In this booklet including the last part of chapter four of her thesis in sociology written at A.I.U. between 2022 and 2024, the human rights activist and translator Milena Rampoldi introduces two abolitionists of two different epoch theorising the concept of the so-called "deracialisation of slavery". However, when we "deracialise" slavery in today's Mauritania, where slavery is connected with a paradigm of apartheid, racism, and ethnic/racial discrimination which came up during the historical development and because of the contact of Muslim slavery with the race-based Atlantic slave trade in…mehr
In this booklet including the last part of chapter four of her thesis in sociology written at A.I.U. between 2022 and 2024, the human rights activist and translator Milena Rampoldi introduces two abolitionists of two different epoch theorising the concept of the so-called "deracialisation of slavery". However, when we "deracialise" slavery in today's Mauritania, where slavery is connected with a paradigm of apartheid, racism, and ethnic/racial discrimination which came up during the historical development and because of the contact of Muslim slavery with the race-based Atlantic slave trade in the region, we risk to lose the race-based paradigm we need to struggle against racism properly by using the term "race" as the author has shown in her reflections about Snouck Hurgronje's concept of "race" in the so-called "system Islam" .In the first chapter of this booklet, Milena Rampoldi introduces the lecture given in 2011 by the scholar Abdullah Hakim Quick at the University of Florida entitled Islam, Slavery and the African. She affirms:"A reason why we urgently need abolitionism as the only option when it is about slavery in Muslim communities/societies and in the Islamic egalitarian doctrine, is also the risk of transferring slavery-driven paradigms to marriage. An example is the important issue thematised by the American scholar Musa Furber in this article I will introduce in this booklet opposing to the forced marriage of raped woman. On the basis of what affirmed by Furber, I show how easily slavery-driven paradigms can be applied in the life of people are not slaves but live like slaves. And these people are mainly women."In the second part of this booklet, the authors introduces the discourse of Ahmed Baba, an important black Muslim scholar of the 16th century, against slavery and its racialisation.
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Autorenporträt
Dr. Phil. Milena Rampoldi, 1973 in Bozen geboren, studierte in Italien Theologie, Pädagogik, Philosophie und Orientalistik, um dann in Wien zum Thema der arabophonen Korandidaktik im deutschen Sprachraum zu promovieren. Sie arbeitete als Fremdsprachlehrerin . 2014 gründete sich den Verein ProMosaik e.V. für die interkulturelle Kommunikation (www.promosaik.com). Die Themen ihrer Bücher beziehen sich im Beson-deren auf die islamische Religion, Kultur und Geschichte und auf den islamischen Feminismus und die Menschenrechte. Sie verfolgt mit ihren Texten das Ziel des Dialogs zwischen den Religionen und ist der Überzeugung, dass man durch die Annäherung an die Geschichte auch die Gegenwart besser verstehen kann, um eine Zukunft im Sinne der Gerechtigkeit und des Friedens aufbauen zu können.
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