Negroes and Negro 'Slavery:' the First an Inferior Race; the Latter Its Normal Condition.

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(1814-1896), John H. Van Evrie “Negroes and Negro 'Slavery:' the First an Inferior Race; the Latter Its Normal Condition.”, RelRace, item créé par Clément Mei, dernier accès le 27 Apr. 2024.
Contributeur Clément Mei
Sujet La création divine de la « race noire »
Mots-clés
Description Dans cet extrait du chapitre 3 “The Human Creation”, l’auteur affirme, dans cet extrait d’un ouvrage de propagande suprémaciste, que la création divine des différentes « races » humaines répond d’un dessein insondable de la part du dieu chrétien.
Auteur John H. Van Evrie (1814-1896)
Date 1861
Éditeur Van Evrie, Horton & co., New York
Langue en

Géolocalisation

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[…] It is clearly and absolutely beyond the reach of human intelligence, and therefore not within the province of legitimate enquiry. The Almighty has, in His infinite wisdom and boundless beneficence, hidden from us many things, a knowledge of which would doubtless injure us, and the origin of the human races belongs to this catalogue. Men may labor to investigate it, to tear aside the veil the Creator has drawn about it, to unlock the mystery in which He has shrouded it, and after millions of years thus appropriated, come back to the startingpoint, the simple, palpable, unavoidable truth. They exist, but why or wherefore, whither they came or whence they go, is beyond the range of human intelligence. We only know, and are only permitted to know, that the several species now known to exist have been exactly as at present in their physical natures and intellectual capacities, through all human experience and without a supernatural interposition or recreation, must continue thus through countless ages, and as long as the existing order of creation itself continues. This we know beyond doubt or possible mistake, while, whether it was thus at the beginning, or changed by a supernatural interposition at some subsequent period, is now, and always must be, left to conjecture. Those who interpret the Book of Genesis, or who believe that the Book of Genesis teaches the origin of the human family from a single pair, will, of course believe that the Creator subsequently changed them into their present form, while those who do not thus interpret the Bible will believe, with equal confidence perhaps, that they were created thus at the beginning. It is not, nor could it be of the slightest benefit to us to really and truly know the truth of this matter. […]