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Apologies for past injustices - where do you stand?

(106 Posts)
Doodledog Wed 23-Mar-22 18:03:31

There has been speculation about whether the UK (and other countries) should apologise for colonisation, slavery and the undoubtedly awful things that happened in our name in the past.

I don't know what I think about this. Part of me thinks it would sound hollow and insincere after all this time, but another part of me thinks that if the people of the countries is asking for the apology then it's the least we should do.

Sticking with Jamaica, as that is the country which is currently in the news in this regard - nobody who lived through the days of slavery is alive now, although there are plenty of people whose place in society is based on their ancestors' involvement in the slave trade. Would it be right to make some sort of reparations? If so, what should they be, and how would they be applied? Or should we all move on and see past atrocities as belonging in the past (or something different)?

Whitewavemark2 Thu 24-Mar-22 10:40:53

Conservatives are called that for a reason.

Greta Thu 24-Mar-22 10:53:25

The question that really intrigues me is 'Why are people so bloody respectful of the people who are enjoying that wealth today?'

Yes, that puzzles me too. Since I came to live in this country I have been acutely aware of 'status'. Whether that is how much money you have, the car you drive, the kind of house you live in, schools your children attend. For instance I sooon learned that if you lived in a semi detached house you were seen as a 'better' person than if you lived in a humble terrace house. Status seems to be an obsession. I guess it makes some people feel superior. It still doesn't answer the question why others feel the need to revere it.

volver Thu 24-Mar-22 11:00:36

MaizieD

volver

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitehall_Accord

The Whitehall Accord. Good old Henry Dundas, aka Henry IX.

I fail to see the relevance of that to Napoleon reinstating slavery.

OK, apologies for continuing a diversion to the thread. Henry Dundas is a figure of great interest in Scotland right now. He has a statue smile

There was an agreement that Britain could exert control over some of the French colonies in the Caribbean, agreed with French counter revolutionaries. So when the French Revolutionary government abolished slavery, the cry would have gone up from the counter revolutionaries, that they needed to bring slavery back or the colonies wouldn't be controlled by the French any more.

So Napoleon brought slavery back.

Happy to be corrected by someone who knows more than me.

halfpint1 Thu 24-Mar-22 11:14:05

Learning from history and doing better now can be more affective than apologising for events we had no control over.
Helping Ukranian refugees springs to mind

Yammy Thu 24-Mar-22 11:15:02

We should learn from our mistakes and move on and educate the present young so they are aware.
The Roman Empire would not have existed but for slaves. The Vikings took British slaves to Iceland. Slavery was going on in Africa internally with tribes selling to Arab traders before it was expanded by France, Portugal and Great Britain as it was then.
None of these facts makes it right but we should learn from them to educate the young and move on.
Perhaps more attention should have been paid to how the Caribbean countries felt before William was sent out.

Oopsadaisy1 Thu 24-Mar-22 11:21:24

Can’t we just accept that although we are all sorry for the awful things that happened in the past, we cannot ‘make it up’ to any of the people who were affected.

If all the rich people who made their money from slavery in the world, sold up and handed it back in cash to the relatives of the people who were enslaved would that help? Maybe having these people stripped of their honours and their wealth would also help?

And as someone said what about the Irish who died in the famines, miners, farmers forced from their lands and farm workers barely able to feed their families? Are their relatives any less deserving?

Reparations seem to be what people want, but we can’t even sort the Windrush problem out, so trying to sort claimants out for the abuse meted out by the upper classes hundreds of years ago is a monumental task and one quite frankly (IMO) that no U.K. Government would want to tackle.

We know that our country wasn’t alone, maybe there should be an International fund for all people affected by land grabbing, slavery and poor treatment by the upper classes who made millions from their misery?
I’m also including the Native Americans in this.

But the list is endless.

Why not start by treating these peoples properly now and give them all a decent standard of living?

Of course we can’t, because we can’t even do that for people living in our own Country.

