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Haratin

Haratin (Arabic: حراطين, romanizedḤarāṭīn), also referred to as Haratine, Harratin (singular: Hartani), are an ethnic group found in western Sahel and southwestern Maghreb.[1][2][3] The Haratin are mostly found in modern Mauritania (where they form a plurality), Morocco, Western Sahara, and Algeria. In Tunisia and Libya, they are referred to as Shwashin, Chouachin, Chouachine (singular: Shwashin, Chouchan).

Haratin / Haratine
Haratin girl from Morocco
Total population
> 1.5 million
Regions with significant populations
(40%)  Mauritania;
(60%) An ethnic group in
( Tunisia,  Algeria,  Morocco,  Libya,  Western Sahara)
Languages
Maghrebi Arabic
Berber languages
Religion
Sunni Islam
Related ethnic groups
Gnawa, other Afro-Arabs,
Beidan, Sahrawis, other Maghrebi Arabs,
other Arab, Berber, Arab-Berber, and Arabized Berber peoples,
Tuareg people, other Maghrebis

The Haratin are both culturally and ethnically distinct from modern sub-Saharan Africans[4][5] and speak Maghrebi Arabic dialects as well as various Berber languages.[6] They have traditionally been characterised as the descendants of former Sub-Saharan slaves.[7][8]

They form the single largest defined ethnolinguistic group in Mauritania where they account for 40% of the population (~1.5 million).[9] In parts of Arab-Berber Maghreb, they are sometimes referred to as a "socially distinct class of workers".[6][10]

The Haratin have been, and still commonly are socially isolated in some Maghrebi countries, living in segregated, Haratin-only ghettos. They are commonly perceived as an endogamous group of former slaves or descendants of slaves.[11][12] They favourably adopted Islam under the Arabs and Berbers[11] and were forcibly recruited into the Moroccan army by Ismail Ibn Sharif (Sultan of Morocco from 1672–1727) to consolidate power.[12]

Traditionally, many Haratin have held occupations in agriculture – as serfs, herdsmen, and indentured workers.[11]

Etymology

The origin and meaning of the name Haratin (singular Hartani) is controversial.[13] Some claim that it comes from the Berber word ahardan (pl. ihardin) referring to skin color, more specifically "dark color".[4][14] This word is absent from the Arabic language and has been used by the Sanhaja tribe and Zenata tribe before the arrival of the Beni Ḥassān.[15] Others claim it comes from the Arabic phrase al-Hurr al-Thani or second class (second group of free people).[13] Neither of these claims have much proof.[13]

History

The Haratin form an ethnic group distinct from Arab and Tuareg populations, as well as from the contemporary ethnic groups of sub-Saharan Africa.[4][5][16] However, in countries such as Morocco, they are sometimes classified either as Berber or Arab, depending on their language and society they are found in.[10] In Mauritania, however, where there are nearly 1.5 million Haratin, they have developed a separate sense of ethnic identity.[10]

During the Roman occupation of Mauretania, the Godala Berber tribe fled to the south towards the Draa oasis and enslaved the local Haratin population.[17][18][19] They have historically inherited their slave status and family occupation, have been endogamous, and socially segregated.[11][12] Some communities differentiated two types of slaves, one called 'Abid or "slave" and Haratin or "freed slave". However, per anthropologist John Shoup, both 'Abid and Haratin were not free to own land or had equivalent property rights.[10] Regardless of whether they were technically free or not, they were treated as socially inferior in the communities they lived in. Being denied the right and the ability to own any land, they historically survived by accepting a patron-client serf relationship either as domestic servant or as share-cropping labor (khammasin).[20][21]

They became a common target of mandatory conscription by the Moroccan ruler Ismail Ibn Sharif as he sought to build a military that had no social or cultural attachment to any other Arab or Berber group in Maghreb. He conscripted the majority of able-bodied male Haratin and 'Abid that were present in Morocco at the time. This army was then commonly coerced into a series of wars in order to consolidate Ibn Sharif's power.[12][20][22]

Haratin communities

Mauritania

In Mauritania, the Haratin form one of the largest ethnic groups and account for as much as 40% of the Mauritanians. They are sometimes referred to as "Black Moors",[23] in contrast to Beidane, or "White Moors". The Haratin there are primarily Hassaniya Arabic.[24]

The Haratin of Mauritania, according to anthropologist Joseph Hellweg, who specializes in West African studies, were historically part of a social caste-like hierarchy that likely developed from a Bedouin legacy between the 14th and 16th century. The "Hassan" monopolized the occupations related to war and politics, the "Zwaya" (Zawaya) the religious roles, the "Bidan" (White Moors) owned property and held slaves (Haratins, Black Moors).[25] Each of these were immovable castes, endogamous, with hereditary occupations and where the upper strata collected tribute (horma) from the lower strata of Mauritanian society, considered them socially inferior, and denied them the right to own land or weapons thereby creating a socio-economically closed system.[26][27][28]

In 1960, Mauritania officially abolished slavery, and made another update to its slavery law in 1981.[24] However, even after the formalities, abolishment, and new laws, discrimination against Haratin is still widespread, and many continue to be, for all practical purposes, enslaved, while large numbers live in other forms of informal dependence on their former masters.[24]

 
In Mauritania, the use of Haratin girls as servants has attracted activists.

