They did what they could. In the book To Be A Slave former slaves tell what they did. Some killed themselves by throwing themselves off the ships. Others created their own social networks among the slaves they were living with. Music was used a lot to convey messages to each other while working. Some ran away seeking freedom and new lives.
Enslaved Africans used various strategies to survive life under slavery, including forming communities, preserving cultural traditions, practicing their faith, and resisting their enslavement through acts of rebellion and escape. Many also found ways to maintain their dignity and sense of self-worth through their interactions with each other and by finding moments of personal autonomy within the constraints of slavery.
One thing enslaved Africans did to survive life under slavery was to build strong communities and support networks among themselves. This allowed them to provide mutual assistance, share resources, and maintain cultural traditions despite the harsh conditions they faced.
Enslaved Africans refers to individuals from Africa who were captured, forced into slavery, and transported to work under brutal conditions in the Americas. This practice was prevalent during the transatlantic slave trade, where millions of Africans were forcibly brought to the New World to provide labor in industries such as agriculture and mining.
Both enslaved Africans and indentured servants were forced to work for others without pay, often under harsh conditions. They both lacked freedom and autonomy over their lives, with their labor being exploited for the benefit of others.
In the triangular trade, slaves were traded for goods such as textiles, alcohol, firearms, and other manufactured goods in Africa. These goods were then transported to the Americas to be traded for enslaved Africans.
The primary causes of European migration to the Americas were economic opportunities, religious freedom, and the desire for political autonomy. The effects included the decimation of indigenous populations, the establishment of colonial systems, and the transatlantic slave trade, which brought millions of Africans to the Americas under brutal conditions.
One thing enslaved Africans did to survive life under slavery was to build strong communities and support networks among themselves. This allowed them to provide mutual assistance, share resources, and maintain cultural traditions despite the harsh conditions they faced.
By taking them to the Underground Railroad to make them run away
it wanted to protect the enslaved africans from being hurt by the south because the south wanted slavery it the north thought it was wrong so they want to protect them and have all people be equal.
There were several ways of obtaining enslaved Africans. Firstly, some were used as payment of debt, some were sold into slavery, others were kidnapped and there are those who were lured, under the guise of adventure.
They had extended families to take care of them since they were separated from their real ones. They also held on to all there traditions.
American slave who sued his master for keeping him enslaved in a territory where slavery was banned under the missouri Compromise
1. The triangle trade brought Africans who are, need I have to say, already highly cultured ( Egyptian pyramids, gods, wealth. Shaka Zulu, Hannibal, cleopactra, exotic animals, beautiful land, ect. ) and brought them to America, gave them a higher level of literacy after slavery and combined thier culture with the Africans so you have African American's thus a mixed culture with the two races.
I'm pretty sure it started because the white people who did not feel like doing there house work and did not want to pay for someone to do it so they took Africans under their control and they only had to pay to own/get the Africans
the purpose of folktales was to teach lessons about how to survive under slavery. Folktales reassured slaves that they could survive by outsmarting more powerful slaveholders.
Africans still practiced their traditional Yoruba & Vodou religions, under slavery, by concealing it under the guise of following Christianity.
was plantation slavery under attack
Fugitive Slave Act of 1850. This law allowed slave owners to reclaim escaped slaves even in free states and required citizens to assist in their capture. It heightened tensions between abolitionists and slaveholders and contributed to the growing divide between the North and South in the lead-up to the Civil War.