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{{short description|Biblical curse imposed on Canaan}} | |||
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In the ], the '''curse of Ham''' is described as a curse which was imposed upon ]'s son ] by the patriarch ]. It occurs in the context of ] and it is provoked by a shameful act that was perpetrated by Noah's son Ham, who "saw the nakedness of his father".{{sfn|Sarna|1981|p=76}}<ref>{{Bibleverse|Genesis|9:22|KJV}}</ref> The exact nature of Ham's transgression and the reason Noah cursed Canaan when Ham had sinned have been debated for over 2,000 years.{{sfn|Goldenberg|2003|p=157}} | |||
The story's original purpose may have been to justify the biblical subjection of the ] to the ],<ref name="Alter_2008_52–3">{{harvnb|Alter|2008|pp=52–53}}.</ref> or a ] to a portion of ] which ruled ] in the ].<ref name="Mathee1">{{Cite journal |last=Mathee |first=Mohamed Shahid |date=1 Dec 2016 |title=Curse motives in the "Curse of Ham" narrative : land for Yahweh's landless people? |url=https://journals.co.za/doi/abs/10.10520/EJC-585136c12 |journal=Journal for Semitics |volume=25 |issue=2 |pages=726–747 |doi=10.25159/1013-8471/2554 |issn=2663-6573}}</ref><ref name="Redford1">{{Cite book |last=Redford |first=Donald B. |title=Egypt, Canaan, and Israel in Ancient Times |publisher=Princeton University Press |year=1992 |isbn=978-0-691-21465-8 |language=en}}</ref> | |||
The '''Curse of Ham''' is a ]{{sfnm|Metcalf|2005|1p=164|Goldenberg|2003|2p=168|Lulat|2005|3p=85, 86}} for the ] upon ] that was imposed by the biblical patriarch ]. | |||
In later centuries, the narrative was interpreted by some ], ] and ] as an explanation for ], as well as a justification for ] of black people.{{sfn|Goldenberg|2003|p=170}}{{sfn|Gomez|2018|p=47–50}} Nevertheless, many Christians, Muslims and Jews now disagree with such interpretations, because in the biblical text, Ham himself is not cursed, and neither race nor skin color are ever mentioned.{{sfnm|1a1=Whitford|1y=2009|1p=35|2a1=Ham|2a2=Sarfati|2a3=Wieland|2y=2001}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Hammerman |first1=Joshua |title=Blacks and Jews: Shame, pride and the Curse of Canaan |url=https://religionnews.com/2024/01/11/blacks-and-jews-shame-pride-and-the-curse-of-canaan/ |website=Religion News Service |access-date=21 September 2024 |date=11 January 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Kell |first1=Garrett |title=Damn the Curse of Ham: How Genesis 9 Got Twisted into Racist Propaganda |url=https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/damn-curse-ham/ |website=The Gospel Coalition |access-date=21 September 2024 |date=9 January 2021}}</ref>{{disputed inline|talk=Talk:Curse_of_Ham#Needs_fixing_"Nevertheless,_most_Christians_and_Jews_now_disagree_with_such_interpretations,_because_in_the_biblical_text,_Ham_himself_is_not_cursed,_and_race_or_skin_color_is_never_mentioned."|date=October 2022}} | |||
The relevant narrative occurs in the ] and concerns Noah's drunkenness and the accompanying shameful act perpetrated by his son ] the father of Canaan ({{bibleverse||Gen.|9:20–27|HE}}).{{sfn|Sarna|1981|p=76}} The controversies raised by this story regarding the nature of Ham's transgression, and the question of why Noah cursed Canaan when Ham had sinned, have been debated for over two thousand years.<ref>{{harvnb|Goldenberg|2003|p=157}}</ref> The story's original objective was to justify the subjection of the ]ites to the ],<ref name="Alter 2008 52–53">{{harvnb|Alter|2008|pp=52–53}}</ref> but in later centuries, the narrative was interpreted by some ],<ref>White Over Black: American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 1550-1812 (Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American Hist) pg 18</ref> ]s and ]s as a curse of, and an explanation for, ].{{sfnm|Goldenberg|2003|1p=170}} Nevertheless, most Christian denominations strongly disagree with such interpretations due to the fact that in the original biblical text, Ham himself is not cursed and race or skin color is never mentioned, and therefore, out of context in the story of Genesis 9.{{sfnm|Whitford|2009|1p=35|2a1=Ham|2a2=Sarfati|2a3=Wieland|2y=2001}} | |||
==Biblical narrative== | |||
==Origins== | |||
The concept of the |
The concept of the curse of Ham finds its origins in Genesis 9: | ||
{{poemquote| | |||
<BLOCKQUOTE style="padding:8px;border:solid 1px"><poem>'''Ham, along with his father and brothers, blessed by God''' | |||
20 And Noah began to be an husbandman, and he planted a vineyard: | |||
Genesis 9:1 And God blessed Noah and his sons, and said unto them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth. | |||
21 And he drank of the wine, and was drunken; and he was uncovered within his tent. | |||
22 And Ham, the father of Canaan, saw the nakedness of his father, and told his two brethren without. | |||
23 And Shem and Japheth took a garment, and laid it upon both their shoulders, and went backward, and covered the nakedness of their father; and their faces were backward, and they saw not their father's nakedness. | |||
24 And Noah awoke from his wine, and knew what his younger son had done unto him. | |||
25 And he said, Cursed be Canaan; a servant of servants shall he be unto his brethren. | |||
26 And he said, Blessed be the Lord God of Shem; and Canaan shall be his servant. | |||
27 God shall enlarge Japheth, and he shall dwell in the tents of Shem; and Canaan shall be his servant. | |||
:– {{bibleverse|Genesis|9:20–27|KJV}}, ''King James Version''}} | |||
The objective of the story may have been to justify the subject status of the ], the descendants of Ham, to the ], the descendants of ].<ref name="Alter_2008_52–3"/> The narrative of the curse is replete with difficulties.{{sfn|Sarna|1981|p=77}} It is uncertain what the precise nature of Ham's offense is.{{sfn|Sarna|1981|p=77}} Verse 22 has been a subject of debate,{{sfn|Sadler|2005|pp=26–27}} as to whether it should be taken literally, or as "a euphemism for some act of gross immorality".{{sfn|Sarna|1981|p=77}} In verse 25, Noah refers to Shem and ] as the "brethren" of Canaan, whereas in verse 18 they are identified as his uncles. The ] presents Canaan and ] (Egypt) among the sons of Ham (10:6). In the Psalms, Egypt is equated with Ham.{{sfn|Sarna|1981|loc=p. 77}}<ref>See {{bibleverse|Psalms|78:51|KJV}}; {{bibleverse-nb|Psalms|105:23, 27|KJV}}; {{bibleverse-nb|Psalms|106:22|KJV}}.</ref> A ] on ] which fell under the rule of ] in the ] has been suggested as a motive for the curse on Canaan and the association with Ham via ]'s rule over Canaan.<ref name="Mathee1"/><ref name="Redford1"/> | |||
'''Canaan cursed by Noah''' | |||
Genesis 9:20 And Noah began ''to be'' an husbandman, and he planted a vineyard: | |||
<sup>21</sup> And he drank of the wine, and was drunken; and he was uncovered within his tent. | |||
<sup>22</sup> And Ham, the father of Canaan, saw the nakedness of his father, and told his two brethren without. | |||
<sup>23</sup> And Shem and Japheth took a garment, and laid ''it'' upon both their shoulders, and went backward, and covered the nakedness of their father; and their faces ''were'' backward, and they saw not their father’s nakedness. | |||
<sup>24</sup> ¶ And Noah awoke from his wine, and knew what his younger son had done unto him. | |||
<sup>25</sup> And he said, <U>Cursed ''be'' Canaan</U>; a servant of servants shall he be unto his brethren. | |||
<sup>26</sup> And he said, Blessed ''be'' the {{LORD}} God of Shem; and Canaan shall be his servant. | |||
<sup>27</sup> God shall enlarge Japheth, and he shall dwell in the tents of Shem; and Canaan shall be his servant. | |||
(—])</poem></blockquote> | |||
The treatment of Japheth in verses 26–27 raises questions: Why is ] named as the God of Shem, but not of Japheth? What does it mean that God will "enlarge" Japheth? And why will Japheth "dwell in the tents of Shem"?{{sfn|Brett|2000|p=45}} Further difficulties include Ham's being referred to as "the youngest son", when all other lists make him Noah's second son.{{sfn|Sarna|1981|p=77}} Biblical scholar ] says that the biggest challenge of the narrative is why Canaan was cursed, rather than Ham,{{sfn|Sarna|1981|p=77}} and that the concealed details of the shameful incident bear the same reticence as ]'s sexual transgression.{{sfn|Sarna|1981|loc=p. 77}}<ref>See {{bibleverse|Gen|35:22|KJV}}</ref> | |||
The narrative's short five verses |
The narrative's short five verses indicate that Canaan's Hamite paternity must have had great significance to the narrator or redactor, according to Sarna, who adds, "The curse on Canaan, invoked in response to an act of moral depravity, is the first intimation of the theme of the corruption of the Canaanites, which is given as the justification for their being dispossessed of their land and for the transfer of that land to the descendants of ]."{{sfn|Sarna|1981|loc=pp. 77, 78}} | ||
==Ham's transgression== | ==Ham's transgression== | ||
The majority of commentators, both ancient and modern, have felt that Ham's seeing his father naked was not a sufficiently serious crime to explain the punishment that follows.<ref name="Goldenberg 2005 259–260">{{harvnb|Goldenberg|2005|pp=259–260}}</ref> Nevertheless, Genesis 9:23, in which Shem and Japheth cover Noah with a cloak while averting their eyes, suggests that the words are to be taken literally,<ref name="Levenson 2004 26">{{harvnb|Levenson|2004|p=26}}</ref> and it has recently been pointed out that in 1st millennium Babylonia, looking at another person's genitals was indeed regarded as a serious matter.<ref name="Goldenberg 2005 259–260"/> | |||
Scholars have debated the exact nature of Ham's misdeed with many identifying it as either voyeurism, castration, paternal incest, or maternal incest.<ref name=Nakedness/>{{rp|26}} | |||
Other ancient commentators suggested that Ham was guilty of more than what the Bible says. The '']'' (an ] translation of the Bible dating from the first few centuries AD) and several other sources had Ham gossiping about his father's drunken disgrace "in the street" (a reading which has a basis in the original Hebrew), so that being held up to public mockery was what had angered Noah; as the '']'' (4th century) puts it, "Ham laughed at his father's shame and did not cover it, but laughed aloud and mocked."<ref name="Kugle 1998 222"/> | |||
===Voyeurism=== | |||
Ancient commentaries have also debated that "seeing" someone's nakedness meant to have sex with that person (e.g. Leviticus 20:17).<ref name="Levenson 2004 26"/> The same idea was raised by 3rd-century rabbis, in the '']'' (c. 500 AD), who argue that Ham either castrated his father, or sodomised him.<ref>{{harvnb|Goldenberg|2005|p=258}}</ref> The same explanations are found in three Greek translations of the Bible, which replace the word "see" in verse 22 with another word denoting homosexual relations.<ref name="Kugle 1998 222">{{harvnb|Kugle|1998|p=222}}</ref> The castration theory has its modern counterpart in suggested parallels found in the castration of ] by ]<ref>{{harvnb|Robertson|1910|p=44}}</ref> and a ] myth of the supreme god ] whose genitals were "bitten off by his rebel son and cup-bearer ], who afterwards rejoiced and laughed ... until Anu cursed him".<ref>{{harvnb|Graves|Patai|1964|p=Ch.21, Note 4}}</ref> | |||
The majority of commentators, both ancient and modern, have felt that Ham's seeing his father naked was not a sufficiently serious crime to explain the punishment that follows.<ref name=Goldenberg_2005_259-60>{{harvnb|Goldenberg|2005|pp=259–60}}.</ref> Nevertheless, Genesis 9:23, where Shem and Japheth cover Noah with a cloak while averting their eyes, suggests that the act of "seeing (Noah's) nakedness" is to be taken literally,<ref name=Levenson_2004_26>{{harvnb|Levenson|2004|p=26}}.</ref> and it has been pointed out that, in first millennium Babylonia, looking at another person's genitals was indeed regarded as a serious matter.<ref name=Goldenberg_2005_259-60/> Other ancient commentators suggested that Ham was guilty of more than what the Bible says. The 2nd century '']'' has Ham gossiping about his father's drunken disgrace "in the street" (a reading which has a basis in the original Hebrew), so that being held up to public mockery was what had angered Noah; as the '']'' (late 6th – early 7th century) puts it, "Ham laughed at his father's shame and did not cover it, but laughed about it and mocked."<ref name=Kugel_1998_222/> | |||
Modern scholars have suggested that to "uncover the nakedness" of a man means to have sex with that man's wife (e.g. Leviticus 20:11).<ref name="Levenson 2004 26"/> If Ham had sex with his mother, and Canaan was the product of this forbidden union, it could explain why the curse falls on his son; the weakness, however, is that Genesis 9:21 has Ham "seeing" his father's nakedness, not "uncovering" it.<ref>{{harvnb|Kissling|2004|p=347}}</ref> | |||
=== |
===Paternal incest or Castration=== | ||
