Gay Rights – Informed Comment https://www.juancole.com Thoughts on the Middle East, History and Religion Fri, 24 Sep 2021 01:07:58 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.8.9 Did a Cosmic Airburst inspire the Myth of Sodom and inadvertently Spark millennia of Homophobia? https://www.juancole.com/2021/09/inadvertently-millennia-homophobia.html Thu, 23 Sep 2021 04:54:19 +0000 https://www.juancole.com/?p=200224 Ann Arbor (Informed Comment) – In a new paper in Nature archeologists Ted E. Bunch and Malcolm A. LeCompte et al. present their findings that a cosmic airburst destroyed an ancient city in 1650 BC (about 3600 years ago) at the site of today’s Tell el-Hammam in western Jordan near the mouth of the Jordan river.

A cosmic airburst is caused by a meteor exploding in the air before it strikes the earth. The most famous such event occurred in 1908 over Tunguska in eastern Siberia, burning trees in a five-mile radius and knocking down those beyond it.

The archeologists found that the sediment and the artifacts within it had been burned at temperatures as high as 4,500 degrees F., destroying buildings including a palace, and discovered human skeletons that appear to have been blasted apart.

The airburst occurred in the saline Dead Sea region, where the water is so salty you can’t sink. I’ve been swimming in the Dead Sea, and people cover themselves with mud so that they don’t get horribly sunburned from floating at the surface. The explosion would have evaporated some of the sea and the detonation drew salt from it and from the surrounding salt desert up to itself, then scattered the salt widely. They write, “anomalously high salt content in the debris matrix is consistent with an aerial detonation above high-salinity sediments near the Jordan River or above the hypersaline Dead Sea. This event, in turn, distributed salt across the region, severely limiting regional agricultural development for up to ~ 600 years.”

Thus, not only did the airburst obliterate the town at the site of Tell el-Hammam, it wiped out Jericho and other Canaanite cities in the area, and sowed salt into their soil so thoroughly that they were not inhabited for the subsequent three to seven hundred years. Population in this region fell from some 60,000 to a few hundred hunters and gatherers and stayed that way for centuries. As a lay person I wonder if this long term depopulation accounts for the tiny population in Jerusalem from the 1600s through about 1000 BC, when there were as few as 500 people living there. If David existed and was in Jerusalem (who knows?), he clearly was a village headman in a minor place with some roughhewn stone fortifications rather than a magnificent emperor with a shining palace.

The authors of the paper go on tentatively to suggest that the airburst could have become a folk memory, passed down in tales from generation to generation for a millennium as so was incorporated by the scribes in Achaemenid Babylon into the Genesis story of Sodom and Gomorrah.

Personally, I don’t approve of this sort of “biblical archeology.” Apocalyptic poets and sages were perfectly capable of imagining the wrath of the gods falling on a human city with cosmic ferocity without needing the actual example of a astronomical event like a meteor fall to inspire them. Many biblical materials go back to ancient Levantine religion of a thousand or two thousand years before the Tell el-Hammam airburst, visible in the Ugaritic tablets of ancient greater Syria.

Still, you can’t rule out that such a huge event could have left a long-term mark on the local Canaanite culture from which the Israelis emerged.

Genesis 19:1-5 says,

    The two angels came to Sodom in the evening, and Lot was sitting in the gateway of Sodom. When Lot saw them, he rose to meet them, and bowed down with his face to the ground. 2 He said, “Please, my lords, turn aside to your servant’s house and spend the night, and wash your feet; then you can rise early and go on your way.” They said, “No; we will spend the night in the square.” 3 But he urged them strongly; so they turned aside to him and entered his house; and he made them a feast, and baked unleavened bread, and they ate. 4 But before they lay down, the men of the city, the men of Sodom, both young and old, all the people to the last man, surrounded the house; 5 and they called to Lot, “Where are the men who came to you tonight? Bring them out to us, so that we may know them.”

Lot offered them his daughters to rape instead of allowing the mob to rape his divine male visitors, but they would not be mollified. The angels advised Lot and his family to flee the coming consequent wrath of the Lord. Gen 19:24-26 says,

    24 Then the Lord rained on Sodom and Gomorrah sulfur and fire from the Lord out of heaven; 25 and he overthrew those cities, and all the Plain, and all the inhabitants of the cities, and what grew on the ground. 26 But Lot’s wife, behind him, looked back, and she became a pillar of salt.

These passages became the basis for Jewish and Christian condemnations of gay people as wicked much later, in the medieval period, though the sin of the people of Sodom was not homosocial pleasure but rather the threat of male on male gang rape. That is, it was about sex as illicit power, applied to a guest. In societies marked by practices of reciprocity, disrespecting a guest is the worst thing you can do. Such societies are typically characterized by scarcity, so people are amazing generous when they have enough to share, in hopes that when thing turn down for them, others will reciprocate with their own generosity.

The Qur’an retells Gen 19 in a set of midrashes or interpretive reimaginings. One of these, The Spider 29:26-35, goes this way:

    26Lot believed in Him, saying, “I am setting out to my Lord. He is the All-Glorious, the All-Wise.”

