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  1. Dec 15, 2022 · “Without a doubt,” writes historian Albert Raboteau, “the Exodus story was the most significant myth for American black identity, whether slave or free.” 7 Close Throughout their history, blacks have equated Pharaoh and Egypt with white slaveholders, racists, and general oppression, and identified themselves first with the Hebrew slaves, then as those freed by their “Moses” from ...

  2. Jan 12, 2022 · And, despite many protestations to the contrary, it can be paid by giving valuables that ensure the success of freed slaves and their descendants. In Exodus 3:22 it’s clear that these reparations are for the descendants of slaves, too. The Egyptians’ silver, gold, and clothing will be placed on Israelite children.

  3. Mar 7, 2019 · This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Exodus: Blacks fled the South in droves more than a century ago, seeking true freedom. In the decade after the Civil War, former slaves in the South ...

  4. Jefferson, Franklin, and Adams used the exodus to frame the rebellion as an act of obedience to God, thus reassuring others of its pure motives and ultimate success. Yet while rebellious Americans were using the exodus against the British, others were using it against another tyrant—American slave owners.

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  5. Because of its clear resonances with the plight of African slaves imported to the New World, the exodus story had long been a “central metaphor of African-American religious expression.” 28 Close In its classic formulation, emancipation from slavery was imagined as “reenactments of Israel’s exodus from Egypt”: enslaved Blacks were “remade in the image of the Hebrew slaves crying ...

  6. Apr 3, 2018 · And so, the Book of Exodus tells of slaves who not only offer no resistance, but cannot even defend themselves from the cruelty of an Egyptian master, incapable as they were of imagining such an act “for impatience of spirit, and cruel bondage” (Exodus 6:9). Moses, in contrast, was not a slave and so he acts with great determination.

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  8. Urim Publications, 2009. ISBN: 978-965-524-020-7. In Exodus and Emancipation: Biblical and African-American Slavery, Rabbi Dr. Kenneth Chelst presents a new perspective on the saga of the Jewish people's enslavement and departure from Egypt by comparing it with the African-American slave experience in the United States, their emancipation and ...

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