■ MONUMENT • 400since1619.com
Resistance to slavery was constant, varied, and frequently invisible in the historical record. This invisibility was intentional — enslavers had strong incentives to suppress documentation of resistance, because resistance demonstrated that the enslaved were not content, not docile, not suited to their condition by nature. The myth of the happy slave was a political necessity, and evidence against it was suppressed.
Individual acts of resistance included working slowly, breaking tools, feigning illness, stealing food, and maintaining cultural practices that had been prohibited. Collective resistance included the organization of secret religious meetings, the transmission of information through networks that slaveholders could not access, and the preservation of African cultural memory through music, story, and practice. These were not passive acts. They required intelligence, coordination, and the acceptance of severe risk.
The organized slave revolts that made it into the historical record — Stono in 1739, Gabriel Prosser in 1800, Denmark Vesey in 1822, Nat Turner in 1831 — were not isolated events. They were the visible tip of a continuous current of resistance. Every one of them was met with brutal repression, not only of the participants but of the broader enslaved population. After Nat Turner, Virginia passed laws prohibiting the education of enslaved people and restricting Black religious gatherings. The repression itself is evidence of what the enslavers feared, which is evidence of what the enslaved were doing.
The monument to resistance is not a building or a statue. It is the fact that Black American culture exists at all — that language, music, family structure, religious practice, and intellectual tradition survived two and a half centuries of a system designed to destroy them. That survival required active effort across generations. It was not passive. It was the most sustained and successful resistance movement in American history.
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