In the '']'', the seriousness of Ham's curse is compounded by the cultic significance of God's covenant to "never again bring a flood on the earth".<ref name = "Bergren, 2002, 137">Dimant, 2002, p. 137</ref> In response to this covenant, Noah builds a sacrificial altar "to atone for the land".<sup></sup> Noah’s practice and ceremonial functions parallel the festival of ] as if it were a prototype to the celebration of the giving of the ].<ref name = "Bergren, 2002, 137"/><ref>Philo, ''Abr.'' 34</ref> His "priestly" functions also emulate being "first priest" in accordance with ] as taught in the ]ic works.<ref>Albeck. ''Buch der Jubiäen'',p. 21, 33</ref><ref>VanderKam. ''Righteousness of Noah'',p. 20, 76</ref> By turning the drinking of the wine into a religious ceremony, ''Jubilees'' alleviates any misgivings that may be provoked by the episode of Noah’s drunkenness. Thus, Ham’s offense would constitute an act of disrespect not only to his father, but also to the festival ordinances.<ref>Dimant, 2002, p. 139</ref> | |||
Ancient commentaries have also debated whether "seeing" someone's nakedness meant to have sex with that person (e.g., Leviticus 20:17).<ref name=Levenson_2004_26/> The same idea was raised by third-century rabbis, in the '']'' (c. 500 AD), who argue that Ham either castrated his father, or ] him.{{sfn|Goldenberg|2005|p=258}} The same explanations are found in three Greek translations of the Bible, which replace the word "see" in verse 22 with another word denoting homosexual relations.<ref name=Kugel_1998_222>{{harvnb|Kugel|1998|p=222}}.</ref> The castration theory has its modern counterpart in suggested parallels found in the castration of ] by ]{{sfn|Robertson|1910|p=44}} in ] and a ] myth of the supreme god ] whose genitals were "bitten off by his rebel son and cup-bearer ], who afterwards rejoiced and laughed ... until Anu cursed him".{{sfn|Graves|Patai|1964|loc=ch. 21, note 4}} | |||
===Medieval Judaism=== | |||
The medieval commentary of ] (Rabbi Shlomo Yitzchaki 1040-1105), who cites older sources from Judaism's ], which is relied upon by traditional Judaic scholarship as the most basic commentary to the present time, provides an introductory explanation. ({{bibleverse||Genesis|9:22-27)|HE}}): | |||
The medieval commentator ] (1040–1105), writes of Ham's offence against Noah: "There are those of our rabbis who say he ] ] סרסו] him, and there are those who say he had relations with him."<ref name=ReferenceA>{{cite book |author=Rashi |chapter=Sefer Bereishis/Genesis |title=The Torah |others=Translated by Rabbis Yisrael Herczberg, Yaakov Petroff, Yoseph Kamentsky, Yaakov Blinder |year=1996 |publisher=Mesorah Publications |location=New York City |isbn=978-0-89906-026-2 |chapter-url=https://www.chabad.org/library/bible_cdo/aid/8173/showrashi/true |pages=96–99}}</ref><ref name=Pentateuch_Targum_Onkelos_Haphtaroth_Rashi_1935_40-1>{{cite book|title=Pentateuch with Targum Onkelos, Haphtaroth and Rashi's Commentary|last1=Rosenbaum |first1=M. |last2=Silbermann |first2=A. M. |last3=Blashki |first3=A. |last4=Joseph |first4=L. |chapter=Genesis|year=1935|publisher=Hebrew Publishing Company|location=New York|pages=40–41}}</ref> Rashi cites ] 70a, which adds that those who believe that Ham had homosexual relations with his father agree that he also emasculated him.<ref>. Sefaria. Retrieved June 2, 2021.</ref> Rashi continues: "What did Ham see that he emasculated him? He said to his brothers: ] the first man had two sons, yet one killed the other because of the inheritance of the world ] 22:7, and our father has three sons yet he seeks still a fourth son."<ref name=ReferenceA/><ref name=Pentateuch_Targum_Onkelos_Haphtaroth_Rashi_1935_40-1/> | |||
*{{bibleverse||Genesis|9:23|HE}}: ''And Shem and Japheth...covered their father's nakedness, their faces were turned backward...'': "...as for Ham who disgraced his father it is said of his offspring 'Thus will the king of ] lead the captives of Egypt and the exiles of Cush and the exiles of Ethiopia, young and old, ''naked'' and ''barefoot'', and with ''buttocks uncovered'', to the shame of Egypt." ({{bibleverse||Isaiah|20:4|HE}}). (] 15; ] 36:6).<ref name="The Torah: With Rashi's Commentary Translated, Annotated, and Elucidated 1996 96–99"/><ref name="Pentateuch with Targum Onkelos, Haphtaroth and Rashi's Commentary 1935 40–41"/> | |||
===Maternal incest=== | |||
*{{bibleverse||Genesis|9:24|HE}}: ''his small (הקטן) son'':" הפסול The 'defective' one (] 36:6) והבזוי and the 'disgraceful' one. similar to 'Behold, I have made you the ''smallest'' (קטן) among the nations.'" ({{bibleverse||Jeremiah|49:15|HE}}, {{bibleverse||Obadiah|1:2|HE}}).<ref name="The Torah: With Rashi's Commentary Translated, Annotated, and Elucidated 1996 96–99"/><ref name="Pentateuch with Targum Onkelos, Haphtaroth and Rashi's Commentary 1935 40–41"/> | |||
*{{bibleverse||Genesis|9:25|HE}}: ''Cursed (ארור) is Canaan: Noah said to Ham'': "You caused me that I should not father a fourth son, another one to serve me. May your fourth son be cursed by serving the offspring of these greater ones ... What did Ham see that he emasculated him? He said to his brothers ] the first man had only two sons (]) yet one killed the other because of the inheritance of the world ] 22:7] and our father has three sons yet he seeks still a fourth son."<ref name="The Torah: With Rashi's Commentary Translated, Annotated, and Elucidated 1996 96–99"/><ref name="Pentateuch with Targum Onkelos, Haphtaroth and Rashi's Commentary 1935 40–41"/> | |||
Some modern scholars, such as Bergsma and Hahn,<ref name=Nakedness>{{cite journal |last1=Bergsma |first1=J. S.|last2=Hahn |first2=S. W. |year=2005 |title=Noah's Nakedness and the Curse on Canaan (Genesis 9:20–27) |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/30040989.pdf|journal=Journal of Biblical Literature |volume=124 |issue=1 |pages=25–40 |doi=10.2307/30040989|jstor=30040989 }}</ref>{{rp|34–39}} have suggested that Ham engaged in intercourse with his mother, Noah's wife. Support for this theory can be found in verses such as Leviticus 20:11: "And the man that lieth with his father's wife hath uncovered his father's nakedness". According to this interpretation of the story, Canaan was the offspring of the illicit union between Ham and his mother, which accounts for the curse falling upon Canaan rather than Ham. | |||
*{{bibleverse||Genesis|9:26|HE}}: ''...Blessed is יהוה the God of Shem'': "Who is destined to keep His promise to offspring to give them the Land of ]" ''and he shall be'': "Canaan shall be to them as a servant to pay tribute."<ref name="Pentateuch with Targum Onkelos, Haphtaroth and Rashi's Commentary 1935 40–41"/><ref name="ReferenceA">{{cite book|last=The Torah: With Rashi's Commentary Translated, Annotated, and Elucidated|first=Rabbis Yisrael Herczberg, Yaakov Petroff, Yoseph Kamentsky, Yaakov Blinder|title=Sefer Bereishis/Genesis|year=1996|publisher=Mesorah Publications, Ltd.|location=Brooklyn|isbn=0-89906-026-9|pages=96–99}}</ref> | |||
*{{bibleverse||Genesis|9:27|HE}}: ''and Canaan shall be a slave to them.'': "Even after the children of Shem will be exiled slaves will be sold to them from the Children of Canaan." <ref name="The Torah: With Rashi's Commentary Translated, Annotated, and Elucidated 1996 96–99"/><ref name="Pentateuch with Targum Onkelos, Haphtaroth and Rashi's Commentary 1935 40–41"/> | |||
===Disrespecting a religious festival=== | |||
According to Devorah Dimant, the ] depicts Noah planting, harvesting, and drinking wine in accordance with the stipulations of the Torah such that Noah's drunkenness appears less problematic and Ham's offense appears more problematic than in Genesis. Dimant writes that the timing of Noah's viniculture and the procedure of Noah's sacrifice in Jubilees 7:1–6 match ] interpretations of Leviticus 19:23–25 and Numbers 29:1–6.<ref name="Bergren_2002_137">{{harvnb|Dimant|2001|p=138}}.</ref> Thus, Dimant claims "''Jubilees'' alleviates any misgivings that may be provoked by the episode of Noah's drunkenness. In this light, Ham's offense constitutes an act of disrespect not only to his father, but also to the festival ordinances."<ref>{{harvnb|Dimant|2001|p=139}}</ref> | |||
==Curse of Canaan== | ==Curse of Canaan== | ||
*Genesis 9:25: "And he said, Cursed be Canaan; a servant of servants shall he be unto his brethren |
* Genesis 9:25: "And he said, Cursed be Canaan; a servant of servants shall he be unto his brethren" | ||
It is noteworthy that the curse was made by Noah, not by God. Some biblical scholars claim that when a curse is made by a man, it could only have been effective if God supports it, unlike the curse of Ham and his descendants, which was not confirmed by God<ref> |
It is noteworthy that the curse was made by Noah, not by God. Some biblical scholars claim that when a curse is made by a man, it could only have been effective if God supports it, unlike the curse of Ham and his descendants, which was not confirmed by God<ref>{{cite book| last=Wiggins |first=Phyllis |year=2005 |title=The Curse of Ham: Satan's Vicious Cycle |pages=41–42, 48}}</ref> or, at least, it is not mentioned in the Bible that he had confirmed it. | ||
===Dead Sea Scrolls=== | ===Dead Sea Scrolls=== | ||
], a ''pesher'' (interpretation) on the Book of Genesis found among the ], explains that since Ham had already been blessed by God (Genesis 9:1), he could not now be cursed by Noah. |
], a '']'' (interpretation) on the Book of Genesis found among the ], explains that since Ham had already been blessed by God (Genesis 9:1), he could not now be cursed by Noah.{{sfn|Goldenberg|2005|p=158}} The 4Q252 scroll probably dates from the later half of the first century BC.{{sfn|Trost|2010|p=42}} A century later, the Jewish historian ] argued that Noah refrained from cursing Ham because of his nearness of kin, and so cursed Ham's son instead.<ref name=Kugel_1998_223>{{harvnb|Kugel|1998|p=223}}.</ref> | ||
A new alternative interpretation of 4Q181, which is a Dead Sea scroll of Genesis, parallels the Book of Jubilees, suggesting that Canaan was cursed because he defied Noah's division of the land.<ref>{{cite web |last=Hasson |first=Nir | url = http://www.haaretz.com/jewish-world/jewish-world-news/.premium-1.527210 | title = Scholars Owe New Dead Sea Scrolls Reading to Google | date = June 2, 2013 | publisher = Haaretz}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Wiener |first=Noah | url = http://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/daily/news/the-curse-of-hama-new-reading-in-the-dead-sea-scrolls/ | title = The Curse of Ham – A New Reading in the Dead Sea Scrolls | date = June 7, 2013 | publisher = Biblical Archaeology Society}}</ref> | |||
===Book of Jubilees=== | |||
The '']'' explains that Noah had allocated Canaan a land west of the Nile along with his brothers, but that he chose instead to squat in land which was delineated to ] (and later ]), and so rightly deserved the curse of ].<ref>{{harvnb|Van Seters|2000|pp=491–492}}</ref> | |||
===Jubilees=== | |||
The ] also recounts the incident between Ham and Noah, and Noah's resulting curse against Canaan, in similar terms. Later, however, ''Jubilees'' explains further that Ham had allocated to Canaan a land west of the Nile (Jubilees 9:1), and all Noah's sons agreed to invoke a curse on anyone who tries to seize land that was not allocated to them (Jubilees 9:14–15). But Canaan violated this agreement and instead chose to squat in the land delineated to ] and his descendants, and so Canaan brought upon himself the full force of this second curse (Jubilees 10:29–35).{{sfn|Van Seters|2000|pp=491–492}} | |||
===Classical Judaism=== | ===Classical Judaism=== | ||
{{See also|Jewish views on slavery}} | |||
], a 1st-century BC Jewish philosopher, said that Ham and Canaan were equally guilty, if not of whatever had been done to Noah, then of other crimes, "for the two of them together had acted foolishly and wrongly and committed other ]s." Rabbi Eleazar decided that Canaan had in fact been the first to see Noah, and had then gone and told his father, who then told his brothers in the street; this, said Eleazar, "did not take to mind the commandment to honour one's father." Another interpretation was that Noah's "youngest son" could not be Ham, who was the middle son: "for this reason they say that this youngest son was in fact Canaan."<ref name="Kugle 1998 223"/> | |||
], a 1st-century BC Jewish philosopher, said that Ham and Canaan were equally guilty, if not of whatever had been done to Noah, then of other crimes, "for the two of them together had acted foolishly and wrongly and committed other ]s." ] decided that Canaan had in fact been the first to see Noah, and had then gone and told his father, who then told his brothers in the street; this, said Eleazar, "did not take to mind the commandment to honour one's father." Another interpretation was that Noah's "youngest son" could not be Ham, who was the middle son: "for this reason they say that this youngest son was in fact Canaan."<ref name=Kugel_1998_223/> | |||
According to Rashi, Ham castrated Noah and prevented him from having a fourth son; therefore, Noah cursed Ham's own fourth son, Canaan.<ref name=ReferenceA/><ref name=Pentateuch_Targum_Onkelos_Haphtaroth_Rashi_1935_40-1/> | |||
{{bibleverse||Genesis|9:25|HE}}: ''Cursed (ארור) is Canaan: Noah said to Ham'': "You caused me that I should not father a fourth son, another one to serve me. May your fourth son be cursed by serving the offspring of these greater ones ... What did Ham see that he emasculated him? He said to his brothers ] the first man had only two sons (]) yet one killed the other because of the inheritance of the world ] 22:7] and our father has three sons yet he seeks still a fourth son."<ref name="The Torah: With Rashi's Commentary Translated, Annotated, and Elucidated 1996 96–99"/><ref name="Pentateuch with Targum Onkelos, Haphtaroth and Rashi's Commentary 1935 40–41"/> | |||
