Question
Although Islamic law did impose some protections for slaves (e.g., prohibiting the separation of children from mothers and mandating medical care), they lacked many rights and were considered chattel to their owners.
Although educated or military slaves could sometimes gain their freedom, those in servitude for manual labor often remained enslaved for life.
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Although educated or military slaves could sometimes gain their freedom, those in servitude for manual labor often remained enslaved for life.
Turn all of this into a short sentence
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GPT-4o mini
Islamic law provided some protections for slaves, such as prohibiting the separation of families and mandating medical care, but they were still considered chattel with limited rights and often remained enslaved for life, especially those in manual labor.