History

These brave and proud black people dropped their ‘slave names’ while they could

What is in a name? Do names have connotations? Why would people want to have their names changed? Some of us have, at some point in time, caught ourselves wondering the reason people are called by certain names. We sometimes wonder why people would respond to certain names.

As odd or as pleasant as they may sound in the next person’s ear, names are a very striking feature of our personality. It is usually the immediate point of reference when people want to mention another person and sometimes the first foundation of building familiarity with the next person.

Names can tell where their bearers come from, their status in the society or community to which they belong, their faith (religion) or their race. Beyond that, some believe names have an impact on a person; names can tell how a person behaves and even determine their fortune – Yes.

A study from the American Economic Review found that people who had “white-sounding” names had higher chances of gaining employment from companies than those with African-American names. For some, names are just names – a mere reference to a person.

Names are fluid. They can change as and when their bearers want to have them changed. So it is not shocking to find people, for varying reasons, growing up to take on new names. At some point, people decide what/how they want to be called. They want to be known and called by a different name from what was bestowed unto them at birth. It could be for religious, socio-political reasons or sometimes a mere dissatisfaction with the name given to them at birth.

In the case of slaves, a name change was a marker of freedom – a new autonomy that afforded former slaves the freedom of choosing how they wanted to be known and called and also signified an end to bondage.

By giving themselves new names, especially surnames, they have cut themselves free from anything that bound them to their masters. While many people would choose to retain their birth names even after acquiring freedom, these brave black people thought it was better to drop their ‘slave names’ and adopt new names.

Names were not just for reference. They signified strength. They signified a voice. To these black people, names have power!

Page: 1 2 3 4 5

Fatiatu Inusah

Fatia is a teacher, writer and reader. She loves to write about history.

Recent Posts

‘It was God’ – Shock as 4-year-old boy survived after his heart stopped beating for 19 hours

Four-year-old Cartier McDaniel from Denver miraculously survived after his heart stopped beating for 19 hours.…

10 hours ago

Student to do community service after racially abusing England striker Callum Wilson for passing ball to white teammate

A 21-year-old engineering student, Ibukun Quadri, avoided jail time after racially abusing England striker Callum…

10 hours ago

Mom and two daughters make memories working side by side as flight attendants

For the past seven years, Denise Campbell and her two daughters, Chantel and Charnel Johnson,…

11 hours ago

The actual reason for Meghan Markle and Prince Harry’s trip to Nigeria revealed

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have touched down in Lagos, marking their arrival in…

11 hours ago

Watch: Popular Atlanta hairstylist gifts free service to client for Mother’s Day

Natiajah, a hairstylist, went viral after giving a free installation to a mother of four…

15 hours ago

A look back at Candace Parker’s legendary WNBA career as she takes new job with Adidas following retirement

Get to know Candace Parker; she is a WNBA legend who spent 16 years in…

15 hours ago

Jay-Z’s VC firm is close to merging with another entity that will lead to $1B in combined assets: report

Marcy Venture Partners (MVP), which was co-founded by musician turned entrepreneur Shawn “Jay-Z” Carter, is…

16 hours ago

Long Island pastor, 71, accused of sexually abusing 15-year-old girl in church basement

Authorities in Suffolk County have brought charges against a 71-year-old Long Island pastor accused of…

18 hours ago

15-year-old becomes Indiana’s youngest college grad as he earns bachelor’s degree in addition to 3 associate degrees

Khaya Njumbe has become the youngest college graduate in Indiana after receiving a bachelor's degree…

18 hours ago

Jury awards $185K to teen who accused deputy of threatening him while filming mom’s arrest

A New Orleans federal jury awarded $185,000 to a teenager who accused a sheriff’s deputy…

20 hours ago

Former NBA champion Glen ‘Big Baby’ Davis handed 40-month prison sentence over NBA fraud scheme

Former Boston Celtics star Glen "Big Baby" Davis was on Thursday sentenced to 40 months…

21 hours ago

San Francisco woman accused of using Target self-checkout to steal over $60,000 of items convicted

Aziza Graves, a 43-year-old from San Francisco, has been found guilty of one felony count…

1 day ago

Meet Llayna and Saniah Maul, the twin sisters graduating as valedictorian and salutatorian

Llayna and Saniah Maul, identical twins, will graduate from Godby High School as valedictorian (top-ranked…

1 day ago

Man suing Floyd Mayweather over alleged assault demands over $3 million in damages

Floyd Mayweather is facing a lawsuit over an alleged assault involving a member of his…

2 days ago

The real reason Angel Reese chose Reebok over Nike in endorsement deal

In 2023, a report from SponsorUnited stated that former LSU star Angel Reese had the most NIL deals of any college basketball player.…

2 days ago