In ] legal texts, the term "Canaanite slave" is used generically for any non-Jew (gentile) held in bondage by an Israelite.<ref>{{bibleverse|Leviticus|25:44–46|HE}}</ref><ref name=daat></ref> According to Jewish law, such a slave should undergo a form of conversion to Judaism, after which they are obligated to perform all '']'' except positive time-dependent ''mitzvot'' (just as Jewish women do),<ref name=daat/> granting them a higher status than ordinary non-Jews.<ref>] (''Horayiot'' 3:8); cf. ] (''Horayiot'' 13a)</ref> | |||
{{bibleverse||Genesis|9:26|HE}}: ''...Blessed is יהוה the God of Shem'': "Who is destined to keep His promise to offspring to give them the Land of ]" ''and he shall be'': "Canaan shall be to them as a servant to pay tribute."<ref name="Pentateuch with Targum Onkelos, Haphtaroth and Rashi's Commentary 1935 40–41"/><ref name="ReferenceA"/> | |||
== Racism and slavery == | |||
{{bibleverse||Genesis|9:27|HE}}: ''and Canaan shall be a slave to them.'': "Even after the children of Shem will be exiled slaves will be sold to them from the Children of Canaan." <ref name="The Torah: With Rashi's Commentary Translated, Annotated, and Elucidated 1996 96–99"/><ref name="Pentateuch with Targum Onkelos, Haphtaroth and Rashi's Commentary 1935 40–41"/> | |||
In the past, some people claimed that the curse of Ham was a biblical justification for imposing ] and ] towards ],<!--Goldenberg--> although this concept has been criticized for being an ideologically driven<!--Lulat--> misconception.{{sfnm|Goldenberg|2003|1p=168|Lulat|2005|2p=85, 86|Metcalf|2005|3p=164}} Regarding this matter, the Christian leader ] called such an attempt a "blasphemy" that "is against everything that the Christian religion stands for."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://mlk-kpp01.stanford.edu/index.php/encyclopedia/documentsentry/doc_pauls_letter_to_american_christians/ |title=Paul's Letter to American Christians |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131002172102/http://mlk-kpp01.stanford.edu/index.php/encyclopedia/documentsentry/doc_pauls_letter_to_american_christians/ |archivedate=October 2, 2013 |publisher=King Research and Education Institute, Stanford University}}</ref> ] similarly argues that the curse was a "prophecy of what would happen" not that it should happen. He believes that the curse is an allusion to Canaan's history of being dominated by numerous foreign powers.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2022 |title=Genesis 9- Coffman's Commentaries on the Bible |url=https://www.studylight.org/commentaries/eng/bcc/genesis-9.html#verses-25 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240127073438/https://www.studylight.org/commentaries/eng/bcc/genesis-9.html#verses-25 |archive-date=January 27, 2024 |website=StudyLight.org}}</ref> These powers include ], ]ns, ] and ].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2024 |title=Genesis 9 Matthew Poole's Commentary |url=https://biblehub.com/commentaries/poole/genesis/9.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240312032011/https://biblehub.com/commentaries/poole/genesis/9.htm |archive-date=March 12, 2024 |website=Biblehub.com}}</ref> | |||
==Origins of the misnomer== | |||
In the past, some people have claimed the "curse of Ham" as a biblical justification for imposing slavery or racism on Black people,<!--Goldenberg--> although this concept is essentially an ideologically driven<!--Lulat--> misnomer.{{sfnm|Goldenberg|2003|1p=168|Lulat|2005|2p=85, 86|Metcalf|2005|3p=}} Regarding this matter, the Christian leader ] called such attempt "a blasphemy" that "is against everything that the Christian religion stands for."<ref>"", Delivered at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, Montgomery, Alabama, on 4 November 1956. "I understand that there are Christians among you who try to justify segregation on the basis of the Bible. They argue that the Negro is inferior by nature because of Noah's curse upon the children of Ham. Oh my friends, this is ]. This is against everything that the Christian religion stands for. I must say to you as I have said to so many Christians before, that in Christ "there is neither Jew nor Gentile, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female, for we are all one in Christ Jesus." </ref> | |||
For ] slave owners who were faced with the ], the curse of Ham was one of the many grounds upon which Christian ] could formulate an ideological defense of slavery.<ref name="noah">{{Cite book |last=Haynes |first=Stephen R. |url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/1124361396 |title=Noah's Curse : the Biblical Justification of American Slavery |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2002 |isbn=978-0-19-988169-7 |location=Oxford |oclc=1124361396}}</ref> Even before slavery, in order to promote economic motivations within Europe associated with colonialism, the curse of Ham was used to shift the common ] belief that phenotypic differentiation among humans was a result of climatic difference, to a ] perspective that phenotypic differentiation among the species was due to there being different racial types.<ref name="auto">{{Cite book|title=Racism: A Short History|last=Fredrickson|first=George M.|year=2015|publisher=Princeton University Press|isbn=9781400873678|location=Princeton|page=44|doi = 10.1515/9781400873678}}</ref> This often came as a result of European anxieties to avoid being sent to the colonies, as they were terrified of the high casualty rate of settlers due to disease and warfare. Thus, many of them formulated the idea that being sent south of the equator "blackened" them and thus made them inferior.<ref name="Whitford 105"/> | |||
===Early Judaism and Islam=== | |||
]]] | |||
In the 15th century, ] friar ] invoked the Curse of Ham to explain the differences between Europeans and Africans in his writings. Annius, who frequently wrote of the "superiority of Christians over the ]", claimed that due to the curse imposed upon black people, they would inevitably remain permanently subjugated by ] and other ]. He wrote that the fact that so many Africans had been enslaved by the heretical Muslims was supposed proof of their inferiority. Through these and other writings, European writers established a hitherto unheard of connection between Ham, Africa and slavery, which laid the ideological groundwork for justifying the ].<ref name="auto"/><ref name="Whitford 105">{{Cite book|last=Whitford|first=David M.|year=2017|title=The Curse of Ham in the Early Modern Era|pages=105ff|publisher=Routledge |doi=10.4324/9781315240367|isbn=9781315240367}}</ref> | |||
While Genesis 9 never says that Ham was black, he became associated with black skin, through folk-etymology deriving his name from a similar, but actually unconnected, word meaning "dark" or "brown".<ref>{{harvnb|Goldenberg|1997|pp=24–25}}</ref> The next stage, are certain fables according to ancient Jewish traditions. According to one legend preserved in the Babylonian ], God cursed Ham because he broke a prohibition on sex aboard ] and was cursed with blackness;<ref>Talmud, Sanhedrin 108b</ref> according to another, Noah cursed him because he castrated his father.<ref>{{harvnb|Goldenberg|1997|p=24}}</ref> Although the Talmud refers only to Ham, the version brought in the ] goes on further to say "Ham, that ] came from him" in reference to the blackness,<ref>Yalkut Shim'oni. Noah Sec. 58</ref> that the curse did not apply to all of Ham but only to his eldest son Cush, ] being a sub-Saharan African.<ref>Bruce, Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile, p. 305</ref> Thus two distinct traditions existed, one explaining dark skin as the result of a curse on Ham, the other explaining slavery by the separate curse on Canaan.<ref>{{harvnb|Goldenberg|1997|p=33}}</ref> | |||
According to the ] mystic ]: "I see that the Black, idolatrous, stupid nations are the descendants of Ham. Their color is due, not to the rays of the sun, but to the dark source whence those degraded races sprang." | |||
The two concepts may have become merged in the 7th century by some ] writers, the product of a culture with a long history of enslaving black Africans; the origin and persistence of the "Curse of Ham", in which Ham, blackness and slavery became a single curse, was thus the result of ]'s need for a justifying myth. Most mediaeval Muslim authorities including ], ], and even the later ''Book of the Zanj'' all assert the view that the effects of Noah's curse on Ham's descendants included blackness, slavery, and a requirement not to let the hair grow past the ears.<ref>{{harvnb|Goldenberg|1997|pp=33–34}}</ref><ref>Goldenberg, ''The Curse of Ham: Race and Slavery in Early Judaism, Christianity, and Islam'' p. 170.</ref> | |||
<ref>{{cite web | url=http://annecatherineemmerich.com/complete_visions/volume_1_the_old_testament/the-old-testament-part-2/ | title=The Old Testament - Part 2 | date=4 January 2019 }}</ref> | |||
The historian David Whitford writes of a "curse matrix" which was derived from the vagueness of Genesis 9 and interpreted by racialists to mean that it mattered not who was cursed or which specific group of people the curse originated with, all that mattering being that there was a vague reference to a ] that could be exploited by those seeking to justify their actions against black people, such as Southern slaveowners.<ref name="Whitford 105"/> | |||
However, an independent interpretation of the curse being imposed on all of the descendants of Ham persisted in Judaism, especially since the other children of Ham were situated in the African continent, i.e. ] fathered the Egyptians, ] the Cushites, and ] the Libyans.<ref>William M. Evans, "From the Land of Canaan to the Land of Guinea: The Strange Odyssey of the 'Sons of Ham'". American Historical Review 85 (February 1980), 15–43 .</ref> | |||
Pro-slavery intellectuals were hard-pressed to find a justification for slavery and racism within ] which taught the belief that all humans were descendants of Adam and they were therefore one race, possessed with equal salvation potential and deserving to be treated as kin.<ref name="auto"/> The curse of Ham was used to drive a wedge in the mythology of a single human race, as elite intellectuals were able to convince people that the three sons of Noah represented the three sects of Man and their respective hierarchy of different fates. Leading intellectuals in the South, like ], claimed that white Europeans were descended from Japhet, who was prophesied to cultivate ] and the powers of the intellect by Noah, but Africans, being the descendants of the cursed Ham, were destined to be possessed by a slavish nature which would be ruled by base appetites.<ref name="noah"/> | |||
===Medieval serfdom and 'Pseudo-Berossus'=== | |||
In medieval Christian exegesis, Ham's sin was regarded as laughter (for mocking his father and doing nothing to rectify his condition).<ref>Paul Freedman, ''Images of the Medieval Peasant'', Stanford, 1999, p88</ref> | |||
That said, some were dismissive of the "Asiatic Japhethites" since they engaged in industries "fitted to the lower capacities of our nature". Others re-interpreted the African descendants of Ham as sympathetic victims, suffering at the hands of Romans, Saracens, Turks and finally, Christian nations who "engaged in the iniquity of the slave trade". Philip Schaff believes this constituted historic prophecy, which is fulfilled gradually.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Park |first=Wongi |date=2021 |title=The Blessing of Whiteness in the Curse of Ham: Reading Gen 9:18–29 in the Antebellum South |journal=Religions |volume=12 |issue=11 |pages=928 |doi=10.3390/rel12110928 |doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
Elsewhere in Medieval Europe, the "Curse of Ham" also became used as a justification for ]. ] (c. 1100) was the first recorded to propose a ] associating Ham with serfdom, writing that serfs were descended from Ham, nobles from Japheth, and free men from Shem. However, he also followed the interpretation of 1 Corinthians 7:21 by ] (late 4th century), which held that as servants in the temporal world, these "Hamites" were likely to receive a far greater reward in the next world than would the Japhetic nobility.<ref>{{harvnb|Whitford|2009|pp=31–34}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Freedman|1999|p=291}}</ref> | |||
===Early Judaism, Christianity and Islam=== | |||
The idea that serfs were the descendants of Ham soon became widely promoted in Europe. An example is Dame ] (c. 1388), who, in a treatise on hawks, claimed that the "]ish" descendants of Ham had settled in Europe, those of the temperate Shem in Africa, and those of the noble Japheth in Asia – a departure from normal arrangements, which placed Shem in Asia, Japheth in Europe and Ham in Africa – because she considered Europe to be the "country of churls", Asia of gentility, and Africa of temperance.<ref>{{harvnb|Whitford|2009|p=38}}</ref> As serfdom waned in the late medieval era, the interpretation of serfs being descendants of Ham decreased as well.<ref>{{harvnb|Whitford|2009|p=173}}</ref> | |||
]]] | |||