Amnesty International reported that in 1994 90,000 Haratine still lived as "property" of their master, with the report indicating that "slavery in Mauritania is most dominant within the traditional upper class of the Moors."[29] According to Mauritanian officials, any master-serf relationship is mutually consensual. This position has been questioned by the United Nations and human rights advocacy groups.[24]

The Amnesty International report states that "[s]ocial attitudes have changed among most urban Moors, but in rural areas, the ancient divide is still very alive." There have been many attempts to assess the real extension of slavery in modern Mauritania, but these have mostly been frustrated by the Nouakchott government's official stance that the practice has been eliminated. Amnesty further estimated that some 300,000 freed slaves continued to be in service of their former masters.[29]

On 27 April 2007 Messaoud Ould Boulkheir was elected speaker of the National Assembly, becoming the first black Haratin to hold the position.

Morocco

Haratin in Morocco are mostly concentrated in the southern part of the Drâa-Tafilalet region, specifically towns such as Zagora where they make up a significant portion of the populace.[30]

Haratin have been the slave strata of the Moroccan society through its recorded history.[12] They were owned in every town and farming center before the time of Moroccan ruler Ismail Ibn Sharif. They provided domestic labor, farm labor, physical labor inside towns and markets, as well as were conscripted to fight wars.[20][22]

According to Remco Ensel – a professor of anthropology specializing in Maghreb studies, the word "Haratin" in Moroccan is a pejorative that connotes "subordination, disrepute" and in contemporary literature; it is often replaced with "Drawi", "Drawa", "Sahrawi", "Sahrawa", or other regional terms.[31][32] The Moroccan Haritin, states Chouki El Hamel, a professor of history specializing in African Studies, are the diaspora of black West Africans who were forcefully transported across the Sahara and sold in Moroccan slave markets over centuries. They absorbed the "Arabo-centric values in the dominant interpretation of Islam", states El Hamel, over the generations and they see themselves as Muslim Moroccans, rather than by their ethnic or native group.[32]

The Haratin strata, as slave workers, were a major institution of Moroccan society through the 19th century.[33] Yet, there has been a general lack of historical records about their origins and ethnography, leading to several constructed proposals, and their mention in older Moroccan literature is generally limited to their status as slaves and more focused on the rights on their owners.[32][34] It is their contemporary economic and social marginalization that has awakened renewed interest in their history and their oral histories.[32]

The Haratins remain indispensable workers in modern oases societies, states Ensel, and continue to be mistreated in contrast to the upper strata called the "Shurfa".[31] According to Remco Ensel, Haratin, along with Swasin in Morocco and other northern fringe societies of the Sahara, were a part of a social hierarchy that included the upper strata of nobles, religious specialists, and literati, followed by freemen, nomadic pastoral strata, and slaves. The Haratin were hierarchically higher than the 'Abid (descendant of slaves) at the very bottom, but lower than Ahrar. This hierarchy, states Ensel, has been variously described as ethnic groups, estates, quasi-castes, castes, or classes.[35][36]

The Haratins historically lived segregated from the main society, in a rural isolation.[36] Their subjugation was sometimes ideologically justified by nobles and some religious scholars, even though others disagreed.[37] The social stratification of Haratin and their inter-relationships with others members of the society varied by valley and oasis, but whether the Haratins were technically 'unfreed, semi-freed, or freed' slaves, they were considered as "inferior" by other strata of the society.[38] The Haratin remain a marginalized population of Morocco, just like other similar groups around the world.[39]

Western Sahara

According to Human Rights Watch, Morocco alleges that slavery is widespread in the Sahrawi refugee camps run by the Polisario Front in southwestern Algeria; Polisario denies this and claims to have eradicated slavery through awareness campaigns. A 2009 investigative report by Human Rights Watch interviewed some dark-skinned Sahrawi people, who are a small minority in the camps; they stated that some "blacks" are "owned" by "whites" but this ownership is manifested only in "granting" marriage rights to girls. In other words, a dark-skinned girl must have an approval from her "master". Without this, the marriage can not be performed by a qadi.[40]

The report notes that Polisario claims to oppose any such discrimination, but raises questions about possible official collusion in, or indifference to, the practice. In addition, a case of an official document that grants freedom to a group of enslaved families has been found by HRW. The document in question dates as recently as 2007. The document was signed by a local judge or an official civil servant. Slavery is still engraved in memories due to historical and traditional reasons, and such cases are not as shocking as one might think to the society of the Sahrawi refugee camps.[40] The Human Rights Watch concludes its chapter on slavery as follows, "In sum, credible sources testified to Human Rights Watch about vestiges of slavery that continue to affect the lives of a portion of the black minority in the Tindouf camps. The practices involve historical ties between families that involve certain rights and obligations that are not always clear. Being a slave does not necessarily preclude enjoying freedom of movement."

