This question has been asked across generations and continues to challenge many today.


 This question has been asked across generations and continues to challenge many today.


 When looking at the brutal reality of the Transatlantic slave trade and the systemic efforts to strip millions of their dignity, language, and culture, it is understandable why this question surfaces.


Historically, for many who endured this period, faith was not a passive acceptance of their circumstances but a radical tool for survival and resistance.


 The spirituals, the secret gatherings, and the deep-rooted traditions that managed to survive were often centered around a belief in ultimate justice and the preservation of the human spirit despite the horrific machinery of enslavement.


 Scholars often point out that the question itself reveals the immense burden placed on those who suffered to find meaning within such immense inhumanity.

Rather than looking for an answer in silence, many historians and theologians suggest looking at the resilience of the people themselves. The survival of cultural identity, the development of new communities under duress, and the eventual movements for liberation are often framed as evidence of an internal, collective strength that transcended the physical chains. Understanding this history is about acknowledging the depths of the trauma while honoring the incredible endurance of the ancestors who refused to let their humanity be completely erased.

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