While Genesis 9 never says that Ham was black, he became associated with black skin, through ] deriving his name from a similar, but actually unconnected, word meaning "dark" or "brown".{{sfn|Goldenberg|1997|pp=24–25}} The next stage are certain fables according to ancient Jewish traditions. According to one legend preserved in the Babylonian ], Ham broke a prohibition on sex aboard ] and "was smitten in his skin" as punishment;<ref>. Sefaria. Retrieved June 2, 2021.</ref> However, in the Talmud this skin punishment is not described as hereditary or linked to slavery, and in other ancient Jewish sources black skin is seen as beautiful rather than disfiguring.<ref>Bernard Lewis, ], p.209</ref> According to another legend, Noah cursed Ham because he castrated his father.{{sfn|Goldenberg|1997|p=24}} | |||
A link between blackness and slavery becomes more heavily implied in the discussions of early Christian writers like ].{{sfn|Goldenberg|2003|p=169}} The suggestion that Canaan was the ancestor of dark-skinned people enters the Biblical tradition with the fourth century Syriac Christian ''Cave of Treasures''. {{sfn|Goldenberg|2003|p=197}} | |||
Ham also figured in an immensely influential work called ''Commentaria super opera diversorum auctorum de antiquitatibus''. In 1498, ] claimed to have translated records of ], an ancient Babylonian priest and scholar; which are today usually considered an elaborate forgery. However, they gained great influence over Renaissance ways of thinking about population and migration, filling a historical gap following the biblical account of the flood.<ref>Morse, Michael A. ''How the Celts Came to Britain''. Tempus Publishing, Stroud, 2005. page 15.</ref> According to this account, Ham studied the evil arts that had been practiced before the flood, and thus became known as "Cam Esenus" (Ham the Licentious), as well as the original ] and Saturn (]). He became jealous of Noah's additional children born after the deluge, and began to view his father with enmity, and one day, when Noah lay drunk and naked in his tent, Ham saw him and sang a mocking incantation that rendered Noah temporarily sterile, as if castrated. This account contains several other parallels connecting Ham with Greek myths of the castration of Uranus by Cronus, as well as Italian legends of Saturn and/or Camesis ruling over the Golden Age and fighting the ]. Ham in this version also abandoned his ] and had mothered the African peoples, and instead married his sister Rhea, daughter of Noah, producing a race of giants in Sicily. | |||
The concepts were introduced into Islam during the Arab expansion of the 7th century, due to the cross-pollination of Jewish and Christian parables and theology into Islam, called "]".{{sfn|Vagda|1973|pp=211-212}} It is with the Islamic writers of this time that the dual curse of blackness and slavery first appears, and from this point on it becomes common in both Christian and Muslim sources.{{sfn|Goldenberg|2003|p=197}} Some medieval Muslim writers{{snd}}including ], ], and even the later '']''{{snd}}asserted the view that old biblical texts describe the effects of Noah's curse on Ham's descendants as being related with blackness, slavery, and a requirement not to let the hair grow past the ears.{{sfn|Goldenberg|1997|loc=pp. 33–34}}{{sfn|Goldenberg|2003|loc=p. 170}} The account of the drunkenness of Noah and curse of Ham is not present within the text of the ], the Islamic holy book,<ref>{{cite quran|11|25|end=49|s=r}}.</ref> as it is not consistent with Islamic teachings, since Noah is a prophet, and prophets do not drink alcohol.{{sfn|Morgan|2010|p=40}} Islam holds prophets of God in very high esteem, and some Muslims suggest the prophets are infallible.<ref name="Shaatri, A. I. 2007">Shaatri, A. I. (2007). Nayl al Rajaa' bisharh' Safinat an'najaa'. Dar Al Minhaj.</ref> | |||
===European/American slavery, 17th–18th centuries=== | |||
] (''branqueamento'') through ] in ]]] | |||
Historically, other Muslim scholars such as ] criticized the Curse of Ham narrative and they went on to criticize the association of black Africans with slaves.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Cleveland |first1=Timothy |date=January 2015 |title=Ahmad Baba al-Timbukti and his Islamic critique of racial slavery in the Maghrib |journal=The Journal of North African Studies |volume=20 |issue=1 |pages=42–64 |doi=10.1080/13629387.2014.983825 |s2cid=143245136}}</ref> Others, such as ], more broadly criticised the ] tradition, and avoided using such reports when explaining verses of the Quran.{{sfn|Bauer|2015|p=115}} | |||
The explanation that black Africans, as the "sons of Ham", were cursed, possibly "blackened" by their sins, was advanced only sporadically during the Middle Ages, but it became increasingly common during the slave trade of the 18th and 19th centuries.<ref>Benjamin Braude, "The Sons of Noah and the Construction of Ethnic and Geographical Identities in the Medieval and Early Modern Periods, "William and Mary Quarterly LIV (January 1997): 103–142. See also , "From the Land of Canaan to the Land of Guinea: The Strange Odyssey of the Sons of Ham,"American Historical Review 85 (February 1980): 15–43</ref><ref name="Swift Superstition">John N. Swift and Gigen Mammoser, "'Out of the Realm of Superstition: Chesnutt's 'Dave's Neckliss' and the Curse of Ham'", ''American Literary Realism'', vol. 42 no. 1, Fall 2009, 3</ref> The justification of slavery itself through the sins of Ham was well suited to the ideological interests of the elite; with the emergence of the slave trade, its ] version justified the exploitation of African labour. | |||
In Islamic tradition, in the ] Muhammad said: "O people, your Lord is one and your father ]] is one. There is no superiority of an Arab over a non-Arab, nor a non-Arab over an Arab; no superiority of a white person over a black person, nor superiority of a black person over a white person – except through ]."<ref>{{Cite web|title=What does Islam say about prejudice and discrimination? – Prejudice and discrimination – GCSE Religious Studies Revision|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/guides/z3vrq6f/revision/6|access-date=2021-11-20|website=BBC Bitesize|language=en-GB}}</ref> | |||
In the parts of Africa where Christianity flourished in the early days, while it was still illegal in Rome, this idea never took hold, and its interpretation of scripture was never adopted by the African ]es. A modern ] commentary on Genesis notes the 19th century and earlier European theory that blacks were subject to whites as a result of the "curse of Ham", but calls this a false teaching unsupported by the text of the Bible, emphatically pointing out that Noah's curse fell not upon all descendants of Ham, but only on the descendants of Canaan, and asserting that it was fulfilled when Canaan was occupied by both Semites (Israel) and ]s (ancient Philistines). The commentary further notes that Canaanites ceased to exist politically after the Third Punic War (149 BC), and that their current descendants are thus unknown and scattered among all peoples.<ref></ref> | |||
===Medieval serfdom and "Pseudo-Berossus"=== | |||
], a 17th-century scientist who also was a ] and a devout ], refuted the idea that blackness was a Curse of Ham, in his book ''Experiments and Considerations Touching Colours'' (1664).<ref>David Mark Whitford (2009), "The curse of Ham in the early modern era", page 174-175; Nina G. Jablonski (2012), "Living Color: The Biological and Social Meaning of Skin Color", page 219</ref> There Boyle explains that the ''Curse of Ham'' used as an explanation of the ] of coloured people was but a misinterpretation embraced by "vulgar writers", travelers, critics and also "men of note" of his time.<ref>Robert Boyle (1664), "", Henry Herringman, London, page 160</ref> In his work, he challenges that vision explaining: | |||
In medieval Christian exegesis, Ham's sin was regarded as laughter (for mocking his father and doing nothing to rectify his condition).{{sfn|Freedman|1999|p=88}} | |||
{{Quote|And not only we do not find expressed in the Scripture, that the Curse meant by ''Noah'' to ''Cham'', was the Blackness of his Posterity, but we do find plainly enough there that the Curse was quite another thing, namely that he should be a Servant of Servants, that is by an Ebraism, a very Abject Servant to his Brethren, which accordingly did in part come to pass, when the ''Israelites'' of the posterity of ''Sem'', subdued the ''Canaanites'', that descended from ''Cham'', and kept them in great Subjection. Nor is it evident that Blackness is a Curse, for Navigators tell us of Black Nations, who think so much otherwise of their own condition, that they paint the Devil White. Nor is Blackness inconsistent with Beauty, which even to our European Eyes consists not so much in Colour, as an Advantageous Stature, a Comely Symmetry of the parts of the Body, and Good Features in the Face. So that I see not why Blackness should be thought such a Curse to the ''Negroes''...|] (author's italics and capitalization)}} | |||
Elsewhere in Medieval Europe, the curse of Ham also became used as a justification for ]. ] (c. 1100) was the first recorded to propose a ] associating Ham with serfdom, writing that serfs were descended from Ham, nobles from Japheth, and free men from Shem. However, he also followed the interpretation of 1 Corinthians 7:21 by ] (late 4th century), which held that as servants in the temporal world, these "Hamites" were likely to receive a far greater reward in the next world than would the Japhetic nobility.{{sfn|Whitford|2009|pp=31–34}}{{sfn|Freedman|1999|p=291}} | |||
A number of other scholars also support the claim that the ] version of the ''Curse of Ham'' was devised at that time because it suited ideological and economical interests of the European elite and ]rs who wanted to justify exploitation of African labour.<ref>Tim Robinson (2007), "Racism: a History", (BBC Documentary)</ref> While Robinson (2007) claims that such version was non-existent before, historian ] argues, as well, that contrary to the claims of many reputable historians, neither the ] nor any early post-] ] writing relates blackness of the skin to a curse whatsoever.<ref>] Sterling Professor of History ] (Emeritus), "Inhuman Bondage: The Rise and Fall of Slavery in the New World", Oxford University Press, Apr 1, 2006, pages 67-68</ref> | |||
The idea that serfs were the descendants of Ham soon became widely promoted in Europe. An example is Dame ] (c. 1388), who, in a treatise on hawks, claimed that the "]ish" descendants of Ham had settled in Europe, those of the temperate Shem in Africa, and those of the noble Japheth in Asia (a departure from normal arrangements, which placed Shem in Asia, Japheth in Europe, and Ham in Africa), because she considered Europe to be the "country of churls", Asia of gentility, and Africa of temperance.{{sfn|Whitford|2009|p=39}} As serfdom waned in the late medieval era, the interpretation of serfs being descendants of Ham decreased as well.{{sfn|Whitford|2009|p=173}} | |||
Ham also figured in an immensely influential work ''Commentaria super opera diversorum auctorum de antiquitatibus'' (''Commentaries on the Works of Various Authors Discussing Antiquity''). In 1498, ] claimed to have translated records of ], an ancient Babylonian priest and scholar; which are today usually considered an elaborate forgery. However, they gained great influence over Renaissance ways of thinking about population and migration, filling a historical gap following the biblical account of the flood.<ref>Morse, Michael A. (2005). ''How the Celts Came to Britain''. Stroud: Tempus Publishing. p. 15.</ref> According to this account, Ham studied the evil arts that had been practiced before the flood, and thus became known as "Cam Esenus" (Ham the Licentious), as well as the original ] and Saturn (]). | |||
He became jealous of Noah's additional children born after the deluge, and began to view his father with enmity, and one day, when Noah lay drunk and naked in his tent, Ham saw him and sang a mocking incantation that rendered Noah temporarily sterile, as if castrated. This account contains several other parallels connecting Ham with Greek myths of the castration of Uranus by Cronus, as well as Italian legends of Saturn and/or Camesis ruling over the Golden Age and fighting the ]. Ham in this version also abandoned his ] and had mothered the African peoples, and instead married his sister Rhea, daughter of Noah, producing a race of giants in Sicily. | |||
===American/European slavery, 17th and 18th centuries=== | |||
The explanation that black Africans, as the "sons of Ham", were cursed, possibly "blackened" by their sins, was sporadically advanced during the ], but its acceptance became increasingly common during the ] of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Braude |first=Benjamin |title=The Sons of Noah and the Construction of Ethnic and Geographical Identities in the Medieval and Early Modern Periods |journal= The William and Mary Quarterly |volume=54 |issue=1 |date=January 1997 |pages=103–142 |doi=10.2307/2953314|jstor=2953314 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Evans |first=William McKee |date=February 1980 |title=From the Land of Canaan to the Land of Guinea: The Strange Odyssey of the Sons of Ham |journal=The American Historical Review |volume=85 |issue=1 |pages=15–43 |doi=10.2307/1853423|jstor=1853423 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Swift |first1=John N. |last2=Mammoser |first2=Gigen |title='Out of the Realm of Superstition: Chesnutt's 'Dave's Neckliss' and the Curse of Ham' |journal=American Literary Realism |volume=42 |issue=1 |date=Fall 2009 |page=3 |doi=10.1353/alr.0.0033|doi-access=free }}</ref> The justification of slavery itself through the sins of Ham was well suited to the ideological interests of the elite{{who?|date=September 2024}}; with the emergence of the slave trade, its ] version justified the exploitation of African labour. | |||