Responding to questions about slavery, the Polisario has acknowledged the survival "to a limited extent, of certain practices related to antiquated thinking" and said it was "determined to combat and eradicate them whenever they emerge and no matter what shape they take." "We welcome this statement and urge the Polisario to be vigilant in pursuing this objective," said HRW.[40]

Algeria

In the Algerian Sahara, the Haratin, who were marginalized by France during colonization, experienced social and political progress after the country's independence.[41] This integration had started during the war of liberation; a discourse of emancipation and the absence of state racism, which constitutes a tradition of Algerian nationalism, had succeeded in mobilizing this social category.[41] Social success through education allowed the former Haratin to be represented in local communities and to access the most influential positions.[41]

References

  1. ^ Chouki El Hamel (2014). Black Morocco: A History of Slavery, Race, and Islam. Cambridge University Press. pp. 110–113. ISBN 978-1-139-62004-8.
  2. ^ Sabine, Partouche. "L'Encyclopédie berbère". Institut de recherches et d'études sur les mondes arabes et musulmans Iremam - UMR 7310. Retrieved 25 February 2018.
  3. ^ Jacques-Meunie, Denise (1972). "L'Notes sur l'histoire des populations du sud marocain". Revue de l'Occident Musulman et de la Méditerranée. 11: 137–150. doi:10.3406/remmm.1972.1148. Retrieved 25 February 2018.
  4. ^ a b c Gast, M. (2000). "Harṭâni". Encyclopédie berbère - Hadrumetum – Hidjaba. 22.
  5. ^ a b Froment, Alain (1999). "Les Bella d'Ours : une anthropobiologie de populations dites captives". In Doe, John (ed.). Les temps du Sahel : En hommage à Edmond Bernus (in French). p. 186.
  6. ^ a b they are Arabic speaking Haratin, Encyclopædia Britannica (2014)
  7. ^ Keita, S. O. Y. (1993). "Studies and Comments on Ancient Egyptian Biological Relationships". History in Africa. 20: 129–154. doi:10.2307/3171969. ISSN 0361-5413. JSTOR 3171969. S2CID 162330365.
  8. ^ McDougall, E. Ann (2015). "Hidden in Plain Sight: "Haratine" in Nouakchott's "Niche-Settlements"". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. 48 (2): 251–279. ISSN 0361-7882. JSTOR 44723360.
  9. ^ Mauritania, CIA Factbook
  10. ^ a b c d John A. Shoup III (2011). Ethnic Groups of Africa and the Middle East: An Encyclopedia: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. pp. 114–115. ISBN 978-1-59884-363-7.
  11. ^ a b c d Anthony Appiah; Henry Louis Gates (2010). Encyclopedia of Africa. Oxford University Press. p. 549. ISBN 978-0-19-533770-9., Quote: "Haratine. Social caste in several northwestern African countries consisting of blacks, many of whom are former slaves (...)"
  12. ^ a b c d e Meyers, Allan R. (1977). "Class, Ethnicity, and Slavery: The Origins of the Moroccan 'Abid". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. Boston University African Studies Center. 10 (3): 427–442. doi:10.2307/216736. JSTOR 216736.
  13. ^ a b c John A. Shoup (31 October 2011). Ethnic Groups of Africa and the Middle East: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. pp. 114–116. ISBN 978-1-59884-362-0.
  14. ^ Hamel, Chouki El (2002). "Race, slavery and Islam in Maghribi Mediterranean thought: the question of the Haratin in Morocco". The Journal of North African Studies. Routledge. 7 (3): 29–52. doi:10.1080/13629380208718472. S2CID 219625829.
  15. ^ Chouki El Hamel (2014). Black Morocco: A History of Slavery, Race, and Islam. Cambridge University Press. p. 110. ISBN 978-1-139-62004-8.
  16. ^ Colin, Georges Séraphin (1971). "Ḥarāṭīn" (PDF). In B. Lewis; V.L. Ménage; Ch. Pellat; J. Schacht (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam. Vol. 3. E. J. Brill..
  17. ^ Ennaji, Mohammed (1999). Serving the Master: Slavery and Society in Nineteenth-century Morocco. Macmillan. p. 62. ISBN 978-0-333-75477-1.
  18. ^ Hsain Ilahiane (1998). The Power of the Dagger, the Seeds of the Koran, and the Sweat of the Ploughman: Ethnic Stratification and Agricultural Intensification in the Ziz Valley, Southeast Morocco. University of Arizona. p. 107.
  19. ^ Chouki El Hamel (27 February 2014). Black Morocco: A History of Slavery, Race, and Islam. Cambridge University Press. pp. 111–112. ISBN 978-1-139-62004-8.
