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- Did God Curse Black People Through Ham?
This post examines how this passage was used to support slavery and why both the interpretation and its implementation were wrong
- The Curse of Ham and Biblical Justifications for Slavery
Genesis 9:18–29, sometimes referred to as the curse of Ham, is one of the most cryptic stories in the Old Testament Subject to a multitude of interpretations, this passage has been widely deployed as the biblical basis for race-based chattel slavery
- Ham (Genesis) - Wikipedia
What is commonly known as "The Curse of Ham" was not bestowed upon Ham himself; rather, Noah indirectly cursed him through his son Canaan The Talmud presents two possible explanations, one attributed to Rabbi Abba Arikha and one to Rabbi Samuel, for what Ham did to Noah to warrant the curse
- Are black people under a curse? - Bible Hub
Certain interpreters throughout history promoted the flawed idea that black people might be under the “Curse of Ham,” often to rationalize slavery, segregation, or racist practices
- The ‘Curse of Ham’: how people of faith used a story in Genesis to . . .
For almost 500 years, priests taught their flocks that a Hebrew prophet had condemned millions of Africans to slavery because they were descended from Ham’s son Canaan
- Did God Curse Africans Into Slavery? - iDisciple
The curse was that “he be the lowest of servants to his relatives” (Genesis 9:25) And since the descendants of Ham were thought to be Africans, it was logical to conclude that God had condemned all generations of Africans into slavery
- Race-making and the myth of Ham - throughlines. org
The story goes: Ham sees Noah sleeping naked and tells his brothers, Shem and Japheth His brothers then cover up Noah’s nakedness with a cloth When Noah wakes, he blesses Shem and Japheth for covering him, but curses Ham’s son Canaan, and thus his whole lineage, to be servants of his brothers
- State of New York State History - The Curse of Canaan: Slavery in Early . . .
Schipper reports that Tanner ends his pamphlet with the admonition that despite pro-slavery interpreters seeing what they want to see in the biblical text, Ham is not cursed, his descendants from Africa are free, and they still enjoy the blessing that God bestowed on all of Noah’s children
- The Alleged Curse on Ham - American Bible Society
Genesis 9:18–29 has been popularly understood to mean that Ham was cursed, and this understanding has often been used to justify oppression of African people, the descendants of Ham
- The “Curse of Ham” - Chicago Bible Students
By creating an immoral Ham, they feel they now have a perverted Ham worthy of a curse or punishment, which enabled them to create the non-scriptural phrase “curse of Ham ”
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