    27We bestowed upon him Isaac and Jacob and established in his lineage a tradition of prophesying and delivering scripture. We gave him his compensation in this world, and he is among the righteous in the next.

    28Lot said to his people, “You commit sexual improprieties to a degree that is unprecedented among all the peoples of the world. 29You approach men, and block the way, and commit immorality in your gatherings.”

The story ends as in Genesis:

    33When Our emissaries came to Lot, he was distressed for them, since he could not protect them.

    They said, “Have no fear, and do not be sad. We will deliver you and your family, except for your wife, who lags behind. 34We are raining down desolation on this city from the sky in retribution for their debauchery.”

    35We left behind a clear sign from it for a people endued with reason.

Muslim clerics again misinterpreted this passage as a condemnation of homosexuality, when it is clearly slamming instead the predations of the people of Sodom, who sexually preyed upon and raped male strangers who came to their town.

If Bunch and Malcolm et al. are right, then a cosmic event, the airburst of a meteor, became an occasion for millennia of puritan preaching depicting the catastrophe as the result of human moral failings. In turn, they specified the supreme moral failing as sexual predation on guests.

And then subsequent millennia of clerics and religious authorities misinterpreted the scriptural story as a condemnation of homosexuality. So in this telling, a superstitious approach to a scientific even produced a superstitious approach to morality that eventuated in homophobia.

Me, I think the reality is likely a good deal more complicated and less positivistic, and that no meteors were needed for the bigoted to impose heteronormativity on society.

For more of my modern readings of the Qur’an, the scripture of Islam, see my recent book,

Purchase

]]>
Trump’s attack on UCLA Athletes’ right to Dissent an Attack on America https://www.juancole.com/2017/11/athletes-dissent-america.html https://www.juancole.com/2017/11/athletes-dissent-america.html#comments Mon, 20 Nov 2017 07:27:10 +0000 https://www.juancole.com/?p=171927 By Juan Cole | (Informed Comment) | – –

So Trump intervened with Chinese authorities to release three UCLA basketball players guilty of shoplifting from a mall in Hangzhou while playing in China. They thanked him, he told them to change their ways.

Then Levar Ball, the father of LiAngelo Ball–one of the three freed players–played down Trump’s involvement in an interview with ESPN. So of course Trump had to tweet:

What Trump is really saying is that we are his subjects and he is our king and we do not have a right to dissent.

One of the purposes of the US government is precisely to help American citizens who get into trouble overseas, whether their trouble resulted from their stupidity or cupidity or not. Especially in the cases where a foreign country has unreasonable statutes that would be unconstitutional in the United States. In the US a first-time offender committing shoplifting would likely be sentenced to community service, or at most 6 months in jail and a $1000 fine (though laws differ from state to state). If China sentences people to 10 years for this same offense, it is especially important that the US government try to get the US citizen back.

The US government does not intervene to get US citizens out of foreign jails because it thinks that ever after the should give up their first amendment rights. That would be noblesse oblige, the notion that high station lays obligations on the aristocracy to be generous to the poor.

Trump has shown his hand. He thinks he is doing noblesse oblige toward us all. And we should all be grateful. And Trump thereby has struck down our first amendment rights to free speech. If we aren’t free citizens but only subjects, then the government can do to us whatever it wants and we can’t complain.

Of all the many dangers posed by Trump to the United States, his instinct to suppress dissent is the worst.

You don’t save Americans abroad from unfair sentencing in order to shut them up forevermore. You save Americans so that they can going on being Americans. And that involves dissent.

So here’s what a much better president said on this issue:

“The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions, that I wish it to be always kept alive. It will often be exercised when wrong, but better so than not to be exercised at all. I like a little rebellion now and then.” — Thomas Jefferson letter to Abigail Adams, February 22, 1787.

Or the very first president said this:

“If men are to be precluded from offering their sentiments on a matter, which may involve the most serious and alarming consequences that can invite the consideration of mankind, reason is of no use to us; the freedom of speech may be taken away, and dumb and silent we may be led, like sheep, to the slaughter.”

— George Washington, first U.S. president

And dumb and silent we are, and led to the slaughter any moment.

——

Related video:

CNN: “Trump: I should have left UCLA players in Chinese jail”

]]>
https://www.juancole.com/2017/11/athletes-dissent-america.html/feed 2
Will Indiana ‘Religious Freedom’ Law permit anti-Gay Discrimination? https://www.juancole.com/2015/03/religious-freedom-discrimination.html https://www.juancole.com/2015/03/religious-freedom-discrimination.html#comments Sat, 28 Mar 2015 05:52:20 +0000 http://www.juancole.com/?p=151313 Jackie Koppell and Jo Ankier | (TheLipTV)

“Indiana Governor Mike Pence signed a religious freedom bill into law amid pressure from opponents who argue that the measure is a secret way for states to condone discrimination against the LGBT community. We look at the story on the Lip News with Jackie Koppell and Jo Ankier. ”

The LipTV: “Indiana ‘Religious Freedom’ Law: A Closer Look”

]]>
https://www.juancole.com/2015/03/religious-freedom-discrimination.html/feed 1