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How African Mothers Were Forced To Breastfeed White Babies In 1600s

BY Getrude Mathayo · August 6, 2021 03:08 pm

KEY POINTS

Since slavery, the dehumanization of black people has been entrenched deeply in the social pyramid. One such is the tragic case of black mothers who were forced to breastfeed their owner’s children at the expense of their own.

The slave owners believed that feeding their babies with milk from their native slaves would provide them natural immunity towards Malaria. This had a trickle-down impact on not only racial but also the psychological, financial, and political fabric of the society throughout the Black community

Since slavery, the dehumanization of black people has been entrenched deeply in the social pyramid. One such is the tragic case of black mothers who were forced to breastfeed their owner’s children at the expense of their own.

Some historians believe that the practice originated in the 1600s when Malaria claimed numerous lives of many white settlers

The Slave trade brought many advantages to western societies. The main duty of a slave was to work on plantations increasing productivity. Slaves often worked long tedious hours in the sun with no pay or reward for their hard labor.

Their presence made traders and plantation owners more productive and made their living conditions very harsh.

After a while, the duties of slaves extended to domestic work and female slaves became of high value. In addition to their plantation duties, many female slaves were taken into the homes of their masters to serve their mistresses, cook, clean, and wash for them

If a mistress had too many children, the domestic worker was made to help in caring for the child. After a while, female slaves were made to take the place of low-class women paid to breastfeed babies, a practice known as wet nursing.

By the 17th century, wet nursing by slaves had become very popular in Europe. The practice soon reached America through British settlers.

The practice was an excuse for many white mothers to avoid breastfeeding with hopes of maintaining their stature and avoiding the “messy” part of motherhood.

The act was perceived as a self-demeaning and women who were seen breastfeeding were often thought of as uncultured, poor, and often shunned.

The practice became very popular when doctors of the time did all they could to prove that breastfeeding was an unhealthy act for women. It is believed that doctors were paid huge sums of money to write such reports.

The children of slaves grew healthy while many white families lost their children too ill health. This made many westerners force slave mothers to breastfeed their white children so that they could develop better and survive the early months of childhood.

Many slave owners practiced wet nursing as a form of birth control among black slaves. In that era, having an ‘heir and a spare’ was a common practice among the wealthy and affluent. Relegating the nursing duties to a black mother, freed up the white mothers for giving birth to the next progeny.

By the 18th century, the trend had become very popular. Once a slave mother had a child, she was quickly assigned to a white mistress and forced to breastfeed her white baby instead of her own.

Young and healthy slave women were also forced to breastfeed white babies after doctors discovered that the continuous sucking of a sexually active female breast could result in lactation.

With slavery and wet nursing, the invaluable breast milk often referred to as ‘liquid gold’, benefited the white children while cow or goat milk was fed as a substitute to black children. This often resulted in high mortality and susceptibility to diseases in the early childhood of black children.

While they breastfed white babies at their expense, slave mothers tried to keep their children alive by feeding them with concoctions they believed will be good substitutes for milk.

They also gave cow milk and dirty water which were not suitable for babies’ health. This resulted in the high deaths of babies of slaves throughout the slave trade.

At the peak of the forced wet nursing, slave traders often kidnapped newborn babies from their slave mothers. The pain in the breasts left these women with no choice but to breastfeed other babies who were often white. Some reluctant slaves were beaten and often milked like cows to feed white babies.

Slave mothers often kept the white babies in their homes until the child’s family felt it was time to take them back.

Since the living conditions of the slaves were not the best, several white babies died. Speculating that slave mothers were killing the babies out of spite; they were later forced to move in with the family where they could be monitored.

The enslaved wet nurses were rejected by their husbands especially after the death of their own children. Another consequence of the practice was slave masters and their sons having affairs with slave women resulting in increased births of mixed-race babies.

Read More: World Breastfeeding Week Awareness Campaign Launched

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