walking past the fiction shelves in the back room at work
the other day - they’re the shelves holding the new novels waiting to be
catalogued - a very stunning, yet simple cover called out to me… i opened up ‘the
secrets of mary bowser’ by lois leveen and was drawn into it immediately – i reserved
it and couldn’t wait to read mary’s story…
this is an historical novel based on the life of mary bowser, a womon born into slavery and owned by a wealthy merchant john van lew... on his death his
daughter elizabeth, an abolitionist, freed all of his slaves and sponsored mary’s
education at the quaker school for negroes in philadelphia – a ‘free’ but ‘segregated’ community where mary learns valuable insights and questions much (including the notion of freedom!)...
after graduating she gave up her ‘freedom’ to return to richmond, virginia
as part of an underground network transporting 'runaway' slaves to freedom... having a photographic memory, her ability to retain everything she reads, sees and hears, and relay information word for word, soon saw her take her place as an integral player in the union spy network... with underground assistance mary was 'installed' as a house slave in the confederate
white house of jefferson davis – the perfect place to glean the movements and plans of the
enemy and feed them back to the union…
very little information remains of mary’s exploits... according to the women in history website “After
the war, the federal government destroyed the records of Southern spy
activities, to protect their lives -- including Mary … In 1995, the U.S.
government honored Mary Elizabeth Bowser for her efforts by inducting her in
the U.S. Army Military Intelligence Corps Hall of Fame in Fort Huachuca,
Arizona. During the ceremony, her contribution was described thus:
Ms. Bowser certainly succeeded in a highly dangerous mission to the great benefit of the Union effort. She was one of the highest placed and most productive espionage agents of the Civil War. ... [Her information] greatly enhanced the Union's conduct of the war. ... Jefferson Davis never discovered the leak in his household staff, although he knew the Union somehow kept discovering Confederate plans."
while reading this book i couldn’t help but think about our
modern day slaves – i saw the parallels to those society uses and abuses
because of their physical difference – the perception that they are less than –
that they are sub-human…
according to the website on nonhuman slavery in an article “The Dreaded Comparison: Martin Rowe on Marjorie Spiegel’s Groundbreaking Book” ...
“the ideologies of slavery that kept these human beings as property continue to be used with non-human animals today…
can you see the parallels???This comparison—between the conditions of slaves and the conditions of animals in factory farms, as victims of the hunt, and in laboratories—may not seem particularly surprising. After all, as Spiegel documents, slaves in the antebellum United States were considered literally sub-human….Of course, this type of thinking does not only extend to slaves or African Americans. It extends to Jews, who were rounded up by the Nazis into cattle-cars and sent to the camps because they were considered less-than-human viral infections in the Aryan body politic. It extends to women who have been thought of as bitches, foxy ladies, vixens, bats, old cows, and less-than-male (i.e. fully human) for centuries. But, and this is Spiegel’s dreaded kicker, this comparison extends to non-human animals—who continue to be beaten, abused, tortured, confined, hunted, and made the play and work thing of those in power."
can you really not see the parallels?
there are so many others enslaved - from the fur factories, to the feed lots, the slaughterhouses, the puppy farms, the bile farms, the circuses, the 'bestiality brothels', the vivisectors torture chambers - there's such a long list that makes up the current slave trade in sentient beings... i won't add any more graphics though - i will leave it to your minds eye, your conscience, because surely now you can see them? surely now you can understand the parallels of this modern day slavery??? surely it's as plain as the nose on your face?
one of my favourite bloggers, vegan feminist agitator, has recently written a wonderfully articulate post - the next emancipation - after seeing the film 'lincoln' (recounting his efforts in 1865 to get the 13th amendment passed which would abolish slavery) - where she states "I do think that there are parallels, though, with slavery: the concepts of ownership, of sovereignty, of emphasizing the powerful majority’s “right” to the entitlements they want to preserve versus the right of those not so endowed to simply live their own lives. In short, the chilling mentality of exceptionalism..." it's a post well worth reading...
one of my favourite bloggers, vegan feminist agitator, has recently written a wonderfully articulate post - the next emancipation - after seeing the film 'lincoln' (recounting his efforts in 1865 to get the 13th amendment passed which would abolish slavery) - where she states "I do think that there are parallels, though, with slavery: the concepts of ownership, of sovereignty, of emphasizing the powerful majority’s “right” to the entitlements they want to preserve versus the right of those not so endowed to simply live their own lives. In short, the chilling mentality of exceptionalism..." it's a post well worth reading...
"We can see quite plainly that our present civilization is built on the exploitation of animals, just as past civilizations were built on the exploitation of slaves." ... donald watson
For me... A larger question is "How can anyone *not* see the parallels?" It's a post I wish I could require every carnist to read... But of course - They would be the last ones to do so.
ReplyDeleteStill - Thank you always for your efforts in exposing the truth.
thank you Bea... there are so many inspiring blogs 'out there' that i would love to see as compulsory carnist mind-food, yours being at the top of the list...
ReplyDeleteYes, I do see the parallels. This is a thought-provoking post and a successful one, because it presents your point of view in a non-confrontational but convincing way.
ReplyDeletethank you parlance - i am always inspired and encouraged by your comments...
ReplyDelete