Rabbi Marc Lee Raphael on
Jews in the Slave Trade
Rabbi Marc Lee Raphael on
Jews in the Slave Trade
Eight years BEFORE the publication of The Secret Relationship Between Blacks and Jews, Volume 1,
Rabbi Marc Lee Raphael published a stunning statement on Jewish
involvement in the slave trade. Rabbi Raphael is both a rabbi and a top
historian of Jewish history. For the last generation he has been the editor of the quarterly journal, American Jewish History.
He is the Nathan and Sophia Gumenick Professor of Judaic Studies,
Professor of Religion, and Chair, Department of Religion, The College of
William and Mary, and a Visiting Fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford
University. He, and a visiting professor at Brown University, the
University of Pittsburgh, HUC-JIR, UCLA, and Case Western Reserve
University. He came to The College of William and Mary in 1989 after 20
years at Ohio State University. He is the author of many books on Jews
and Judaism in America, and his most recent publication (with his wife
Linda Schermer Raphael) is When Night Fell: An Anthology of Holocaust Short Stories (Rutgers University Press, 1999). He is now writing Judaism in America for the Contemporary American Series of Columbia University Press. Visit him at the website of his synagoge, Bet Aviv, in Columbia, Maryland.
The following passages are from Dr. Raphael's book Jews and Judaism in the United States a Documentary History (New York: Behrman House, Inc., Pub, 1983), pp. 14, 23-25.
"Jews
also took an active part in the Dutch colonial slave trade; indeed, the
bylaws of the Recife and Mauricia congregations (1648) included an imposta (Jewish tax) of five soldos
for each Negro slave a Brazilian Jew purchased from the West Indies
Company. Slave auctions were postponed if they fell on a Jewish holiday.
In Curacao in the seventeenth century, as well as in the British
colonies of Barbados and Jamaica in the eighteenth century, Jewish
merchants played a major role in the slave trade. In fact, in all the
American colonies, whether French (Martinique), British, or Dutch, Jewish merchants frequently dominated.
"This
was no less true on the North American mainland, where during the
eighteenth century Jews participated in the 'triangular trade' that
brought slaves from Africa to the West Indies and there exchanged them
for molasses, which in turn was taken to New England and converted into
rum for sale in Africa. Isaac Da Costa of Charleston in the 1750's,
David Franks of Philadelphia in the 1760's, and Aaron Lopez of Newport
in the late 1760's and early 1770's dominated Jewish slave trading on
the American continent."
Dr. Raphael discusses the central role of the Jews in the New World commerce and the African slave trade (pp. 23-25):
SEVENTEENTH AND EIGHTEENTH CENTURIES:
JEWISH INTER-ISLAND TRADE: CURACAO, 1656
During the sixteenth
century, exiled from their Spanish homeland and hard-pressed to escape
the clutches of the Inquisition, Spanish and Portuguese Jews fled to the
Netherlands; the Dutch enthusiastically welcomed these talented,
skilled husinessmen. While thriving in Amsterdam-where they became the
hub of a unique urban Jewish universe and attained status that
anticipated Jewish emancipation in the West by over a century-they began
in the 1500's and 1600's to establish themselves in the Dutch and
English colonies in the New World. These included Curacao, Surinam,
Recife, and New Amsterdam (Dutch) as well as Barbados, Jamaica, Newport,
and Savannah (English). In these European outposts the Jews, with their
years of mercantile experience and networks of friends and family
providing market reports of great use, played a significant role in the
merchant capitalism, commercial revolution, and territorial expansion
that developed the New World and established the colonial economies. The
Jewish-Caribbean nexus provided Jews with the opportunity to claim a disproportionate influence in seventeenth and eighteenth century New World commerce,
and enabled West Indian Jewry-far outnumbering its coreligionists
further north-to enjoy a centrality which North American Jewry would not
achieve for a long time to come.
