Student Question
In Spielberg's film Amistad, how much did political self-interest motivate the Africans' defenders?
Quick answer:
In Spielberg's Amistad, the Africans' defenders were not primarily motivated by political self-interest. Key figures like Theodore Joadson, Lewis Tappan, and John Quincy Adams were driven by moral, religious, and legal principles. While Adams initially hesitated, he was persuaded by the injustice revealed in the trial, particularly after hearing Cinque's story. The abolitionists’ motivations were rooted in religious and moral beliefs against slavery, rather than political gain.
There is definitely no direct evidence, either historically
or in the film, that those who defended the rights of the
kidnapped Africans in the Amistad case acted out of political
self-interest. Those who defended the Africans were the
leading abolitionists, Theodore Joadson, a
former slave, and Lewis Tappan who enlisted the help of
Roger Sherman Baldwin, an attorney specializing in property
law. While Joadson and Tappan both first sought assistance from former
President John Quincy Adams, he at first refused,
saying that he neither supported nor condoned slavery; however, he
eventually joined the fight to defend the kidnapped Africans,
and his defensive speech before the Supreme Court was quintessential in
convincing the Supreme Court to rule in favor of the Africans. But why
did Adams have such a sudden change of heart? Was his change of heart
based solely on political self-interest, or did he have more noble
reasons?
It's important to note the case hinged on the question of property
rights. Since La Amistad was a Spanish schooner,
Spain's queen Isabella II claimed the slaves as
Spain's property and wanted monetary compensation from the U.S. for
impounding the ship and slaves; however, since the Amistad was also
taken into custody by a US ship, according to the laws of the high
seas, the captain of the American ship was
entitled to salvage rights, making the ship and slaves
rightfully the property of the US as well. It should also be noted
that Spain lied about the slaves, denying they had broken
British, US, and even Spanish law forbidding international slave trade, saying
that the slaves had been born on a plantation in Cuba and were therefore legal
domestic slaves. Hence, the case brought out the questions,
did the slaves have the legal right to mutiny on the Amistad, and
under the laws of the times, did anyone have the legal right to own the slaves?
As it became apparent that Spain had broken their own international
slave trade law by kidnapping these slaves out of Africa and then
trying to transport them to Cuba on the Amistad, it also
became apparent to Adams that the trial brought up
questions about justice. Adams especially had a change of heart when
he heard Cinque's story of brutal kidnapping translated from
his African language, because it was at the point Cinque's story was exposed
that it also became apparent laws were broken by the Spanish.
More importantly, if laws were broken by the Spanish, then the slaves
cannot lawfully be claimed as anyone's property. Hence, it
can't really be said that Adams had political self-interest in
mind when he changed his mind in defense of the Africans. Instead,
even though he did not yet condemn slavery, he valued justice,
and as a defender of the Constitution, he valued personal rights as
well as the right to own property. Hence, in deciding to defend the
Africans once he learned they had been illegally stolen, he was
defending his own sense of justice as well as the
principles he valued that are protected in the
Constitution.
As for the abolitionists, abolitionism was a movement
fueled by the religious understandings of English Quakers and
evangelicals, as well as by moralist thinkers from the
Enlightenment. Those who moved to put an end to slavery all did so
because they either understood slavery to be unchristian or to contradict
Enlightenment philosophies. Lewis Tappan especially became a
Unitarian, a church that advocated peace and therefore also for the abolition
of slavery. Hence, even for the abolitionists who defended the
Africans, we cannot say they did so based solely on political
self-interest but rather on moral and religious
principles.
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