13/02/2026
This metal was not decoration.
It was not discipline.
It was not “control.”
It was a tool of psychological destruction.
This iron muzzle was used during slavery for three main reasons — and every one of them was designed not just to control the body, but to erase the human being inside it.
1. It was used to stop enslaved Africans from eating the fruits of the land they were forced to cultivate — apples, pineapples, oranges, cashews, bananas, sugarcane.
They planted.
They watered.
They harvested.
They watched the land overflow with food.
Yet they were starved.
Their own hands fed empires, while their mouths were treated like crimes.
Hunger was policy.
2. It was used to silence African spiritual songs.
Songs of memory.
Songs of grief.
Songs of God.
Songs of war.
The slave masters understood something dangerous:
A people who can sing can still remember who they are.
A people who remember who they are can still resist.
So they crushed the songs.
Because the songs carried courage.
The songs carried codes.
The songs carried unity.
The songs carried rebellion.
They were not just stopping sound.
They were trying to kill spirit.
3. It was used to prevent enslaved parents from teaching their children African languages.
Because language is identity.
Language is culture.
Language is history.
Language is power.
If a child cannot speak the tongue of their ancestors, they grow up cut off from their roots, their names, their worldview, their gods, their memory.
So they forced foreign words into African mouths — and tried to suffocate the old ones.
Sometimes, slave masters would force an apple into the mouth of the enslaved before locking the metal mask.
Not out of kindness.
Out of cruelty.
So the tongue would swell.
So speech would become impossible.
So choking would hover near death.
So silence would be guaranteed.
Imagine that.
Your mouth filled.
Your face caged.
Your voice stolen.
Your hunger mocked.
Your identity suffocated.
This was not just slavery of labor.