  20. ^ a b c Martin A. Klein; Suzanne Miers (2013). Slavery and Colonial Rule in Africa. Routledge. pp. 58–59, 79–86. ISBN 978-0714648842.
  21. ^ Chouki El Hamel (2014). Black Morocco: A History of Slavery, Race, and Islam. Cambridge University Press. p. 92. ISBN 978-1-139-62004-8.
  22. ^ a b John Ralph Willis (2005). Slaves and Slavery in Africa: Volume Two: The Servile Estate. Routledge. pp. 2–9. ISBN 978-1-135-78016-6.
  23. ^ "Slavery's last stand - CNN.com". CNN.
  24. ^ a b c d Appiah, Kwame Anthony; Henry Louis Gates Jr. (2010). Encyclopedia of Africa: Two-Volume Set. Oxford University Press. p. 549. ISBN 9780195337709.
  25. ^ Joseph R Hellweg (2011). Mark Juergensmeyer; Wade Clark Roof (eds.). Encyclopedia of Global Religion. SAGE Publications. p. 761. ISBN 978-1-4522-6656-5.
  26. ^ Anthony G. Pazzanita (1999), Middle East Journal, Political Transition in Mauritania: Problems and Prospects, Volume 53, Number 1 (Winter, 1999), pages 44-58
  27. ^ Katherine Ann Wiley (2016), Making People Bigger: Wedding Exchange and the Creation of Social Value in Rural Mauritania, Africa Today, Johns Hopkins University Press, Volume 62, Number 3, pages 48-69
  28. ^ Melinda Smale (1980), Women in Mauritania, USAID: Mauritania, Office of Women in Development, Agency for International Development, OICD Washington DC, page viii-ix, xviii-xix, 12-17, 35-36, 43; Quote: "Caste is the most specific of these crucial concepts. When applied to West African societies, it is used in the very general meaning of the division of societies into hierarchically rank-endogamous-occupational groups; the relation between these groups having ritual as well as economic significance. (...) To understand Mauritanian society, one must understand its ethnic groups, its tribes, socio-economic classes and its castes. The Hassaniya speakers who predominate over the majority of the country except along the river are divisible into two crucial subgroups - the Bidan or white Moors and the Haratin or black Moors. The Bidan are traditionally further divided into Z'waya (religious or "marabout" groups), Hassan (warrior groups), Zenaga (free tributary groups), Mu'allamin (craftsmen) and Ighyuwn (entertainers) (...)
  29. ^ a b Afrol News
  30. ^ "À Zagora, les fantômes de la ségrégation". huffpostmaghreb.
  31. ^ a b Remco Ensel (1999). Saints and Servants in Southern Morocco. BRILL. pp. 2–4. ISBN 90-04-11429-7.
  32. ^ a b c d Chouki El Hamel (2014). Black Morocco: A History of Slavery, Race, and Islam. Cambridge University Press. pp. 4–6. ISBN 978-1-139-62004-8.
  33. ^ Mohammed Ennaji (1999). Serving the Master: Slavery and Society in 19th Century Morocco. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 1–7. ISBN 978-0-312-21152-3.
  34. ^ Mohamed Hassan (2012). Between Caravan and Sultan: The Bayruk of Southern Morocco: A Study in History and Identity. BRILL Academic. pp. 189–195. ISBN 978-90-04-18382-7.
  35. ^ Chouki El Hamel (2014). Black Morocco: A History of Slavery, Race, and Islam. Cambridge University Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-1-139-62004-8.
  36. ^ a b Chouki El Hamel (2014). Black Morocco: A History of Slavery, Race, and Islam. Cambridge University Press. pp. 92, 112–113. ISBN 978-1-139-62004-8.
  37. ^ Chouki El Hamel (2014). Black Morocco: A History of Slavery, Race, and Islam. Cambridge University Press. pp. 112–113, 172–173. ISBN 978-1-139-62004-8., Quote: "This new meaning was an ideological construct to justify the subjugation of the free/freed blacks [Haratin] and was buttressed by documents that sought to advance the Makhzan's agenda by demonstrating that the Haratin were of slave origin, therefore creating a racialized caste".
  38. ^ Chouki El Hamel (2014). Black Morocco: A History of Slavery, Race, and Islam. Cambridge University Press. pp. 3, 45–46, 57–59, 244–246. ISBN 978-1-139-62004-8.
  39. ^ Remco Ensel (1999). Saints and Servants in Southern Morocco. BRILL. pp. 6–7. ISBN 90-04-11429-7.
  40. ^ a b c "Human Rights in Western Sahara and the Tindouf Refugee Camps". 19 December 2008. Retrieved 17 August 2011.
  41. ^ a b c Yousfi, Badreddine (30 June 2017). "Les territoires sahariens en Algérie. Gouvernance, acteurs et recomposition territoriale". L'Année du Maghreb (in French) (16): 53–69. doi:10.4000/anneemaghreb.2951. ISSN 1952-8108. Retrieved 22 March 2021.