]-] painter ], 1895, ]. The painting depicts a black grandmother, ] mother, white father and their ] child, hence three generations of racial ] through ].]] | |||
In the parts of Africa where Christianity flourished in its early days, while it was still illegal in Rome, this idea never took hold, and its interpretation of scripture was never adopted by the African ]es. A modern ] commentary on Genesis cites the nineteenth century theory and the earlier European theory which state that blacks were subjected to whites as a result of the curse of Ham, but it calls this belief a false teaching which is unsupported by the text of the Bible, it emphatically points out that Noah's curse did not fall upon all of the descendants of Ham, instead, it only fell upon the descendants of Canaan, and it asserts that the curse was fulfilled when Canaan was occupied by Semites (Israel) and ]s. The commentary further notes that Canaanites ceased to exist as a political force after the ] (149 BC), and as a result, their current descendants are unknown and they are also scattered among all peoples.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://good-amharic-books.com/images/PDFs/Gentee_04.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110711111017/http://good-amharic-books.com/images/PDFs/Gentee_04.pdf|url-status=dead|title=Amharic ''Commentary on Genesis'' pp. 133–142. (PDF)|archive-date=July 11, 2011}}</ref> | |||
The ] scientist ]{{snd}}a seventeenth-century polymath who was also a ] and a devout Christian{{snd}}refuted the idea that blackness was caused by the curse of Ham, in his book ''Experiments and Considerations Touching Colours'' (1664).{{sfn|Whitford|2009|pages=174–175}}{{sfn|Jablonski|2012|p=219}} There, Boyle explains that the curse of Ham as an explanation for the ] of coloured people was but a misinterpretation that was embraced by "vulgar writers", travelers, critics, and also "men of note" of his time.{{sfn|Boyle|1664|p=160}} In his work, he challenges that vision, explaining: | |||
{{Blockquote|And not only we do not find expressed in the Scripture, that the Curse meant by ''Noah'' to ''Cham'', was the Blackness of his Posterity, but we do find plainly enough there that the Curse was quite another thing, namely that he should be a Servant of Servants, that is by an Ebraism, a very Abject Servant to his Brethren, which accordingly did in part come to pass, when the ''Israelites'' of the posterity of ''Sem'', subdued the ''Canaanites'', that descended from ''Cham'', and kept them in great Subjection. Nor is it evident that Blackness is a Curse, for Navigators tell us of Black Nations, who think so much otherwise of their own condition, that they paint the Devil White. Nor is Blackness inconsistent with Beauty, which even to our European Eyes consists not so much in Colour, as an Advantageous Stature, a Comely Symmetry of the parts of the Body, and Good Features in the Face. So that I see not why Blackness should be thought such a Curse to the ''Negroes''... }} | |||
A number of other scholars also support the claim that the racialized version of the curse of Ham was devised at that time because it suited the ideological and economic interests of the European elite and the slave traders who wanted to justify their exploitation of African laborers.<ref>Robinson, Tim (director) (2007). ''Racism: A History'' (documentary). BBC Four.</ref> While Robinson (2007) claims that such a version was non-existent before, historian ] also argues that contrary to the claims of many reputable historians, neither the ] nor any early post-biblical ] writing relates blackness of the skin to a curse whatsoever.<ref name=dbd>] (2006). '']''. Oxford University Press. pp. 67–68.</ref> | |||
===Abyssinia=== | |||
In what is now Ethiopia, the ] justified ] with its version of the Curse of Ham.<ref name="Noel-Buxton">{{cite journal |last1=Noel-Buxton |first1=Lord |authorlink=Noel Buxton|title=Slavery in Abyssinia |journal=International Affairs |date=July 1932 |volume=11 |issue=4 |page=515 |doi=10.2307/3015767 |jstor=3015767 |language=en-UK |quote=A great part of the chapter is devoted to refuting the argument, which apparently is commonly used in the Abyssinian Church, that slavery came upon a large section of the population of the world through the curse of Noah upon his grandson, because of an insult offered to Noah by his son. Controversy seems to rage upon this theory, which the Foreign Minister (]) tries to combat by arguing that this cannot be the reason for slavery, because God would not have punished the grandson but the son. }}</ref> | |||
===Latter Day Saint movement=== | ===Latter Day Saint movement=== | ||
{{Anchor|In the Latter-day Saint Movement}} |
{{Anchor|In the Latter-day Saint Movement}} | ||
{{Main| |
{{Main|Curses of Cain and Ham and the LDS Church}} | ||
{{see also|Black people and Mormonism|Black people and temple and priesthood policies in the LDS Church|Civil rights and Mormonism|Mormonism and slavery|Mormon teachings on skin color}} | |||
In 1835, ], the founder of the ], published a work which was titled the ]. It explicitly states that an Egyptian king who is referred to by the name of ] was a descendant of Ham and the Canaanites,<ref>{{Mormonverse|Abraham|1|21}}</ref> who were black,<ref>{{Mormonverse|Moses|7:8}}</ref> that Noah had cursed his lineage so they did not have the right to the priesthood,<ref>{{Mormonverse|Abraham|1:26}}</ref> and that all Egyptians descended from him.<ref>{{Mormonverse|Abraham|1:22}}</ref> | |||
After the death of ], the founder of the ], leaders of ] (LDS Church) taught that ] were under the curse of Ham, although the day would come when the curse would be nullified through the saving powers of Jesus Christ.<ref>{{citation |last= Simonsen |first= Reed R. |year= 1991 |title= If Ye Are Prepared: a reference manual for missionaries |location= Centerville, Utah |publisher= Randall Co. |pages= 243–266 |oclc= 28838428 }}</ref> In addition, based on his interpretation of the ], ] believed that as a result of this curse Negroes were banned from the Mormon ].<ref>{{cite book |editor-last= Bush |editor-first= Lester E., Jr. |editor2-last= Mauss |editor2-first= Armand L. |editor2-link= Armand L. Mauss |title= Neither White Nor Black: Mormon Scholars Confront the Race Issue in a Universal Church |publisher= ] |year= 1984 |location= Salt Lake City, Utah |url= http://signaturebookslibrary.org/?p=438 |isbn= 0-941214-22-2 |page= 70}}</ref> In 1978 then LDS president ] said he received ] that extended the Priesthood to all worthy male members of the LDS Church.<ref>{{citation |contribution= Official Declaration—2 |url= http://scriptures.lds.org/od/2 |title= ] |work= ] |publisher= LDS Church }}</ref> | |||
It was later considered scripture by ] (LDS Church). This passage is the only one which is found in any Mormon scripture that bars a particular lineage of people from holding the priesthood, and, while nothing in the Book of Abraham explicitly states that Noah's curse was the same curse which is mentioned in the Bible or that the Egyptians were related to other black Africans,{{sfn|Mauss|2003|p=238}} it later became the foundation of church policy with regard to the priesthood ban.<ref name=Reeve_2015_205>{{harvnb|Reeve|2015|p=205}}.</ref> The 2002 edition of the ''Doctrine and Covenants Student Manual'' points to Abraham 1:21–27 as the reason why black men were not given the priesthood until 1978.<ref name=DC_manual>{{cite book|chapter-url=https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/manual/doctrine-and-covenants-student-manual/official-declaration-2-every-faithful-worthy-man?lang=eng|chapter=Official Declaration 2, 'Every Faithful, Worthy Man'|year=2002|publisher=]|title=Doctrine & Covenants Student Manual|pages=634–635}}</ref> | |||
In 1836, Smith taught that the curse of Ham came from God, and it stated that blacks were cursed with servitude.{{sfn|Bringhurst|1981|p=22}} He warned those who tried to interfere with slavery that God could do his own work.<ref>{{cite wikisource |wslink=Latter Day Saints' Messenger and Advocate/Volume 2/Number 7/Letter to Oliver Cowdery from Joseph Smith, Jr. (Apr. 1836) |title=Letter to Oliver Cowdery from Joseph Smith, Jr. |date=April 1836 |last=Smith |first=Joseph|author-link=Joseph Smith |page=290 |publisher=]|newspaper=] |volume=2 |issue=7 |quote=Those who are determined to pursue a course which shows an opposition and a feverish restlessness against the designs of the Lord, will learn, when perhaps it is too late for their own good, that God can do His own work without the aid of those who are not dictate by His counsel.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Lythgoe |first=Dennis L. |url=https://www.proquest.com/openview/136fe4bc7890e0b3acc8c1d6ef7aaf89/ |title=Negro Slavery and Mormon Doctrine |journal=] |via=] |volume=21 |issue=4 |date=Fall 1967 |page=327}}</ref> In 1835 Smith said ] had told him, "it is not right that any man should be in bondage one to another".<ref>{{lds|Doctrine & Covenants|dc|101|79}}</ref> Smith started expressing more anti-slavery positions starting in 1842.<ref name="Harris2015">{{cite book|last1=Harris|first1=Matthew L.|last2=Bringhurst|first2=Newell G.|author2-link=Newell G. Bringhurst|title=The Mormon Church and Blacks: A Documentary History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Pn20CgAAQBAJ&pg=PAiii|date=2015|publisher=]|location=Chicago|isbn=978-0-252-08121-7}}</ref>{{rp|18}}<ref name=BushDialogue>{{cite journal |last1=Bush |first1=Lester E.|author1-link=Lester E. Bush Jr. |date=1973 |title= Mormonism's Negro Doctrine: An Historical Overview|url=https://www.dialoguejournal.com/wp-content/uploads/sbi/articles/Dialogue_V08N01_13.pdf |journal=] |volume=8 |issue=1 |publisher=]}}</ref>{{rp|18–19}} In 1844, when ] in the wake of widespread opposition to Mormon settlement in ], he advocated for the abolition of slavery by the year 1850. | |||
After Smith's 1844 death, ] became his most popular successor during the ]. Young maintained that ] were under the curse of Ham and he also maintained that those who tried to abolish slavery were going against the decrees of God, although the day would come when the curse would be nullified through the saving powers of ].<ref>{{citation |last= Simonsen |first= Reed R. |year= 1991 |title= If Ye Are Prepared: A Reference Manual for Missionaries |location= Centerville, Utah |publisher= Randall Co. |pages= 243–266 |oclc= 28838428 }}.</ref> In addition, based on his interpretation of the Book of Abraham, Young believed that, as a result of this curse, ]es were banned from the Mormon ].{{sfn|Bush|1984|p=70}} | |||
In 1978, LDS Church president ] said that he received ] that extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church without regard to race or color.<ref>{{cite web |title= Official Declaration 2 |url= https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/scriptures/dc-testament/od/2?lang=eng |publisher= ] }}.</ref> In 2013, the LDS Church denounced the curse of Ham explanation for the withholding of the priesthood from black Africans.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/topics/race-and-the-priesthood |title=Race and the Priesthood|publisher=]|date=2013}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
*] | * ] | ||
*] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
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===Bibliography=== | ===Bibliography=== | ||
{{Refbegin |2}} | {{Refbegin |2}} | ||
*{{cite book |last=Alter |first=Robert | |
* {{cite book |last=Alter |first=Robert |author-link=Robert Alter |title=The Five Books of Moses |year=2008 |publisher=W. W. Norton & Company |isbn=978-0-393-33393-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZcMhkJ8a708C&pg=PA52 | ||
}} | |||
*{{cite book |last= |
* {{cite book |last=Bauer |first=Karen |title=Gender Hierarchy in the Qur'an: Medieval Interpretations, Modern Responses |year=2015 |publisher=] |isbn=978-1-316-24005-2}} | ||
* {{cite book |last=Boyle |first=Robert |title=Experiments and Considerations Touching Colours |publisher=Henry Herringman |location=London |year=1664 |url=http://www.gutenberg.org/files/14504/14504-h/14504-h.htm#Page_160 }} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Dimant |first=Devorah |chapter=Noah in early Jewish literature |editor=Michael E. Stone |editor2=Theodore E. Bergren |title=Biblical Figures Outside the Bible |publisher=Trinity Press |url=http://books.google.com.au/books?id=eXM1YwCGipMC#v=onepage&q=&f=false |year=2001 |ref=harv}} | |||
*{{cite book |last= |
* {{cite book |last=Brett |first=Mark G. |title=Genesis: Procreation and the Politics of Identity |year=2000 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0203992029 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nFDW1lqNEXYC&pg=PA45 | ||