A bit of a ramble I know, but it is a very difficult problem and saying ‘sorry’ is only the start of it.

Katie59 Thu 24-Mar-22 11:23:33

Jamaica or any other former colony becoming a republic will make no difference to the lives of 99% of the population, a few of the elite will be able to enhance their own prestige and probably their bank balances too.

volver Thu 24-Mar-22 11:27:10

I find it very distasteful and if I may say so, colonial, that some posts say that our former colonies are corrupt and need a bigger country to look after them.

Do you hear yourselves?

Dinahmo Thu 24-Mar-22 11:30:06

Throughout history, the world over, masses of people have been enslaved at one time or another.

In England, during the Middle Ages the feudal system existed and about 85% of the population were serfs. Serfdom was a form of slavery whereby the serfs were tied to the land they occupied and the landowners. The lords owned everything that the serfs had, apart from their ability to work,

The end of serfdom started with the Peasants Revolt in 1381 but was not abolished until the reign of Elizabeth 1. It was abolished by Austria in the 18C and Russia in the 19C.

So, are the descendants of those English landowners supposed to apologise for the treatment during the Middle Ages of the ancestors of the majority of us? Obviously the answer has to be no. In the same way we should not be apologising for slavery.

During the Industrial Revolution children as young as 4 worked in the cotton mills or mines. Is anyone going to argue that their lives were better than those of slaves?

What we should be doing is learning from the past, remembering that slavery still goes on, sometimes in the UK and endeavouring to ensure that all people are treated fairly.

volver Thu 24-Mar-22 11:31:53

During the Industrial Revolution children as young as 4 worked in the cotton mills or mines. Is anyone going to argue that their lives were better than those of slaves?

Oh God, Aye.

Read some history lassie.

volver Thu 24-Mar-22 11:35:17

That was rude, and I apologise.

But I stand by the fact that the thousands (millions?) of people taken from their homes, treated as worse than animals, raped, held in sub-human conditions, and all the rest of it, had it a bit worse than children down mines. That doesn't diminish the suffering of the children down mines but it is not transatlantic slavery.

GrannyGravy13 Thu 24-Mar-22 11:36:11

There are still child slaves in Africa, they mine in appalling conditions in order for us to have batteries and microchips in everyday technology.

They need rescuing not apologies.

volver Thu 24-Mar-22 11:38:27

We can do both GG13

So what you are raising is a complete distraction.

I still don't know if we should be apologising but I do know that saying there are other evils in the world isn't a good argument for not doing it.

GrannyGravy13 Thu 24-Mar-22 11:43:28

volver

We can do both GG13

So what you are raising is a complete distraction.

I still don't know if we should be apologising but I do know that saying there are other evils in the world isn't a good argument for not doing it.

I just think that apologies for the slave trade by this generation who had absolutely nothing to do with it is rather pointless.

Acknowledging it, is however essential.

The above is just my opinion.

volver Thu 24-Mar-22 11:45:51

Like I said GG13, I don't know either way whether apologising is a good thing.

But I do know that saying there are other bad things in the world isn't an argument for not doing it, and distracts from the true discussion.

winterwhite Thu 24-Mar-22 11:54:19

We can't apologise for things we didn't do ourselves (ex for animals owned by us or small children). If we use the word 'regret' instead it is much easier.

Reparation would be best served by doing much, much more by way of foreign aid. The UK's stance is shameful, and this is something that ordinary people can do something about if they really want to, by putting pressure on their elected representatives and at the ballot box.

AGAA4 Thu 24-Mar-22 12:06:03

How far back should we go to apologise for the suffering Britain has caused.
Some of our history is nothing to be proud of.
If countries we have exploited want an apology then we should apologise.

JaneJudge Thu 24-Mar-22 12:09:51

AGAA4

How far back should we go to apologise for the suffering Britain has caused.
Some of our history is nothing to be proud of.
If countries we have exploited want an apology then we should apologise.

I agree with this. I was going to post similar, it doesn't matter what WE think, it matters to them and that is all that is important.