Bibliography

  • Ilahiane, Hsain (1998). The Power of the Dagger, the Seeds of the Koran, and the Sweat of the Ploughman: Ethnic Stratification and Agricultural Intensification in the Ziz Valley. Southeast Morocco. Vol. 107, 7. unpublished dissertation, Univ. of Arizona.
  • El Hamel, Chouki (Fall 2002). 'Race', Slavery and Islam in the Maghribi Mediterranean Thought: The Question of the Haratin in Morocco. Journal of North African Studies. Vol. 29.
  • Batrán, Aziz Abdalla (1985). "The 'Ulamá of Fas, Mulay Isma'il, and the Issue of the Haratin of Fas". In John Ralph, Willis (ed.). Slaves and Slavery in Muslim Africa. Vol. 1: Islam and the Ideology of Enslavement. London: Frank Cass. pp. 125–59.
  • Ensel, Remco (1999). Saints and Servants in Southern Morocco. Leiden: Brill.
  • Hunwick, J O. "Black Slaves in the Mediterranean World: introduction to a Neglected Aspect of the African Diaspora". Journal of African History.
  • EnNaji, Mohammed; Seth, Graebner (1998). Serving The Master: Slavery & Society in Nineteenth-Century Morocco. St. Martin's Press. p. 62.
  • Amnesty International, 7 November 2002, Mauritania, A future free from slavery? The formal abolition of slavery in 1981 has not led to real and effective abolition for various reasons, including a lack of legislation to ensure its implementation.