}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Goldenberg |first=David M. |editor1-last=Stemberger |editor1-first=Günter |editor2-last=Perani |editor2-first=Mauro |title=The words of a wise man's mouth are gracious |chapter=What did Ham do to Noah? |year=2005 |pages= |publisher=Walter de Gruyter |isbn= |url=http://books.google.com.au/books?id=4cr-mix9kMgC&pg=PA261#v=onepage&q=curse%20of%20ham%20greek%20mesopotamian%20myth&f=false |ref=harv}} | |||
* {{ |
* {{cite book |last1=Bringhurst |first1=Newell |title=Saints, Slaves, and Blacks: The Changing Place of Black People Within Mormonism |publisher=Greenwood Press |date=1981 |isbn=9780313227523 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/saintsslavesblac0000brin}} | ||
* {{cite book |last= |
* {{cite book |editor-last= Bush |editor-first= Lester E. Jr. |editor2-last= Mauss |editor2-first= Armand L. |editor2-link= Armand L. Mauss |title= Neither White Nor Black: Mormon Scholars Confront the Race Issue in a Universal Church |publisher= ] |year= 1984 |location= Salt Lake City, Utah |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ot16AAAACAAJ |isbn=978-0-941214-22-3 |ref={{sfnref|Bush|1984}}}} | ||
* {{Cite book |last=Dimant |first=Devorah |chapter=Noah in early Jewish literature |editor=Michael E. Stone |editor2=Theodore E. Bergren |title=Biblical Figures Outside the Bible |publisher=Trinity Press |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eXM1YwCGipMC |year=2001 | |||
* {{Cite book |last1=Graves |first1=Robert |last2=Patai |first2=Raphael |title=Hebrew Myths: The Book of Genesis |publisher=Princeton University Press, Cassel |year=1964 |isbn= |url= |ref=harv}} | |||
|isbn=9781563384110 }} | |||
*{{cite web |last1=Ham |first1=Ken |authorlink1=Ken Ham |last2=Sarfati |first2=Jonathan |authorlink2=Jonathan Sarfati |last3=Wieland |first3=Carl |authorlink3=Carl Wieland |year=2001 |editor-last=Batten |editor-first=Don |url=http://www.christiananswers.net/q-aig/race-blacks.html |title=Are black people the result of a curse on Ham |website=ChristianAnswers.net |archiveurl= |archivedate= |deadurl= |accessdate=28 September 2013 |quote= |ref=harv}} | |||
*{{cite book | |
* {{cite book |last=Freedman |first=Paul H. |title=Images of the Medieval Peasant |year=1999 |publisher=Stanford University Press |isbn= 9780804733731|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RXBReIaQDW8C | ||
}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Kissling |first=Paul |title=Genesis |publisher=College Press |year=2004 |volume=volume 1 |isbn= |url=http://books.google.com.au/books?id=lotBnvqdmeQC&pg=PP4#v=onepage&q=In%20the%20beginning&f=false |ref=harv}} | |||
*{{ |
* {{cite book |last=Goldenberg |first=David M. |editor1-last=Stemberger |editor1-first=Günter |editor2-last=Perani |editor2-first=Mauro |title=The Words of a Wise Man's Mouth Are Gracious |chapter=What did Ham do to Noah? |year=2005 |publisher=Walter de Gruyter |isbn= 9783110188493|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4cr-mix9kMgC&pg=PA261 | ||
}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Levenson |first=Jon D. |editor1-last=Berlin |editor1-first=Adele |editor2-last=Brettler |editor2-first=Marc Zvi |title=The Jewish study Bible |chapter=Genesis: introduction and annotations |year=2004 |page=26 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=0-19-529751-2 |url=http://books.google.com.au/books?id=aDuy3p5QvEYC#v=onepage&q&f=false |ref=harv}} (). | |||
*{{cite book |last= |
* {{cite book |last=Goldenberg |first=David M. |editor1-last=Salzman |editor1-first=Jack |editor2-last=West |editor2-first=Cornel |title=Struggles in the Promised Land |chapter=The Curse of Ham: A Case of Rabbinic Racism? |year=1997 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=9780198024927 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=C2MJkRjpOHoC&pg=PA34 | ||
}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Metcalf |first=Alida C. |title=Go-betweens and the colonization of Brazil, 1500-1600 |url=http://books.google.com/books?&id=lWuNIISvBqIC#v=snippet&q=ham%20curse&f=false |year=2005 |publisher=] |location=Austin |isbn=0292712766 |edition=1st ed. |page=164 |ref=harv |quote=Goldenberg further argues that the "Curse of Ham" is a misnomer... the biblical text actually says that Noah cursed Canaan, Ham's son.}} | |||
*{{ |
* {{Cite book |last1=Goldenberg |first1=David M. |title=The Curse of Ham: Race and Slavery in Early Judaism, Christianity, and Islam |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=9781400828548 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1MS9AiZ74MoC&pg=PA168 |year=2003 | ||
}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Sadler |first=R.S. |authorlink= |title=Can a Cushite change his skin? |year=2005 |publisher=T&T Clark |location= |language= |isbn= |pages=|url=http://books.google.com.au/books?id=jNwI0AlRhuwC#v=onepage&q=&f=false |ref=harv}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Gomez |first1=Michael A. |title=African Dominion: A New History of Empire in Early and Medieval West Africa |title-link=African Dominion |date=2018 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=978-0-691-19682-4}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Sarna |first=Nahum |authorlink=Nahum Sarna |editor-last=Friedman |editor-first=Richard Elliott |title=The Creation of Sacred Literature: Composition and Redaction of the Biblical Text |chapter=The Anticipatory Use of Information as a Literary Feature of the Genesis Narratives |year=1981 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=0-520-09637-1 |url=http://books.google.com.au/books?id=HvjNTNWTyQUC#v=onepage&q=&f=false |ref=harv}} | |||
*{{Cite book | |
* {{Cite book |last1=Graves |first1=Robert |last2=Patai |first2=Raphael |title=Hebrew Myths: The Book of Genesis |publisher=Princeton University Press, Cassel |year=1964 | ||
}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Van Seters |first=John |editor1-last=VanderKam |editor1-first=James |title=From revelation to canon: studies in the Hebrew Bible and Second Temple literature |chapter=Geography as an evaluative tool |year=2000 |pages=|publisher=Brill |isbn= |url=http://books.google.com.au/books?id=L352z_jZSmcC&pg=PA476#v=onepage&q=Putting%20them%20in%20their%20place%3A%20Geography%20as%20an%20evaluative%20tool&f=false |ref=harv}} | |||
* {{cite web |last1=Ham |first1=Ken |author-link1=Ken Ham |last2=Sarfati |first2=Jonathan |author-link2=Jonathan Sarfati |last3=Wieland |first3=Carl |author-link3=Carl Wieland |year=2001 |editor-last=Batten |editor-first=Don |url=http://www.christiananswers.net/q-aig/race-blacks.html |title=Are Black People the Result of a Curse on Ham |website=ChristianAnswers.net |access-date=September 28, 2013 | |||
*{{Cite book |last=Whitford |first=David M. |title=The curse of Ham in the early modern era |publisher=Ashgate Publishing |year=2009 |url=http://books.google.com.au/books?id=hMb7_SL-OJYC#v=onepage&q=&f=false |ref=harv}} | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Jablonski |first=Nina G. |year=2012 |title=Living Color: The Biological and Social Meaning of Skin Color |page=219 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=9780520953772}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Keil |first1=Carl |last2=Delitzsch |first2=Franz |others=Trans. James Martin |title=Biblical Commentary on the Old Testament |volume=1 |year=1885 |publisher=T&T Clark |location=Edinburgh | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Kissling |first=Paul |title=Genesis, Volume 1 |publisher=College Press |year=2004 |isbn= 9780899008752|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lotBnvqdmeQC&pg=PP4 | |||
}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Kugel |first=James L. |title=Traditions of the Bible |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=1998 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QUkaVq_GlJUC&pg=PA222 |isbn=9780674791510 | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Levenson |first=Jon D. |editor1-last=Berlin |editor1-first=Adele |editor2-last=Brettler |editor2-first=Marc Zvi |title=The Jewish Study Bible |chapter=Genesis: Introduction and Annotations |year=2004 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-529751-5 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aDuy3p5QvEYC&pg=PA26 }} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Lulat |first=G. |title=A History of African Higher Education from Antiquity to the Present: A Critical Synthesis. |year=2005 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |location=Santa Barbara |isbn=9780313068669 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J00xEkY-vTEC&pg=PA86 |pages=85–6 | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book |title=All Abraham's Children: Changing Mormon Conceptions of Race and Lineage |first=Armand L. |last=Mauss |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=7lXq9JfR_EYC&pg=PA238|publisher=University of Illinois Press |year=2003 |isbn=0-252-02803-1}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Metcalf |first=Alida C. |title=Go-betweens and the Colonization of Brazil, 1500–1600 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lWuNIISvBqIC |year=2005 |publisher=] |location=Austin |isbn=978-0292712768 |edition=1st |page=164 | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Morgan |first=Diane |title=Essential Islam: A Comprehensive Guide to Belief and Practice |url=https://archive.org/details/essentialislamco0000morg/page/40 |url-access=registration |year=2010 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |isbn=978-0313360251 |page=40}} | |||
* {{cite book|author1-link=W. Paul Reeve|last1=Reeve|first1=W. Paul|title=Religion of a Different Color: Race and the Mormon Struggle for Whiteness|date=2015|publisher=Oxford University Press |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=95j4BQAAQBAJ |location=New York City (NY) |isbn=978-0-19-975407-6 | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Robertson |first=John M. |title=Christianity and Mythology |year=1910 |publisher=Kessinger Publishing (2004 reprint) |isbn=978-0-7661-8768-9 |page=496 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=usGxKc9gMNwC | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Sadler |first=R. S. |title=Can a Cushite Change his Skin? |year=2005 |publisher=T&T Clark |isbn= 9780567029607 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jNwI0AlRhuwC | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Sarna |first=Nahum |author-link=Nahum Sarna |editor-last=Friedman |editor-first=Richard Elliott |title=The Creation of Sacred Literature: Composition and Redaction of the Biblical Text |chapter=The Anticipatory Use of Information as a Literary Feature of the Genesis Narratives |year=1981 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-09637-0 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/creationofsacred0000unse/page/76/mode/2up |chapter-url-access=registration | |||
}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Trost |first=Travis D. |title=Who Should be King in Israel? |publisher=Peter Lang Publishing |year=2010 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FnvbpnRwxeYC&pg=PA42 |isbn=9781433111518 | |||
}} | |||
* {{Cite encyclopedia |edition=2nd |publisher=Brill Academic Publishers |volume=4 |pages=211–212 |last=Vagda |first=G. |title=Isrāʾīliyyāt |encyclopedia=] |year=1973 |isbn=978-9004057456}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=VanderKam |first=James Claire |chapter=The Righteousness of Noah |editor=John Joseph Collins |editor2=George W. E. Nickelsburg |title=Ideal Figures in Ancient Judaism: Profiles and Paradigms, Volumes 12–15 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Le4QAQAAIAAJ |year=1980 |publisher=Scholars Press |location=Chico |isbn=978-0891304340 |pages=13–32 | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Van Seters |first=John |editor1-last=VanderKam |editor1-first=James |title=From Revelation to Canon: Studies in the Hebrew Bible and Second Temple Literature |chapter=Geography as an evaluative tool |year=2000 |publisher=Brill |isbn=0391041363 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=L352z_jZSmcC&pg=PA476 | |||
}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Whitford |first=David M. |title=The Curse of Ham in the Early Modern Era |publisher=Ashgate Publishing |year=2009 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hMb7_SL-OJYC |isbn=9780754666257 }} | |||
{{Refend}} | {{Refend}} | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
* {{Commons category-inline|Drunken Noah|}} | |||
* of statements about abolition by ], originally printed in the {{citation |newspaper= ] |volume= 2 |issue= 7 |location= ] |month= April |year= 1836}} | |||
* | |||
{{Religion and slavery}} | |||
* An account of the theft of the garment by Ham is found in Jasher 7:24–29. | |||
{{Book of Genesis}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 21:02, 25 December 2024
Biblical curse imposed on CanaanIn the Book of Genesis, the curse of Ham is described as a curse which was imposed upon Ham's son Canaan by the patriarch Noah. It occurs in the context of Noah's drunkenness and it is provoked by a shameful act that was perpetrated by Noah's son Ham, who "saw the nakedness of his father". The exact nature of Ham's transgression and the reason Noah cursed Canaan when Ham had sinned have been debated for over 2,000 years.
