaved. It brings to light the injustices which can't be swept aside as "from the past."