The Atlantic Slave Trade: Empire Built on Human Suffering — Fexingo History
Four German Quakers in a small Pennsylvania town drafted the first known public protest against slavery in the American colonies in 1688. This episode explores the Germantown Mennonite community, the Radical Pietist theology that inspired Francis Daniel Pastorius and his neighbors, the text of their petition to the Monthly Meeting, and the complex web of reasons it was tabled — not rejected outright, but passed up through Quaker hierarchy until it quietly died. We discuss the tension between the Friends' growing antislavery conscience and their economic entanglement with the slave trade, the role of the Meeting system in suppressing dissent, and how this document — rediscovered in 1844 — became a touchstone for later abolitionists from Whittier to Douglass. We also consider the limits of the protest: it was directed against Quaker slaveholders, not the institution itself, and it relied on biblical arguments, not racial equality. A nuanced look at a moment of moral clarity that failed to take hold. #GermantownProtest #FrancisDanielPastorius #QuakerAbolition #Pennsylvania #1688 #RadicalPietist #Mennonite #GarrettHenderich #DerickOpdengraeff #AbrahamOpdengraeff #MonthlyMeeting #Slavery #Abolition #ColonialAmerica #JohnGreenleafWhittier #FrederickDouglass #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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