Point Zero. Before transatlantic slavery, before European colonies in the Americas, Africa was already home to structured societies with governance, trade networks, legal systems, and spiritual traditions. Regions of West and Central Africa included empires such as Mali, Songhai, Benin, Kongo, and others, each with distinct political organization and cultural life. These societies engaged in agriculture, regional and international trade, education, and diplomacy long before sustained European intervention. Early European contact began through commerce, not enslavement. Trade relationships initially focused on goods such as gold, ivory, and textiles. Over time, as European expansion intensified and labor demands increased in the Americas, those trade systems shifted. Human beings were gradually absorbed into commercial exchange through coercion, warfare, and policy. This transition was not accidental. It was documented, regulated, and enforced by emerging colonial economies. Africans taken into the transatlantic system did not arrive without identity or culture. Identity was deliberately dismantled during capture, transport, and sale. The Middle Passage functioned as an organized system of confinement and control, designed to sever language, kinship, and memory. Survivors carried fragments of cultural knowledge that later shaped communities across the Americas, even as legal structures sought to erase their origins. This context forms the foundation for understanding enslavement in the Americas, interactions between Africans and Indigenous nations, and the emergence of mixed identities under colonial rule. Subsequent chapters do not stand alone. They extend from this point. #PointZero #AfricaBeforeEnslavement #HistoricalRecord #ArchivalSeries #LataraSpeaksTruth #BlackHistoryDocumented #AfricanHistory #BeforeTheShips #BeforeTheChains #HistoricalContext #UnfilteredHistory