GrannyGravy13 Thu 24-Mar-22 12:12:13

volver

Like I said GG13, I don't know either way whether apologising is a good thing.

But I do know that saying there are other bad things in the world isn't an argument for not doing it, and distracts from the true discussion.

I think the position I am taking on this is the Government/Monarchy can say what it likes but it cannot change history.

What we can do is change the here and now, by doing so does not negate the suffering of the slaves but it could stop it being perpetuated in the 21st Century.

Doodledog Thu 24-Mar-22 12:28:00

There have been a lot of interesting replies, and it's clear that there is no real consensus.

If 'we' decide to apologise, who should speak for us? Should it be the royals, or there government, or someone else? Is there anyone who can speak for all of the UK?

Or if we decide to pay reparations, how would that work? We can't realistically pay individual people, and if we did, how would the formula work? Is an international response more appropriate? If so, do we factor in Aid that has already happened, or is it insulting to even consider that? How do we know what would have happened without (eg) slavery, or if the UK government had helped the Irish in the famine, or taxed mine owners and used the money to educate the workforce? Can we 'wind back' to a time that has never existed and to a place that is hypothetical?

I still don't know. Apologies without back-up money do seem hollow - I don't want to hear someone born in the last 70 years apologising to me about what happened to my great grandparents in Ireland in the 19th century - it makes no sense. Would my life have been materially different if it hadn't happened? I have no idea. Does it matter? Probably not.

I agree that the notion of deferring to those who benefitted from atrocities is strange. I'm not a cap-doffer, and I don't understand the fierce loyalties some people have to borders and boundaries - they seem to me to be nothing more than territories of long-dead thugs, so I don't go in for that either, although I can fully understand why Ukranians identify as such and not as Russians.

It's all complicated, isn't it? I knew so much more when I was younger ?

Dinahmo Thu 24-Mar-22 12:37:01

volver

That was rude, and I apologise.

But I stand by the fact that the thousands (millions?) of people taken from their homes, treated as worse than animals, raped, held in sub-human conditions, and all the rest of it, had it a bit worse than children down mines. That doesn't diminish the suffering of the children down mines but it is not transatlantic slavery.

You've hit the nail on the head with your statement regarding transatlantic slavery. I do think that is the reason why most people have difficulty with this because it's one race enslaving another. Otherwise, what is the difference between the treatment of slaves in the West Indies and those enslaved by their own nations?

Slavery is still happening in the UK - witness the report of a case this year of a man held captive for 40 years in a shed n Cumbria. There have also been cases involving rich Saudis holding their servants captive in London.

Caleo Thu 24-Mar-22 12:38:11

Some peoples need reparations and some do not. For instance it would be absurd to try to turn back the clock in Ireland to pre-Cromwell days, whereas it would be fair to turn back the clock to the Israeli Palestine pre-1967 border, or the Green Line.

Katie59 Thu 24-Mar-22 12:42:28

winterwhite

We can't apologise for things we didn't do ourselves (ex for animals owned by us or small children). If we use the word 'regret' instead it is much easier.

Reparation would be best served by doing much, much more by way of foreign aid. The UK's stance is shameful, and this is something that ordinary people can do something about if they really want to, by putting pressure on their elected representatives and at the ballot box.

Proposing more foreign aid or compensation for past misdeeds, is not a vote winner at an election, so is not going to happen. There are a great many other priorities that voters will support.

MaizieD Thu 24-Mar-22 13:01:31

^ I don't want to hear someone born in the last 70 years apologising to me about what happened to my great grandparents in Ireland in the 19th century -^

I don't want anyone apologising to me because my gt, gt, grandmother was born in slavery but I would very much like to see something done about things like the Windrush scandal and the inequities suffered by many descendants of slaves.

Sarnia Thu 24-Mar-22 13:12:37

Let's move on for pity's sake. You can't put the clock back, history is just that, history. Draw a line under it and learn from it. We have more than enough in the here and now to be worrying ourselves over.