External links

haratin, wool, based, stuffing, harateen, arabic, حراطين, romanized, Ḥarāṭīn, also, referred, harratin, singular, hartani, ethnic, group, found, western, sahel, southwestern, maghreb, mostly, found, modern, mauritania, where, they, form, plurality, morocco, we. For the wool based stuffing see harateen Haratin Arabic حراطين romanized Ḥaraṭin also referred to as Haratine Harratin singular Hartani are an ethnic group found in western Sahel and southwestern Maghreb 1 2 3 The Haratin are mostly found in modern Mauritania where they form a plurality Morocco Western Sahara and Algeria In Tunisia and Libya they are referred to as Shwashin Chouachin Chouachine singular Shwashin Chouchan Haratin HaratineHaratin girl from MoroccoTotal population gt 1 5 millionRegions with significant populations 40 Mauritania 60 An ethnic group in Tunisia Algeria Morocco Libya Western Sahara LanguagesMaghrebi ArabicBerber languagesReligionSunni IslamRelated ethnic groupsGnawa other Afro Arabs Beidan Sahrawis other Maghrebi Arabs other Arab Berber Arab Berber and Arabized Berber peoples Tuareg people other MaghrebisThe Haratin are both culturally and ethnically distinct from modern sub Saharan Africans 4 5 and speak Maghrebi Arabic dialects as well as various Berber languages 6 They have traditionally been characterised as the descendants of former Sub Saharan slaves 7 8 They form the single largest defined ethnolinguistic group in Mauritania where they account for 40 of the population 1 5 million 9 In parts of Arab Berber Maghreb they are sometimes referred to as a socially distinct class of workers 6 10 The Haratin have been and still commonly are socially isolated in some Maghrebi countries living in segregated Haratin only ghettos They are commonly perceived as an endogamous group of former slaves or descendants of slaves 11 12 They favourably adopted Islam under the Arabs and Berbers 11 and were forcibly recruited into the Moroccan army by Ismail Ibn Sharif Sultan of Morocco from 1672 1727 to consolidate power 12 Traditionally many Haratin have held occupations in agriculture as serfs herdsmen and indentured workers 11 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Haratin communities 3 1 Mauritania 3 2 Morocco 3 3 Western Sahara 3 4 Algeria 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksEtymology EditThe origin and meaning of the name Haratin singular Hartani is controversial 13 Some claim that it comes from the Berber word ahardan pl ihardin referring to skin color more specifically dark color 4 14 This word is absent from the Arabic language and has been used by the Sanhaja tribe and Zenata tribe before the arrival of the Beni Ḥassan 15 Others claim it comes from the Arabic phrase al Hurr al Thani or second class second group of free people 13 Neither of these claims have much proof 13 History EditThe Haratin form an ethnic group distinct from Arab and Tuareg populations as well as from the contemporary ethnic groups of sub Saharan Africa 4 5 16 However in countries such as Morocco they are sometimes classified either as Berber or Arab depending on their language and society they are found in 10 In Mauritania however where there are nearly 1 5 million Haratin they have developed a separate sense of ethnic identity 10 During the Roman occupation of Mauretania the Godala Berber tribe fled to the south towards the Draa oasis and enslaved the local Haratin population 17 18 19 They have historically inherited their slave status and family occupation have been endogamous and socially segregated 11 12 Some communities differentiated two types of slaves one called Abid or slave and Haratin or freed slave However per anthropologist John Shoup both Abid and Haratin were not free to own land or had equivalent property rights 10 Regardless of whether they were technically free or not they were treated as socially inferior in the communities they lived in Being denied the right and the ability to own any land they historically survived by accepting a patron client serf relationship either as domestic servant or as share cropping labor khammasin 20 21 They became a common target of mandatory conscription by the Moroccan ruler Ismail Ibn Sharif as he sought to build a military that had no social or cultural attachment to any other Arab or Berber group in Maghreb He conscripted the majority of able bodied male Haratin and Abid that were present in Morocco at the time This army was then commonly coerced into a series of wars in order to consolidate Ibn Sharif s power 12 20 22 Haratin communities EditMauritania Edit See also Slavery in Mauritania In Mauritania the Haratin form one of the largest ethnic groups and account for as much as 40 of the Mauritanians They are sometimes referred to as Black Moors 23 in contrast to Beidane or White Moors The Haratin there are primarily Hassaniya Arabic 24 The Haratin of Mauritania according to anthropologist Joseph Hellweg who specializes in West African studies were historically part of a social caste like hierarchy that likely developed from a Bedouin legacy between the 14th and 16th century The Hassan monopolized the occupations related to war and politics the Zwaya Zawaya the religious roles the Bidan White Moors owned property and held slaves Haratins Black Moors 25 Each of these were immovable castes endogamous with hereditary occupations and where the upper strata collected tribute horma from the lower strata of Mauritanian society considered them socially inferior and denied them the right to own land or weapons thereby creating a socio economically closed system 26 27 28 In 1960 Mauritania officially abolished slavery and made another update to its slavery law in 1981 24 However even after the formalities abolishment and new laws discrimination against Haratin is still widespread and many continue to be for all practical purposes enslaved while large numbers live in other forms of informal dependence on their former masters 24 In Mauritania the use of Haratin girls as servants has attracted activists Amnesty International reported that in 1994 90 000 Haratine still lived as property of their master with the report indicating that slavery in Mauritania is most dominant within the traditional upper class of the Moors 29 According to Mauritanian officials any master serf relationship is mutually consensual This position has been questioned by the United Nations and human rights advocacy groups 24 The Amnesty International report states that s ocial attitudes have changed among most urban Moors but in rural areas the ancient divide is still very alive There have been many attempts to assess the real extension of slavery in modern Mauritania but these have mostly been frustrated by the Nouakchott government s official stance that the practice has been eliminated Amnesty further estimated that some 300 000 freed slaves continued to be in service of their former masters 29 On 27 April 2007 Messaoud Ould Boulkheir was elected speaker of the National Assembly