Tuesday, April 21, 2026 -Pierre Guillon de Prince’s ancestors were based in Nantes, France’s largest port for transatlantic slavery, and were shipowners who transported around 4,500 enslaved Africans while owning plantations in the Caribbean, according to Reuters.
Guillon de Prince offered the apology to a gathering in
Nantes ahead of the inauguration of an 18-metre replica ship mast. He called on
other families and the government to confront their history and consider
reparations.
“Faced with the rise of racism in our society, I felt a
responsibility not to let this past be erased,” the Frenchman said, adding that
he desires to pass the family history on to his grandchildren.
Guillon de Prince was with Dieudonné Boutrin, a descendant
of enslaved people from the Caribbean island of Martinique, when he delivered
the apology.
Guillon de Prince and Boutrin are co-workers at Coque
Nomade-Fraternité, a human right association in Nantes that campaigns on
slavery and reparations. The two said the mast would serve as a “beacon of
humanity”.
Boutrin, 61, said, “Many families of descendants of slave
traders don’t dare speak out for fear of reopening
old wounds and anger.
“Pierre’s apology is a courageous act,” he added.
Guillon de Prince said he hopes his apology would inspire
others, including the government, to follow suit.
Besides Guillon de Prince’s apology, some families in other
countries, including Britain, have delivered similar formal apologies for
slavery, Reuters said.
The Transatlantic slave trade occurred during the 15th
through the 19th centuries, causing the displacement of about 12.5 million
Africans. France, which trafficked an estimated 1.3 million people, recognized
transatlantic slavery as a crime against humanity in 2001. It has, however, yet
to apologize for its role in the inhumane practice.
Last month, the U.N. General Assembly passed a resolution
declaring the trafficking of enslaved Africans “the gravest crime against
humanity” and calling for reparations as “a concrete step towards remedying
historical wrongs.”
The resolution urges “the prompt and unhindered restitution”
of cultural items such as artworks, monuments, museum pieces, documents and
national archives, to their countries of origin without charge, the Associated
Press reported.
The resolution passed with 123 member states voting in
favour, 3 against, and 53 abstentions. Argentina, Israel and the United States
were the three members who voted against the resolution. France abstained from
the vote.
For several years, the issue of reparations for slavery has
been raised by descendants of slaves in the Americas and the Caribbean. The
belief that white Americans owe black Americans a moral debt for compensation
for slavery, Jim Crow and long-standing racism has been ongoing since
emancipation.

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