4.6 • 1K Ratings
🗓️ 1 August 2023
⏱️ 30 minutes
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Amid mounting claims for reparations for slavery and colonialism, historian Zoe Strimpel asks how far reparative justice should go. Should we limit reparations to the living survivors of state atrocities, such as the Holocaust, or should we re-write the rulebook to include the ancestors of victims who suffered historical injustices centuries ago? Alongside testimony from a Holocaust survivor and interviews with lawyers, historians and reparations advocates, Zoe hears about the long shadow cast by slavery - lumbering Caribbean states and societies with a legacy that they are still struggling with today. Are demands for slavery reparations just another front in the culture war designed to leverage white guilt? Will they inevitably validate countless other claims to rectify historical grievances? Or are they a necessary step for diverse societies to draw in the extremes of a polarised debate so we can write a common history that we can all live with?
Presenter: Zoe Strimpel Producer: David Reid Editor: Clare Fordham
Contributors Mala Tribich, Holocaust survivor. Michael Newman, Chief Executive, Association of Jewish Refugees. Albrecht Ritschtl, Professor of Economic History, London School of Economics Dr. Opal Palmer Adisa, former director, University of West Indies. Kenneth Feinberg, Master of the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund. Tomiwa Owolade, journalist and author of "This is not America". Alex Renton, journalist, author and co-founder of Heirs of Slavery. Dr Hardeep Dhillon, historian, University of Pennsylvania. James Koranyi, Associate Professor of modern European History at the University of Durham.
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0:41.0 | Thank you for listening to this edition of Analysis, the |
0:44.9 | podcast that looks at the ideas behind the news. In this episode, |
0:49.6 | historian Zoe Strimple takes a deep dive into the thorny questions surrounding |
0:54.8 | reparative justice. |
0:59.0 | I find it hard to describe adequately the horrible things that I've seen and heard, but here unadorned |
1:05.5 | are the facts. |
1:06.8 | Richard Dimbleby's dispatch from Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp, 19th of April |
1:12.4 | 1945. |
1:15.0 | I passed through the barrier and found myself in the world of a nightmare. |
1:20.0 | There were dead people all over and there were piles of people. It was just a horrific sight. Black women were raped by enslavers as well as they trained black men to rape black women. |
1:46.6 | Two atrocities, one the Holocaust, |
1:49.6 | the murder between 1941 and 1945 of 6 million Jews. |
1:54.0 | The other, slavery, the forced seizure of more than 12 million Africans |
1:59.0 | and the enslavement over hundreds of years of millions more. Financial compensation schemes for Jewish survivors of |
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