African Complicity in the Slave Trade: Should African Kingdoms Be Held Morally Accountable Today?

The transatlantic slave trade remains one of history’s most harrowing episodes, marked by unimaginable suffering and the forced displacement of millions of Africans. While European and American slavers bear the brunt of historical condemnation, the role of African kingdoms in facilitating the trade raises complex moral questions. Should these African societies—many of which actively participated in capturing and selling enslaved people—be held morally accountable today? The Historical Reality of African Involvement The African slave trade was not a one-sided enterprise. Many powerful West and Central African kingdoms, such as Dahomey, the Ashanti Empire, and the Kingdom of Kongo, engaged in the capture and sale of enslaved people to European traders. African middlemen, warlords, and rulers profited immensely from the trade, exchanging captives for guns, textiles, and other goods. As historian **John Thornton** notes: "Africa...