Slavery is when one person has to work for another person who owns them, like a pet that gets fed but can’t leave the house.
Imagine you have a really cool toy car that your older sibling takes from your shelf. They say, "This is mine, so if you want to play with it, you have to do what I say." If they make you wash their dishes every day just so they will let you use the car for ten minutes, and they can take the car away whenever they want, that feels a lot like slavery. The key part isn't just working hard; it is that someone else owns your labor entirely.
How It Works in Real Life
In history, people were treated like property. Just as you might own a dog or a bicycle, a master owned a slave. This meant the master could decide where the slave lived, what they ate, and who they married. The slave gave their energy to make money or grow food for the owner, often getting very little back in return.
Think about baking cookies. If you bake them yourself, you eat them if you want. But if your brother owns the oven, the flour, and even you while you are working, he can sell the cookies and keep all the money. You get a small piece of crust for lunch, but most of the value goes to him.
Types of Slavery
Slavery wasn't always exactly the same everywhere. Sometimes it was chattel slavery, which is like owning an object. You could buy it, sell it, or even lose it in a game of chance. Other times, people owed labor because they had debts, similar to how you might owe your parents ten dollars for breaking a vase and have to do extra chores until the debt is paid off.
| Feature | Owner (Master) | Slave |
|---|---|---|
| Ownership | Owns tools and workers | Is owned as property |
| Freedom | Can leave anytime | Must stay where told |
| Reward | Keeps most profit | Gets food/shelter |
So, slavery is basically being a worker who belongs to someone else completely.
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