The story's original purpose may have been to justify the biblical subjection of the Canaanites to the Israelites, or a land claim to a portion of New Kingdom of Egypt which ruled Canaan in the late Bronze Age.
In later centuries, the narrative was interpreted by some Jews, Christians and Muslims as an explanation for black skin, as well as a justification for enslavement of black people. Nevertheless, many Christians, Muslims and Jews now disagree with such interpretations, because in the biblical text, Ham himself is not cursed, and neither race nor skin color are ever mentioned.
Biblical narrative
The concept of the curse of Ham finds its origins in Genesis 9:
20 And Noah began to be an husbandman, and he planted a vineyard:
21 And he drank of the wine, and was drunken; and he was uncovered within his tent.
22 And Ham, the father of Canaan, saw the nakedness of his father, and told his two brethren without.
23 And Shem and Japheth took a garment, and laid it upon both their shoulders, and went backward, and covered the nakedness of their father; and their faces were backward, and they saw not their father's nakedness.
24 And Noah awoke from his wine, and knew what his younger son had done unto him.
25 And he said, Cursed be Canaan; a servant of servants shall he be unto his brethren.
26 And he said, Blessed be the Lord God of Shem; and Canaan shall be his servant.
27 God shall enlarge Japheth, and he shall dwell in the tents of Shem; and Canaan shall be his servant.
– Genesis 9:20–27, King James Version
The objective of the story may have been to justify the subject status of the Canaanites, the descendants of Ham, to the Israelites, the descendants of Shem. The narrative of the curse is replete with difficulties. It is uncertain what the precise nature of Ham's offense is. Verse 22 has been a subject of debate, as to whether it should be taken literally, or as "a euphemism for some act of gross immorality". In verse 25, Noah refers to Shem and Japheth as the "brethren" of Canaan, whereas in verse 18 they are identified as his uncles. The Table of Nations presents Canaan and Mizraim (Egypt) among the sons of Ham (10:6). In the Psalms, Egypt is equated with Ham. A land claim on Canaan which fell under the rule of New Kingdom Egypt in the late Bronze Age has been suggested as a motive for the curse on Canaan and the association with Ham via Ancient Egypt's rule over Canaan.
The treatment of Japheth in verses 26–27 raises questions: Why is YHWH named as the God of Shem, but not of Japheth? What does it mean that God will "enlarge" Japheth? And why will Japheth "dwell in the tents of Shem"? Further difficulties include Ham's being referred to as "the youngest son", when all other lists make him Noah's second son. Biblical scholar Nahum Sarna says that the biggest challenge of the narrative is why Canaan was cursed, rather than Ham, and that the concealed details of the shameful incident bear the same reticence as Reuben's sexual transgression.
The narrative's short five verses indicate that Canaan's Hamite paternity must have had great significance to the narrator or redactor, according to Sarna, who adds, "The curse on Canaan, invoked in response to an act of moral depravity, is the first intimation of the theme of the corruption of the Canaanites, which is given as the justification for their being dispossessed of their land and for the transfer of that land to the descendants of Abraham."
Ham's transgression
Scholars have debated the exact nature of Ham's misdeed with many identifying it as either voyeurism, castration, paternal incest, or maternal incest.
Voyeurism
The majority of commentators, both ancient and modern, have felt that Ham's seeing his father naked was not a sufficiently serious crime to explain the punishment that follows. Nevertheless, Genesis 9:23, where Shem and Japheth cover Noah with a cloak while averting their eyes, suggests that the act of "seeing (Noah's) nakedness" is to be taken literally, and it has been pointed out that, in first millennium Babylonia, looking at another person's genitals was indeed regarded as a serious matter. Other ancient commentators suggested that Ham was guilty of more than what the Bible says. The 2nd century Targum Onqelos has Ham gossiping about his father's drunken disgrace "in the street" (a reading which has a basis in the original Hebrew), so that being held up to public mockery was what had angered Noah; as the Cave of Treasures (late 6th – early 7th century) puts it, "Ham laughed at his father's shame and did not cover it, but laughed about it and mocked."
Paternal incest or Castration
Ancient commentaries have also debated whether "seeing" someone's nakedness meant to have sex with that person (e.g., Leviticus 20:17). The same idea was raised by third-century rabbis, in the Babylonian Talmud (c. 500 AD), who argue that Ham either castrated his father, or sodomised him. The same explanations are found in three Greek translations of the Bible, which replace the word "see" in verse 22 with another word denoting homosexual relations. The castration theory has its modern counterpart in suggested parallels found in the castration of Uranus by Cronus in Greek mythology and a Hittite myth of the supreme god Anu whose genitals were "bitten off by his rebel son and cup-bearer Kumarbi, who afterwards rejoiced and laughed ... until Anu cursed him".
The medieval commentator Rashi (1040–1105), writes of Ham's offence against Noah: "There are those of our rabbis who say he emasculated him, and there are those who say he had relations with him." Rashi cites Sanhedrin 70a, which adds that those who believe that Ham had homosexual relations with his father agree that he also emasculated him. Rashi continues: "What did Ham see that he emasculated him? He said to his brothers: Adam the first man had two sons, yet one killed the other because of the inheritance of the world [Cain killed Abel over a dispute how to divide the world between them according to Genesis Rabbah 22:7, and our father has three sons yet he seeks still a fourth son."
Maternal incest
Some modern scholars, such as Bergsma and Hahn, have suggested that Ham engaged in intercourse with his mother, Noah's wife. Support for this theory can be found in verses such as Leviticus 20:11: "And the man that lieth with his father's wife hath uncovered his father's nakedness". According to this interpretation of the story, Canaan was the offspring of the illicit union between Ham and his mother, which accounts for the curse falling upon Canaan rather than Ham.
Disrespecting a religious festival
According to Devorah Dimant, the Book of Jubilees depicts Noah planting, harvesting, and drinking wine in accordance with the stipulations of the Torah such that Noah's drunkenness appears less problematic and Ham's offense appears more problematic than in Genesis. Dimant writes that the timing of Noah's viniculture and the procedure of Noah's sacrifice in Jubilees 7:1–6 match Second Temple Judaism interpretations of Leviticus 19:23–25 and Numbers 29:1–6. Thus, Dimant claims "Jubilees alleviates any misgivings that may be provoked by the episode of Noah's drunkenness. In this light, Ham's offense constitutes an act of disrespect not only to his father, but also to the festival ordinances."
Curse of Canaan
- Genesis 9:25: "And he said, Cursed be Canaan; a servant of servants shall he be unto his brethren"
It is noteworthy that the curse was made by Noah, not by God. Some biblical scholars claim that when a curse is made by a man, it could only have been effective if God supports it, unlike the curse of Ham and his descendants, which was not confirmed by God or, at least, it is not mentioned in the Bible that he had confirmed it.
Dead Sea Scrolls
4Q252, a pesher (interpretation) on the Book of Genesis found among the Dead Sea Scrolls, explains that since Ham had already been blessed by God (Genesis 9:1), he could not now be cursed by Noah. The 4Q252 scroll probably dates from the later half of the first century BC. A century later, the Jewish historian Josephus argued that Noah refrained from cursing Ham because of his nearness of kin, and so cursed Ham's son instead.
A new alternative interpretation of 4Q181, which is a Dead Sea scroll of Genesis, parallels the Book of Jubilees, suggesting that Canaan was cursed because he defied Noah's division of the land.
Jubilees
The Book of Jubilees also recounts the incident between Ham and Noah, and Noah's resulting curse against Canaan, in similar terms. Later, however, Jubilees explains further that Ham had allocated to Canaan a land west of the Nile (Jubilees 9:1), and all Noah's sons agreed to invoke a curse on anyone who tries to seize land that was not allocated to them (Jubilees 9:14–15). But Canaan violated this agreement and instead chose to squat in the land delineated to Shem and his descendants, and so Canaan brought upon himself the full force of this second curse (Jubilees 10:29–35).
Classical Judaism
See also: Jewish views on slaveryPhilo of Alexandria, a 1st-century BC Jewish philosopher, said that Ham and Canaan were equally guilty, if not of whatever had been done to Noah, then of other crimes, "for the two of them together had acted foolishly and wrongly and committed other sins." Rabbi Eleazar decided that Canaan had in fact been the first to see Noah, and had then gone and told his father, who then told his brothers in the street; this, said Eleazar, "did not take to mind the commandment to honour one's father." Another interpretation was that Noah's "youngest son" could not be Ham, who was the middle son: "for this reason they say that this youngest son was in fact Canaan."
According to Rashi, Ham castrated Noah and prevented him from having a fourth son; therefore, Noah cursed Ham's own fourth son, Canaan.
In halakhic legal texts, the term "Canaanite slave" is used generically for any non-Jew (gentile) held in bondage by an Israelite. According to Jewish law, such a slave should undergo a form of conversion to Judaism, after which they are obligated to perform all mitzvot except positive time-dependent mitzvot (just as Jewish women do), granting them a higher status than ordinary non-Jews.
Racism and slavery
In the past, some people claimed that the curse of Ham was a biblical justification for imposing slavery and racial discrimination towards black people, although this concept has been criticized for being an ideologically driven misconception. Regarding this matter, the Christian leader Martin Luther King Jr. called such an attempt a "blasphemy" that "is against everything that the Christian religion stands for." James Burton Coffman similarly argues that the curse was a "prophecy of what would happen" not that it should happen. He believes that the curse is an allusion to Canaan's history of being dominated by numerous foreign powers. These powers include Assyrians, Chaldeans, Greeks and Romans.
For Southern slave owners who were faced with the abolitionist movement to end slavery, the curse of Ham was one of the many grounds upon which Christian planters could formulate an ideological defense of slavery. Even before slavery, in order to promote economic motivations within Europe associated with colonialism, the curse of Ham was used to shift the common Aristotelian belief that phenotypic differentiation among humans was a result of climatic difference, to a racialist perspective that phenotypic differentiation among the species was due to there being different racial types. This often came as a result of European anxieties to avoid being sent to the colonies, as they were terrified of the high casualty rate of settlers due to disease and warfare. Thus, many of them formulated the idea that being sent south of the equator "blackened" them and thus made them inferior.
In the 15th century, Dominican friar Annius of Viterbo invoked the Curse of Ham to explain the differences between Europeans and Africans in his writings. Annius, who frequently wrote of the "superiority of Christians over the Saracens", claimed that due to the curse imposed upon black people, they would inevitably remain permanently subjugated by Arabs and other Muslims. He wrote that the fact that so many Africans had been enslaved by the heretical Muslims was supposed proof of their inferiority. Through these and other writings, European writers established a hitherto unheard of connection between Ham, Africa and slavery, which laid the ideological groundwork for justifying the transatlantic slave trade.
According to the Catholic mystic Anne Catherine Emmerich: "I see that the Black, idolatrous, stupid nations are the descendants of Ham. Their color is due, not to the rays of the sun, but to the dark source whence those degraded races sprang."
The historian David Whitford writes of a "curse matrix" which was derived from the vagueness of Genesis 9 and interpreted by racialists to mean that it mattered not who was cursed or which specific group of people the curse originated with, all that mattering being that there was a vague reference to a generational curse that could be exploited by those seeking to justify their actions against black people, such as Southern slaveowners.
Pro-slavery intellectuals were hard-pressed to find a justification for slavery and racism within Christian theology which taught the belief that all humans were descendants of Adam and they were therefore one race, possessed with equal salvation potential and deserving to be treated as kin. The curse of Ham was used to drive a wedge in the mythology of a single human race, as elite intellectuals were able to convince people that the three sons of Noah represented the three sects of Man and their respective hierarchy of different fates. Leading intellectuals in the South, like Benjamin Morgan Palmer, claimed that white Europeans were descended from Japhet, who was prophesied to cultivate civilization and the powers of the intellect by Noah, but Africans, being the descendants of the cursed Ham, were destined to be possessed by a slavish nature which would be ruled by base appetites.
