Commemorating the abolition of slavery in Tunisia. The rights of black citizens and the history of slaves of European origin

M’hamed Oualdi
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Abstract

This article contrasts a policy of commemoration of slavery in post-revolutionary Tunisia with the gradual and very slow history of the demise of slavery in this country since the beginning of the 19th century. It explores the choice of the Tunisian state to commemorate the abolition of slavery in Tunisia with reference to the promulgation of a decree enacted in 1846, and the way in which the end of West and East African slavery became central to civic memory in Tunisia.The first part of the article is based on recent, innovative and stimulating scholarly research by Ines Mrad Dali, Sephanie Pouessel, Maha Abdelhamid and Marta Scaglioni on black communities in Tunisia. The second part relies on works on European captives and the Mamluks or Muslim slaves and servants of often Caucasian origin in the Maghreb.The first section places the issue of the commemoration of slavery in the context of the emergence of civic claims from black activists in Tunisia since the 2011 Revolution. The profound transformations that black communities have undergone since decolonization in the 1950s have shaped these claims. Indeed, the categories of national belonging to a Tunisian civic community, and therefore the debates on collective memory and the historical representations of the nation, have become more decisive for these anti-racist activists than the narratives of local origins which aimed to explain or even legitimize the subordinate positions of these communities, especially in the south of the country.The second section broadens the discussion to include Christian male and female captives and especially the cases of male and female slaves of Caucasian origin converted to Islam (Mamluks and Odalisques) in 19th-century Tunisia. This section shows that the descendants of European captives are less concerned with the commemoration of the abolition of slavery. Their role in the country's history is greater because of their contribution to the founding of the Tunisian nation and its state. The uneven integration of the descendants of slaves into Tunisian society, in addition to the separate relationship with the memory of slavery of these groups explain over a long period of time the presence today of the differential treatment of Tunisians on the basis of skin colour.The article concludes with two observations: Tunisian anti-racist activists wanted to fight against racist discourses and categories. From this point of view, they succeeded in advancing their cause by giving official status to the commemoration of the abolition of 1846. Henceforth, the fundamental and difficult question of the unequal distribution of resources in post-revolutionary Tunisia remains to be asked.
纪念突尼斯废除奴隶制。黑人公民的权利和欧洲裔奴隶的历史
本文将突尼斯革命后的奴隶制纪念政策与该国自19世纪初以来逐渐缓慢的奴隶制消亡历史进行对比。它探讨了突尼斯国家选择纪念1846年颁布的一项法令,以及西非和东非奴隶制的终结如何成为突尼斯公民记忆的中心。文章的第一部分是基于Ines Mrad Dali, Sephanie Pouessel, Maha Abdelhamid和Marta Scaglioni最近对突尼斯黑人社区的创新和刺激的学术研究。第二部分依赖于欧洲俘虏和马穆鲁克人或穆斯林奴隶和马格里布白人血统的仆人的作品。第一部分将纪念奴隶制的问题置于2011年革命以来突尼斯黑人活动家提出的公民要求的背景下。自20世纪50年代非殖民化以来,黑人社区所经历的深刻变革形成了这些主张。事实上,对于这些反种族主义活动人士来说,突尼斯公民社区所属的民族类别,以及因此而引发的关于集体记忆和国家历史表征的辩论,已变得比那些旨在解释或甚至使这些社区的从属地位合法化的地方起源的叙述更具决定性,特别是在该国南部。第二部分扩大了讨论范围,包括基督徒男女俘虏,特别是19世纪突尼斯皈依伊斯兰教的高加索裔男女奴隶(马穆鲁克和奥达里斯克)的案例。这一节表明,欧洲俘虏的后代不太关心废除奴隶制的纪念活动。他们在国家历史上的作用更大,因为他们对突尼斯民族和国家的建立做出了贡献。奴隶的后代不均衡地融入突尼斯社会,加上这些群体与奴隶制记忆的单独关系,在很长一段时间内解释了今天突尼斯人因肤色而受到差别待遇的存在。文章以两点结论结尾:突尼斯反种族主义活动人士想要对抗种族主义言论和种族主义类别。从这个角度来看,他们成功地推进了他们的事业,使1846年废除奴隶制的纪念活动获得了官方地位。从此以后,在革命后的突尼斯,资源分配不均这一根本而棘手的问题仍有待解决。
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