becoming the first black Haratin to hold the position Morocco Edit Haratin in Morocco are mostly concentrated in the southern part of the Draa Tafilalet region specifically towns such as Zagora where they make up a significant portion of the populace 30 Haratin have been the slave strata of the Moroccan society through its recorded history 12 They were owned in every town and farming center before the time of Moroccan ruler Ismail Ibn Sharif They provided domestic labor farm labor physical labor inside towns and markets as well as were conscripted to fight wars 20 22 According to Remco Ensel a professor of anthropology specializing in Maghreb studies the word Haratin in Moroccan is a pejorative that connotes subordination disrepute and in contemporary literature it is often replaced with Drawi Drawa Sahrawi Sahrawa or other regional terms 31 32 The Moroccan Haritin states Chouki El Hamel a professor of history specializing in African Studies are the diaspora of black West Africans who were forcefully transported across the Sahara and sold in Moroccan slave markets over centuries They absorbed the Arabo centric values in the dominant interpretation of Islam states El Hamel over the generations and they see themselves as Muslim Moroccans rather than by their ethnic or native group 32 The Haratin strata as slave workers were a major institution of Moroccan society through the 19th century 33 Yet there has been a general lack of historical records about their origins and ethnography leading to several constructed proposals and their mention in older Moroccan literature is generally limited to their status as slaves and more focused on the rights on their owners 32 34 It is their contemporary economic and social marginalization that has awakened renewed interest in their history and their oral histories 32 The Haratins remain indispensable workers in modern oases societies states Ensel and continue to be mistreated in contrast to the upper strata called the Shurfa 31 According to Remco Ensel Haratin along with Swasin in Morocco and other northern fringe societies of the Sahara were a part of a social hierarchy that included the upper strata of nobles religious specialists and literati followed by freemen nomadic pastoral strata and slaves The Haratin were hierarchically higher than the Abid descendant of slaves at the very bottom but lower than Ahrar This hierarchy states Ensel has been variously described as ethnic groups estates quasi castes castes or classes 35 36 The Haratins historically lived segregated from the main society in a rural isolation 36 Their subjugation was sometimes ideologically justified by nobles and some religious scholars even though others disagreed 37 The social stratification of Haratin and their inter relationships with others members of the society varied by valley and oasis but whether the Haratins were technically unfreed semi freed or freed slaves they were considered as inferior by other strata of the society 38 The Haratin remain a marginalized population of Morocco just like other similar groups around the world 39 Western Sahara Edit According to Human Rights Watch Morocco alleges that slavery is widespread in the Sahrawi refugee camps run by the Polisario Front in southwestern Algeria Polisario denies this and claims to have eradicated slavery through awareness campaigns A 2009 investigative report by Human Rights Watch interviewed some dark skinned Sahrawi people who are a small minority in the camps they stated that some blacks are owned by whites but this ownership is manifested only in granting marriage rights to girls In other words a dark skinned girl must have an approval from her master Without this the marriage can not be performed by a qadi 40 The report notes that Polisario claims to oppose any such discrimination but raises questions about possible official collusion in or indifference to the practice In addition a case of an official document that grants freedom to a group of enslaved families has been found by HRW The document in question dates as recently as 2007 The document was signed by a local judge or an official civil servant Slavery is still engraved in memories due to historical and traditional reasons and such cases are not as shocking as one might think to the society of the Sahrawi refugee camps 40 The Human Rights Watch concludes its chapter on slavery as follows In sum credible sources testified to Human Rights Watch about vestiges of slavery that continue to affect the lives of a portion of the black minority in the Tindouf camps The practices involve historical ties between families that involve certain rights and obligations that are not always clear Being a slave does not necessarily preclude enjoying freedom of movement Responding to questions about slavery the Polisario has acknowledged the survival to a limited extent of certain practices related to antiquated thinking and said it was determined to combat and eradicate them whenever they emerge and no matter what shape they take We welcome this statement and urge the Polisario to be vigilant in pursuing this objective said HRW 40 Algeria Edit In the Algerian Sahara the Haratin who were marginalized by France during colonization experienced social and political progress after the country s independence 41 This integration had started during the war of liberation a discourse of emancipation and the absence of state racism which constitutes a tradition of Algerian nationalism had succeeded in mobilizing this social category 41 Social success through education allowed the former Haratin to be represented in local communities and to access the most influential positions 41 References Edit Chouki El Hamel 2014 Black Morocco A History of Slavery Race and Islam Cambridge University Press pp 110 113 ISBN 978 1 139 62004 8 Sabine Partouche L Encyclopedie berbere Institut de recherches et d etudes sur les mondes arabes et musulmans Iremam UMR 7310 Retrieved 25 February 2018 Jacques Meunie Denise 1972 L Notes sur l histoire des populations du sud marocain Revue de l Occident Musulman et de la Mediterranee 11 137 150 doi 10 3406 remmm 1972 1148 Retrieved 25 February 2018 a b c Gast M 2000 Harṭani Encyclopedie berbere Hadrumetum Hidjaba 22 a b Froment Alain 1999 Les Bella d Ours une anthropobiologie de populations dites captives In Doe John ed Les temps du Sahel En hommage a Edmond Bernus in French p 186 a b they are Arabic speaking Haratin Encyclopaedia Britannica 2014 Keita S O Y 1993 Studies and Comments on Ancient Egyptian Biological Relationships History in Africa 20 129 154 doi 10 2307 3171969 ISSN 0361 5413 JSTOR 3171969 S2CID 162330365 McDougall E Ann 2015 Hidden in Plain Sight Haratine in Nouakchott s Niche Settlements The International Journal of African Historical Studies 48 2 251 279 ISSN 0361 7882 JSTOR 44723360 Mauritania CIA Factbook a b c d John A Shoup III 2011 Ethnic Groups of Africa and the Middle East An Encyclopedia An Encyclopedia ABC CLIO pp 114 115 ISBN 978 1 59884 