[This is a very short note on a very big topic. I don’t know enough to write more, but with all the religious justifications of slavery and colonialism flying around, I think it is worth a note.]
The original teachings of great old-world religions reject slavery and colonialism. Exodus in the Tanakh, of course. But also many of the non-Jewish followers of Jesus were slaves, and Jesus preached to a colonized people (“Render unto Caesar…”) Mohammed criticized slavery and laid down rules of conduct for the relations of slaves and masters. Gautama Buddha specifically forbade the ownership of slaves, and the very word nirvana means “liberation.”
How then did all of these religions come to embrace slavery and colonialism? One answer is that, slavery being such a huge feature of the cultures of the times, all these teachings address master-slave relations; they could hardly do otherwise. Over time, this was converted into an acceptance and even validation of slavery. Christianity and Islam both limited the prohibitions against slavery to their co-religionists, so that Christians enslaved Muslims, Muslims enslaved Christians, and it was open season on pagans. In Rome, Christianity became the state religion, entirely vitiating the anti-colonial stance of Jesus teachings.
I don’t know enough to write more. But, if these teachings are in any sense divinely inspired, then the divine rejects slavery and colonialism.
4 comments:
don't they mean the same?
Perhaps so, but all the great prophets have preached against slavery.
I see so many pro-slavery comments. Everybody did it. It's in the past, not in the present, so don't judge, etc. Those that refuse to teach history that includes Blacks and slavery, are geared up to reinstate it should they win power. With 10s of millions of Americans cheering for a dictatorship, it is very frightening.
Slavery is a historic norm, and any movement away from it is to be supported. Nor is it in the past; there are nearly 50 million people enslaved at this time. The fight continues…
https://www.ilo.org/global/topics/forced-labour/lang--en/index.htm
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