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Question
how was the practice of traditional african enslavement different from the enslavement practiced after european contact?
- enslaved people were usually transported to the west indies.
- enslaved people were often ransomed back to their home villages.
- enslaved people were rarely captured in war.
- enslaved people rarely had an opportunity to regain their freedom.
Traditional African enslavement often allowed for enslaved people to be ransomed back to their communities, had pathways to freedom, and enslavement was frequently tied to war captives or debt. Post-European contact, enslavement became a permanent, racialized system with no path to freedom for most, and enslaved people were transported across the Atlantic (like to the West Indies). The other options are incorrect: transport to the West Indies was a post-European practice; enslaved people in traditional African systems were often captured in war; and post-European enslavement rarely offered freedom, which is the opposite of traditional practices.
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B. Enslaved people were often ransomed back to their home villages.