363 7 a b c d Anthony Appiah Henry Louis Gates 2010 Encyclopedia of Africa Oxford University Press p 549 ISBN 978 0 19 533770 9 Quote Haratine Social caste in several northwestern African countries consisting of blacks many of whom are former slaves a b c d e Meyers Allan R 1977 Class Ethnicity and Slavery The Origins of the Moroccan Abid The International Journal of African Historical Studies Boston University African Studies Center 10 3 427 442 doi 10 2307 216736 JSTOR 216736 a b c John A Shoup 31 October 2011 Ethnic Groups of Africa and the Middle East An Encyclopedia ABC CLIO pp 114 116 ISBN 978 1 59884 362 0 Hamel Chouki El 2002 Race slavery and Islam in Maghribi Mediterranean thought the question of the Haratin in Morocco The Journal of North African Studies Routledge 7 3 29 52 doi 10 1080 13629380208718472 S2CID 219625829 Chouki El Hamel 2014 Black Morocco A History of Slavery Race and Islam Cambridge University Press p 110 ISBN 978 1 139 62004 8 Colin Georges Seraphin 1971 Ḥaraṭin PDF In B Lewis V L Menage Ch Pellat J Schacht eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Vol 3 E J Brill Ennaji Mohammed 1999 Serving the Master Slavery and Society in Nineteenth century Morocco Macmillan p 62 ISBN 978 0 333 75477 1 Hsain Ilahiane 1998 The Power of the Dagger the Seeds of the Koran and the Sweat of the Ploughman Ethnic Stratification and Agricultural Intensification in the Ziz Valley Southeast Morocco University of Arizona p 107 Chouki El Hamel 27 February 2014 Black Morocco A History of Slavery Race and Islam Cambridge University Press pp 111 112 ISBN 978 1 139 62004 8 a b c Martin A Klein Suzanne Miers 2013 Slavery and Colonial Rule in Africa Routledge pp 58 59 79 86 ISBN 978 0714648842 Chouki El Hamel 2014 Black Morocco A History of Slavery Race and Islam Cambridge University Press p 92 ISBN 978 1 139 62004 8 a b John Ralph Willis 2005 Slaves and Slavery in Africa Volume Two The Servile Estate Routledge pp 2 9 ISBN 978 1 135 78016 6 Slavery s last stand CNN com CNN a b c d Appiah Kwame Anthony Henry Louis Gates Jr 2010 Encyclopedia of Africa Two Volume Set Oxford University Press p 549 ISBN 9780195337709 Joseph R Hellweg 2011 Mark Juergensmeyer Wade Clark Roof eds Encyclopedia of Global Religion SAGE Publications p 761 ISBN 978 1 4522 6656 5 Anthony G Pazzanita 1999 Middle East Journal Political Transition in Mauritania Problems and Prospects Volume 53 Number 1 Winter 1999 pages 44 58 Katherine Ann Wiley 2016 Making People Bigger Wedding Exchange and the Creation of Social Value in Rural Mauritania Africa Today Johns Hopkins University Press Volume 62 Number 3 pages 48 69 Melinda Smale 1980 Women in Mauritania USAID Mauritania Office of Women in Development Agency for International Development OICD Washington DC page viii ix xviii xix 12 17 35 36 43 Quote Caste is the most specific of these crucial concepts When applied to West African societies it is used in the very general meaning of the division of societies into hierarchically rank endogamous occupational groups the relation between these groups having ritual as well as economic significance To understand Mauritanian society one must understand its ethnic groups its tribes socio economic classes and its castes The Hassaniya speakers who predominate over the majority of the country except along the river are divisible into two crucial subgroups the Bidan or white Moors and the Haratin or black Moors The Bidan are traditionally further divided into Z waya religious or marabout groups Hassan warrior groups Zenaga free tributary groups Mu allamin craftsmen and Ighyuwn entertainers a b Afrol News A Zagora les fantomes de la segregation huffpostmaghreb a b Remco Ensel 1999 Saints and Servants in Southern Morocco BRILL pp 2 4 ISBN 90 04 11429 7 a b c d Chouki El Hamel 2014 Black Morocco A History of Slavery Race and Islam Cambridge University Press pp 4 6 ISBN 978 1 139 62004 8 Mohammed Ennaji 1999 Serving the Master Slavery and Society in 19th Century Morocco Palgrave Macmillan pp 1 7 ISBN 978 0 312 21152 3 Mohamed Hassan 2012 Between Caravan and Sultan The Bayruk of Southern Morocco A Study in History and Identity BRILL Academic pp 189 195 ISBN 978 90 04 18382 7 Chouki El Hamel 2014 Black Morocco A History of Slavery Race and Islam Cambridge University Press p 3 ISBN 978 1 139 62004 8 a b Chouki El Hamel 2014 Black Morocco A History of Slavery Race and Islam Cambridge University Press pp 92 112 113 ISBN 978 1 139 62004 8 Chouki El Hamel 2014 Black Morocco A History of Slavery Race and Islam Cambridge University Press pp 112 113 172 173 ISBN 978 1 139 62004 8 Quote This new meaning was an ideological construct to justify the subjugation of the free freed blacks Haratin and was buttressed by documents that sought to advance the Makhzan s agenda by demonstrating that the Haratin were of slave origin therefore creating a racialized caste Chouki El Hamel 2014 Black Morocco A History of Slavery Race and Islam Cambridge University Press pp 3 45 46 57 59 244 246 ISBN 978 1 139 62004 8 Remco Ensel 1999 Saints and Servants in Southern Morocco BRILL pp 6 7 ISBN 90 04 11429 7 a b c Human Rights in Western Sahara and the Tindouf Refugee Camps 19 December 2008 Retrieved 17 August 2011 a b c Yousfi Badreddine 30 June 2017 Les territoires sahariens en Algerie Gouvernance acteurs et recomposition territoriale L Annee du Maghreb in French 16 53 69 doi 10 4000 anneemaghreb 2951 ISSN 1952 8108 Retrieved 22 March 2021 Bibliography EditIlahiane Hsain 1998 The Power of the Dagger the Seeds of the Koran and the Sweat of the Ploughman Ethnic Stratification and Agricultural Intensification in the Ziz Valley Southeast Morocco Vol 107 7 unpublished dissertation Univ of Arizona El Hamel Chouki Fall 2002 Race Slavery and Islam in the Maghribi Mediterranean Thought The Question of the Haratin in Morocco Journal of North African Studies Vol 29 Batran Aziz Abdalla 1985 The Ulama of Fas Mulay Isma il and the Issue of the Haratin of Fas In John Ralph Willis ed Slaves and Slavery in Muslim Africa Vol 1 Islam and the Ideology of Enslavement London Frank Cass pp 125 59 Ensel Remco 1999 Saints and Servants in Southern Morocco Leiden Brill Hunwick J O Black Slaves in the Mediterranean World introduction to a Neglected Aspect of the African Diaspora Journal of African History EnNaji Mohammed Seth Graebner 1998 Serving The Master Slavery amp Society in Nineteenth Century Morocco St Martin s Press p 62 Amnesty International 7 November 2002 Mauritania A future free from slavery The formal abolition of slavery in 1981 has not led to real and effective abolition for various reasons including a lack of legislation to ensure its implementation External links EditHaratin at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons Texts from Wikisource Data from Wikidata Slavery in Africa at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haratin amp oldid 1143521989, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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