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B Franklin Wrote 4 The National Gazette, Quoting the Koran & Calling 4 Enslavement of Christians
Infidel Bloggers Alliance ^ | February 6, 2015 | Pastorius

Posted on 02/06/2015 1:09:02 PM PST by wtd



TOPICS: History; Reference; Religion; Society
KEYWORDS: abolition; abolitionist; abolitionists; benjaminfranklin; koran; slavery; thebillofrights; theconstitution; theframers; therevolution
Another quote from the author Theodore Parker (often mis-attributed to Martin Luther King) is woven among the five quotes on the carpet made specially for the Oval Office...


1 posted on 02/06/2015 1:09:02 PM PST by wtd
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To: wtd

It does not look to me like Benjamin Franklin quoted from the koran and called for Christians to be enslaved.

It looks to me like he quoted from a speech given by someone else, who quoted from the koran and called for the enslavement of Christians - and that he did so as part of his effort to point out the evils of slavery.


2 posted on 02/06/2015 1:18:01 PM PST by WayneS (Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos.)
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To: WayneS

Or, it was a work of satire, written as part of his effort to point out the evils of slavery.


3 posted on 02/06/2015 1:19:31 PM PST by WayneS (Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos.)
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To: WayneS

I think Franklin had been reading Jonathan Swift’s “A Modest Proposal”.


4 posted on 02/06/2015 1:25:12 PM PST by Publius ("Who is John Galt?" by Billthedrill and Publius now available at Amazon.)
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To: WayneS

Exactly. The suggestion that Franklin quoted the ‘koran’ is an interpretation from the author “Theodore Parker”. All links are provided to the sources.


5 posted on 02/06/2015 1:26:33 PM PST by wtd
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To: WayneS

the latter


6 posted on 02/06/2015 1:27:24 PM PST by babble-on
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To: wtd

I think you need to give a better summary of this, because most readers will freak out. What Franklin was doing was saying that, supposing that apologies for slavery were applied to Christians, how would people feel about it?

That said, it’s a bizarre thing, because the Latin countries, with the exception of Portugal, were not involved in the slave trade except tangentially. For example, in the case of the Amistad, the Spanish captain did not transport slaves, and certainly didn’t sell them, but had taken this “cargo” on because something had happened to the original ship...and the only reason the Amistad had a rebellion is that he felt bad for the future slaves, did not manacle them, let them have recreation and sleep on deck, and forbid the crew to watch them. I think he was perfectly right in doing this, but it was a little naïve, and that’s why the ship was overrun and the captain was killed.

You can’t blame the slaves for doing this, but in terms of the slave trade, chattel slavery at that point was entirely an American institution. The British had practiced it but abandoned it in the 18th century, the Spanish and Italians had never practiced it.

Chattel slavery means the slave is a possession (chattel) with no rights, but slaves in Spain had usually been bought from the Arabs, where they were chattel, but then were given basic legal and religious rights and were supposed to be able to earn money, save, marry, receive religious instruction, and be able to buy their freedom or be freed by their owner.

In the US, it was forbidden in certain counties in SC and GA to even preach to the Africans, let alone baptize them, because that meant they were human beings and much of the South subsisted on the “two creations” theory. This was based on the two Creation accounts in Genesis, interpreted to mean that whites had been created first and everybody else had been created to serve them.

But of course since the Dems and Obama have a vested interest in our knowing nothing about the reality of slavery and attitudes here, most Americans are completely ignorant of this.

Obama blaming slavery on Christianity!!! Gimme a break! For one thing, even the most liberal “Christians,” the Quakers, who were big in the slave trade, bought their product from the Muslim slave hunters in Africa.


7 posted on 02/06/2015 1:28:20 PM PST by livius
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To: WayneS

It looks like a title designed to attract attention to me


8 posted on 02/06/2015 1:29:31 PM PST by GeronL
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To: livius
The summary is there in one simple sentence:

"The first thing we need to understand is Ben Franklin was petitioning Congress for the abolition of slavery in the USA:"

As well as in the last two paragraphs of Theodore Parkers quotes:

"This petition was the last public act of Franklin, the last public document he ever signed. He had put his hand to the Declaration of Independence; to the treaties of alliance with France and Prussia; to the treaty of peace with Great Britain, now he signs the first petition for the abolition of slavery. Between 1783 and 1790 what important events had taken place! For three years he had been President of Pennsylvania, unanimously elected by the Assembly every time save the first, when one vote out of seventy-seven was cast against him. He had been a member of the Federal Convention, which made the Constitution, and, spite of what he considered to be its errors, put his name to it. Neither he, nor Washington, nor indeed any of the great men who helped to make that instrument, thought it perfect, or worshiped it as an idol. But now, as his last act, he seeks to correct the great fault, and blot, and vice of of the American government – the only one which, in seventy-six years, has given us much trouble. The petition was presented on the 12th of February, 1790. It asked for the abolition of the

Page 35

slave trade, and for the emancipation of slaves. A storm followed; the South was in a rage, which lasted till near the end of March. Mr. Jackson, of Georgia, defended the “peculiar institution.” The ancient republics had slaves; the whole current of the Bible, from Genesis to Revelation, proved that religion was not hostile to slavery. On the 23rd of March, 1790, Franklin wrote for the National Gazette the speech in favor of the enslavement of Christians. He put it into the mouth of a member of the Divan of Algiers. It was a parody of the actual words of Mr. Jackson, of Georgia, as delivered in Congress a few days before; the text, however, being taken out of the Koran. It was one of the most witty, brilliant, and ingenious things that came from his mind. This was the last public writing of Dr. Franklin ..."