Groups of Jews began to
arrive in Surinam in the middle of the seven-teenth century, after the
Portuguese regained control of northern Brazil. By 1694, twenty-seven
years after the British had surrendered Surinam to the Dutch, there were
about 100 Jewish families and fifty single Jews there, or about 570
persons. They possessed more than forty estates and 9,000 slaves,
contributed 25,905 pounds of sugar as a gift for the building of a
hospital, and carried on an active trade with Newport and other colonial
ports. By 1730, Jews owned 115 plantations and were a large part of a
sugar export business which sent out 21,680,000 pounds of sugar to
European and New World markets in 1730 alone.
Slave trading was a major feature of Jewish economic life in Surinam which as a major stopping-off point in the triangular trade. Both North American and Caribbean Jews played a key role in this commerce:
records of a slave sale in 1707 reveal that the ten largest Jewish
purchasers (10,400 guilders) spent more than 25 percent of the total
funds (38,605 guilders) exchanged.
Jewish economic life in
the Dutch West Indies, as in the North American colonies, consisted
primarily of mercantile communities, with large inequities in the
distribution of wealth. Most Jews were shopkeepers, middlemen, or petty
merchants who received encouragement and support from Dutch authorities.
In Curacao, for example, Jewish communal life began after the
Portuguese victory in 1654. In 1656 the community founded a
congregation, and in the early 1670's brought its first rabbi to the
island. Curacao, with its large natural harbor, was the steppng-stone to
the other Caribbean islands and thus ideally suited geographically for
commerce. The Jews were the recipients of favorable charters containing
generous economic privileges granted by the Dutch West Indies Company in
Amsterdam. The economic life of the Jewish community of Curacao
revolved around ownership of sugar plantations and marketing of sugar,
the importing of manufactured goods, and a heavy involvement in the slave trade,
within a decade of their arrival, Jews owned 80 percent of the Curacao
plantations. The strength of the Jewish trade lay in connections in
Western Europe as well as ownership of the ships used in commerce. While
Jews carried on an active trade with French and English colonies in the
Caribbean, their principal market was the Spanish Main (today Venezuela
and Colombia).
Extant tax lists give us a
glimpse of their dominance. Of the eighteen wealthiest Jews in the 1702
and 1707 tax lists, nine either owned a ship or had at least a share in
a vessel. By 1721 a letter to the Amsterdam Jewish community claimed
that "nearly all the navigation...was in the hands of the Jews."' Yet
another indication of the economic success of Curacao's Jews is the fact
that in 1707 the island's 377 residents were assessed by the Governor
and his Council a total of 4,002 pesos; 104 Jews, or 27.6 percent of the
taxpayers, contributed 1,380 pesos, or 34.5 percent of the entire
amount assessed.
In the British West
Indies, two 1680 tax lists survive, both from Barbados; they, too,
provide useful information about Jewish economic life. In Bridgetown
itself, out of a total of 404 households, 54 households or 300 persons
were Jewish, 240 of them living in "ye Towne of S. Michael ye Bridge
Town." Contrary to most impressions, "many, indeed, most of them, were
very poor." There were only a few planters, and most Jews were not
naturalized or endenizened (and thus could not import goods or pursue
debtors in court). But for merchants holding letters of endenization,
opportunities were not lacking. Barbados sugar-and its by-products rum
and molasses-were in great demand, and in addition to playing a role in
its export, Jewish merchants were active in the import trade. Forty-five
Jewish households were taxed in Barbados in 1680, and more than half of
them contributed only 11.7 percent of the total sum raised. While the
richest five gave almost half the Jewish total, they were but 11.1
percent of the taxable population. The tax list of 1679-80 shows a
similar picture; of fifty-one householders, nineteen (37.2 percent) gave
less than one-tenth of the total, while the four richest merchants gave
almost one-third of the total.
An interesting record of
interisland trade involving a Jewish merchant and the islands of
Barbados and Curacao comes from correspondence of 1656. It reminds us
that sometimes the commercial trips were not well planned and that
Jewish captains-who frequently acted as commercial agents as well-would
decide where to sell their cargo, at what price, and what goods to bring
back on the return trip.
End of excerpt.