That said, some were dismissive of the "Asiatic Japhethites" since they engaged in industries "fitted to the lower capacities of our nature". Others re-interpreted the African descendants of Ham as sympathetic victims, suffering at the hands of Romans, Saracens, Turks and finally, Christian nations who "engaged in the iniquity of the slave trade". Philip Schaff believes this constituted historic prophecy, which is fulfilled gradually.
Early Judaism, Christianity and Islam
While Genesis 9 never says that Ham was black, he became associated with black skin, through folk etymology deriving his name from a similar, but actually unconnected, word meaning "dark" or "brown". The next stage are certain fables according to ancient Jewish traditions. According to one legend preserved in the Babylonian Talmud, Ham broke a prohibition on sex aboard the ark and "was smitten in his skin" as punishment; However, in the Talmud this skin punishment is not described as hereditary or linked to slavery, and in other ancient Jewish sources black skin is seen as beautiful rather than disfiguring. According to another legend, Noah cursed Ham because he castrated his father.
A link between blackness and slavery becomes more heavily implied in the discussions of early Christian writers like Origen. The suggestion that Canaan was the ancestor of dark-skinned people enters the Biblical tradition with the fourth century Syriac Christian Cave of Treasures.
The concepts were introduced into Islam during the Arab expansion of the 7th century, due to the cross-pollination of Jewish and Christian parables and theology into Islam, called "Isra'iliyyat". It is with the Islamic writers of this time that the dual curse of blackness and slavery first appears, and from this point on it becomes common in both Christian and Muslim sources. Some medieval Muslim writers – including Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari, Ibn Khaldun, and even the later Book of the Zanj – asserted the view that old biblical texts describe the effects of Noah's curse on Ham's descendants as being related with blackness, slavery, and a requirement not to let the hair grow past the ears. The account of the drunkenness of Noah and curse of Ham is not present within the text of the Quran, the Islamic holy book, as it is not consistent with Islamic teachings, since Noah is a prophet, and prophets do not drink alcohol. Islam holds prophets of God in very high esteem, and some Muslims suggest the prophets are infallible.
Historically, other Muslim scholars such as Ahmad Baba al-Timbukti criticized the Curse of Ham narrative and they went on to criticize the association of black Africans with slaves. Others, such as Ibn Kathir, more broadly criticised the Isra'iliyyat tradition, and avoided using such reports when explaining verses of the Quran.
In Islamic tradition, in the Farewell Sermon Muhammad said: "O people, your Lord is one and your father is one. There is no superiority of an Arab over a non-Arab, nor a non-Arab over an Arab; no superiority of a white person over a black person, nor superiority of a black person over a white person – except through mindfulness of God."
Medieval serfdom and "Pseudo-Berossus"
In medieval Christian exegesis, Ham's sin was regarded as laughter (for mocking his father and doing nothing to rectify his condition).
Elsewhere in Medieval Europe, the curse of Ham also became used as a justification for serfdom. Honorius Augustodunensis (c. 1100) was the first recorded to propose a caste system associating Ham with serfdom, writing that serfs were descended from Ham, nobles from Japheth, and free men from Shem. However, he also followed the interpretation of 1 Corinthians 7:21 by Ambrosiaster (late 4th century), which held that as servants in the temporal world, these "Hamites" were likely to receive a far greater reward in the next world than would the Japhetic nobility.
The idea that serfs were the descendants of Ham soon became widely promoted in Europe. An example is Dame Juliana Berners (c. 1388), who, in a treatise on hawks, claimed that the "churlish" descendants of Ham had settled in Europe, those of the temperate Shem in Africa, and those of the noble Japheth in Asia (a departure from normal arrangements, which placed Shem in Asia, Japheth in Europe, and Ham in Africa), because she considered Europe to be the "country of churls", Asia of gentility, and Africa of temperance. As serfdom waned in the late medieval era, the interpretation of serfs being descendants of Ham decreased as well.
Ham also figured in an immensely influential work Commentaria super opera diversorum auctorum de antiquitatibus (Commentaries on the Works of Various Authors Discussing Antiquity). In 1498, Annius of Viterbo claimed to have translated records of Berossus, an ancient Babylonian priest and scholar; which are today usually considered an elaborate forgery. However, they gained great influence over Renaissance ways of thinking about population and migration, filling a historical gap following the biblical account of the flood. According to this account, Ham studied the evil arts that had been practiced before the flood, and thus became known as "Cam Esenus" (Ham the Licentious), as well as the original Zoroaster and Saturn (Cronus).
He became jealous of Noah's additional children born after the deluge, and began to view his father with enmity, and one day, when Noah lay drunk and naked in his tent, Ham saw him and sang a mocking incantation that rendered Noah temporarily sterile, as if castrated. This account contains several other parallels connecting Ham with Greek myths of the castration of Uranus by Cronus, as well as Italian legends of Saturn and/or Camesis ruling over the Golden Age and fighting the Titanomachy. Ham in this version also abandoned his wife who had been aboard the ark and had mothered the African peoples, and instead married his sister Rhea, daughter of Noah, producing a race of giants in Sicily.
American/European slavery, 17th and 18th centuries
The explanation that black Africans, as the "sons of Ham", were cursed, possibly "blackened" by their sins, was sporadically advanced during the Middle Ages, but its acceptance became increasingly common during the slave trade of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The justification of slavery itself through the sins of Ham was well suited to the ideological interests of the elite; with the emergence of the slave trade, its racialized version justified the exploitation of African labour.
In the parts of Africa where Christianity flourished in its early days, while it was still illegal in Rome, this idea never took hold, and its interpretation of scripture was never adopted by the African Coptic Churches. A modern Amharic commentary on Genesis cites the nineteenth century theory and the earlier European theory which state that blacks were subjected to whites as a result of the curse of Ham, but it calls this belief a false teaching which is unsupported by the text of the Bible, it emphatically points out that Noah's curse did not fall upon all of the descendants of Ham, instead, it only fell upon the descendants of Canaan, and it asserts that the curse was fulfilled when Canaan was occupied by Semites (Israel) and Japhetites. The commentary further notes that Canaanites ceased to exist as a political force after the Third Punic War (149 BC), and as a result, their current descendants are unknown and they are also scattered among all peoples.
The Anglo-Irish scientist Robert Boyle – a seventeenth-century polymath who was also a theologian and a devout Christian – refuted the idea that blackness was caused by the curse of Ham, in his book Experiments and Considerations Touching Colours (1664). There, Boyle explains that the curse of Ham as an explanation for the complexion of coloured people was but a misinterpretation that was embraced by "vulgar writers", travelers, critics, and also "men of note" of his time. In his work, he challenges that vision, explaining:
And not only we do not find expressed in the Scripture, that the Curse meant by Noah to Cham, was the Blackness of his Posterity, but we do find plainly enough there that the Curse was quite another thing, namely that he should be a Servant of Servants, that is by an Ebraism, a very Abject Servant to his Brethren, which accordingly did in part come to pass, when the Israelites of the posterity of Sem, subdued the Canaanites, that descended from Cham, and kept them in great Subjection. Nor is it evident that Blackness is a Curse, for Navigators tell us of Black Nations, who think so much otherwise of their own condition, that they paint the Devil White. Nor is Blackness inconsistent with Beauty, which even to our European Eyes consists not so much in Colour, as an Advantageous Stature, a Comely Symmetry of the parts of the Body, and Good Features in the Face. So that I see not why Blackness should be thought such a Curse to the Negroes...
A number of other scholars also support the claim that the racialized version of the curse of Ham was devised at that time because it suited the ideological and economic interests of the European elite and the slave traders who wanted to justify their exploitation of African laborers. While Robinson (2007) claims that such a version was non-existent before, historian David Brion Davis also argues that contrary to the claims of many reputable historians, neither the Talmud nor any early post-biblical Jewish writing relates blackness of the skin to a curse whatsoever.
Abyssinia
In what is now Ethiopia, the Abyssinian Church justified slavery with its version of the Curse of Ham.
Latter Day Saint movement
Main article: Curses of Cain and Ham and the LDS Church See also: Black people and Mormonism, Black people and temple and priesthood policies in the LDS Church, Civil rights and Mormonism, Mormonism and slavery, and Mormon teachings on skin color
In 1835, Joseph Smith, the founder of the Latter Day Saint movement, published a work which was titled the Book of Abraham. It explicitly states that an Egyptian king who is referred to by the name of Pharaoh was a descendant of Ham and the Canaanites, who were black, that Noah had cursed his lineage so they did not have the right to the priesthood, and that all Egyptians descended from him.
It was later considered scripture by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). This passage is the only one which is found in any Mormon scripture that bars a particular lineage of people from holding the priesthood, and, while nothing in the Book of Abraham explicitly states that Noah's curse was the same curse which is mentioned in the Bible or that the Egyptians were related to other black Africans, it later became the foundation of church policy with regard to the priesthood ban. The 2002 edition of the Doctrine and Covenants Student Manual points to Abraham 1:21–27 as the reason why black men were not given the priesthood until 1978.
In 1836, Smith taught that the curse of Ham came from God, and it stated that blacks were cursed with servitude. He warned those who tried to interfere with slavery that God could do his own work. In 1835 Smith said God had told him, "it is not right that any man should be in bondage one to another". Smith started expressing more anti-slavery positions starting in 1842. In 1844, when Smith ran for president of the United States in the wake of widespread opposition to Mormon settlement in Illinois, he advocated for the abolition of slavery by the year 1850.
After Smith's 1844 death, Brigham Young became his most popular successor during the succession crisis. Young maintained that Black Africans were under the curse of Ham and he also maintained that those who tried to abolish slavery were going against the decrees of God, although the day would come when the curse would be nullified through the saving powers of Jesus Christ. In addition, based on his interpretation of the Book of Abraham, Young believed that, as a result of this curse, negroes were banned from the Mormon priesthood.
In 1978, LDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball said that he received a revelation that extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church without regard to race or color. In 2013, the LDS Church denounced the curse of Ham explanation for the withholding of the priesthood from black Africans.
See also
- Afrikaner Calvinism
- Afrophobia
- Christian views on slavery
- Generations of Noah
- Hamitic
- Historical race concepts
- History of Christian thought on persecution and tolerance
- Islamic views on slavery
- Jewish views on slavery
- Negrophobia
- Racism in Jewish communities
- Racism in Muslim communities
- Slavery and religion
References
Citations
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- Genesis 9:22
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- ^ Sarna 1981, p. 77.
- Sadler 2005, pp. 26–27.
- ^ Sarna 1981, p. 77.
- See Psalms 78:51; 105:23, 27; 106:22.
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- See Gen 35:22
- Sarna 1981, pp. 77, 78.
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A great part of the chapter is devoted to refuting the argument, which apparently is commonly used in the Abyssinian Church, that slavery came upon a large section of the population of the world through the curse of Noah upon his grandson, because of an insult offered to Noah by his son. Controversy seems to rage upon this theory, which the Foreign Minister (Heruy Wolde Selassie) tries to combat by arguing that this cannot be the reason for slavery, because God would not have punished the grandson but the son.
- Abraham 1
- Moses 7:8
- Abraham 1:26
- Abraham 1:22
- Mauss 2003, p. 238.
- Reeve 2015, p. 205.
- "Official Declaration 2, 'Every Faithful, Worthy Man'". Doctrine & Covenants Student Manual. LDS Church. 2002. pp. 634–635.
- Bringhurst 1981, p. 22.
- Smith, Joseph (April 1836). "Letter to Oliver Cowdery from Joseph Smith, Jr." . Messenger and Advocate. Vol. 2, no. 7. LDS Church. p. 290 – via Wikisource.
Those who are determined to pursue a course which shows an opposition and a feverish restlessness against the designs of the Lord, will learn, when perhaps it is too late for their own good, that God can do His own work without the aid of those who are not dictate by His counsel.
- Lythgoe, Dennis L. (Fall 1967). "Negro Slavery and Mormon Doctrine". Western Humanities Review. 21 (4): 327 – via ProQuest.
- Doctrine & Covenants 101:79
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Bibliography
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External links
- Media related to Drunken Noah at Wikimedia Commons
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Primeval history (1–11) |
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Patriarchal age (12–50) |
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- Primeval history
- Criticism of Judaism
- Curses
- Ham (son of Noah)
- Historical definitions of race
- History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
- Mormonism and race
- Mormonism-related controversies
- The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Africa
- Judaism and slavery
- Noach (parashah)
- Book of Jubilees
- Religion and race
- Segregationist theology
- Christianity and race
- Christianity and slavery