9 posted on 02/06/2015 1:33:54 PM PST by wtd
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To: WayneS

No, that speech was never made. That was just a pretext for Franklin to submit his own writing as if it were some document he discovered.

He often did stuff like that, writing “letters to the editor” under pseudonyms and such.


10 posted on 02/06/2015 1:36:36 PM PST by Boogieman
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To: wtd

Interesting.


11 posted on 02/06/2015 1:40:04 PM PST by TBP (Obama lies, Granny dies.)
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To: WayneS
It does not look to me like Benjamin Franklin quoted from the koran and called for Christians to be enslaved.
It looks to me like he quoted from a speech given by someone else, who quoted from the koran and called for the enslavement of Christians - and that he did so as part of his effort to point out the evils of slavery.

Exactly. Misleading headline.

12 posted on 02/06/2015 1:46:10 PM PST by Albion Wilde (It is better to offend a human being than to offend God.)
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To: livius
... the Latin countries, with the exception of Portugal, were not involved in the slave trade except tangentially.

What he said was, "Are not Spain, Portugal, France and the Italian states, governed by despots, who hold all their subjects in slavery, without exception?" I think that was a subtle dig at Roman Catholicism, not at chattel slavery.

Franklin was a deist, and is buried in a Quaker churchyard in Philadelphia, where I have visited his remains several times.

13 posted on 02/06/2015 1:51:11 PM PST by Albion Wilde (It is better to offend a human being than to offend God.)
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To: WayneS
It looks to me like he quoted from a speech given by someone else, who quoted from the koran and called for the enslavement of Christians - and that he did so as part of his effort to point out the evils of slavery.

Yes, but if the author stated that outright, nobody would want to read his story. No story, no money.

It's always about the money.

14 posted on 02/06/2015 1:56:04 PM PST by UCANSEE2 (Lost my tagline on Flight MH370. Sorry for the inconvenience.)
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To: wtd
It's worth noting several of the points the original author was making against the freeing of the slaves in America:

"Few of them will return to their countries, they know too well the greater hardships they must there be subject to: ...they will not adopt our manners:..: must we maintain them as beggars in our streets; or suffer our properties to be the prey of their pillage; for men accostomed to slavery, will not work for a livelihood when not compelled."

And further:

"Sending the slaves home then, would be sending them out of light into darkness. I repeat the question, what is to be done with them? I have heard it suggested, that they may be planted in the wilderness, where there is plenty of land for them to subsist on, and where they may flourish as a free state; but they are, I doubt, too little disposed to labour without compulsion, as well as too ignorant to establish a good government... While serving us, we take care to provide them with every thing; and they are treated with humanity."
It's ironic that many of these things are indeed the present condition of the inner cities, two centuries later. And now we have a new class of economic indenture in the form of illegals, and a hot debate about "what is to be done with them?" There are differences, however; most illegals, having come here voluntarily, will indeed work hard. The mental condition of resentment in that percentage of descendents from those brought here as chattel centuries ago is proving more difficult to amend.
15 posted on 02/06/2015 2:06:10 PM PST by Albion Wilde (It is better to offend a human being than to offend God.)
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To: Albion Wilde
Indeed, irony abounds.

There are also those migrants/invaders who arrive with no intention of breaking a sweat to attain the American dream (irony of Obama's lexicon "dreamers").

As well as the migrants who deceptively arrive on legal visas with NO intention of leaving, chosing instead on colonizing with their mosques and Islamic centers - a slave of a different kind, who also and demand

"we maintain them as beggars in our streets; or suffer our properties to be the prey of their pillage; for men accostomed to slavery, will not work for a livelihood when not compelled."

-not to mention the grievance industry having bought the propaganda of CAIR's apostles in places like Ferguson, Sanford, St. Louis, Detroit etc.

16 posted on 02/06/2015 2:18:46 PM PST by wtd
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To: WayneS

oh gosh we wouldn’t want to confuse people with the facts now would we ;)


17 posted on 02/06/2015 2:48:55 PM PST by Nifster
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To: wtd

I know - what I meant is that most readers wouldn’t go that far (certainly on FR, where nobody ever reads beyond the first sentence), and the headline was definitely misleading.


18 posted on 02/06/2015 3:57:52 PM PST by livius
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