Monday, August 8, 2022

Black Athena Controversy

BLACK ATHENA CONTROVERSY

 

Black History draws attention to evidence that mainstream historians consider unimportant and omit from the historical mythos that assumes, without much thought, that people with white skins made the important events. What brought this home to me almost a quarter century was a column written for Black History month in a Seattle newspaper by a black journalist. He cited that American Revolution as an example. It might have happened eventually in any  case, but what sparked the Declaration of Independence when it did was the return of Benjamin Franklin from Britain with the report that Britain had abolished slavery.   The Mansfield Judgement handed down by the Court of King’s Bench  in 1772 that there was no legal basis for slavery must have aroused the big slaveholders in Verginia such as Lee, Jefferson and Washington.  Their property could be in danger. So must also must have been the news Franklin brought that France, stung by her massive defeat in the Seven Years War, was willing to finance a rebellion.  “French francs” made a more potent rallying cry that did “Liberty”. All that is omitted from mainstream history of the American Revolution.

Were the Blacks written out of Greek and Roman history in the same way? Bernal presents the evidence. But how plausible is it?

I made on other contribution to the Black History debate: a review of Jaques Berlinerblau’s Heresy in the University, for the Literary Review of Canada. I have forgotten the reference.

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Mary R. Lefkowitz and Guy Maclean Rogers. Black Athena Revisited.

Chapel Hill and London: The University of North Carolina Press. 1996. pp. xxi + tt

Mary R. Lefkowitz. Not Out of Africa. How Afrocentrism Became an Excuse

to Teach Myth as History. A New Republic Book. New York Basic Books. 1996. Pp.

xvii + . 

Echos du Monde Classique/Classical Views XllI. n.s. 17.1998, pp.677-696  (Edited by 

Robert Todd).

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I regret that my software program did not allow me to use French accents or German umlauts.

J. A. S. EVANS

 

The relationship between history and myth is a delicate one. We use

mythology in order to adjust the past into a pattern acceptable to the

present. and a certain amount of mythmaking is probably necessary to

keep modern nation states glued together. (I)  National histories. ethnic

histories and "victim group" histories regularly blur the boundary

between well-attested evidence and fiction. often because their creators

allow themselves to be blinkered by "models" which tend to shake

themselves loose from the evidence and become "doctrines." Yet, as

Lucian of Samosata reminded us, the historian's goal is to tell the truth.

and anyone who wants to pass for an historian must lay claim to the

same purpose with some degree of plausibility. Otherwise. he must

abandon history and write historical novels or. better still. epics which

no one expects to be encumbered with bibliography. No modern

mythmaker can claim the success of Vergil's Aeneid. which wove the

past into an enduring imperial myth. But Vergil was a poet. and in the

modern world poets have moved away from mass audiences. University

survey courses supplemented by electronic media have moved

into the vacuum thus created.

However, there is a new element in the modern "Culture Wars"

which rouses the academic exasperation evident in these two books from the battlefront,

Mary Lefkowitz's Not Out of Africa and Black Athena 

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... Mary R. Lefkowitz and Guy Maclean Rogers. Black Athena Revisited.

Chapel Hill and London: The University of North Carolina Press. 1996. pp. xxi +

522.

Mary R. Lefkowitz. Not Out of Africa. How Afrocentrism Became an Excuse

to Teach Myth as History. A New Republic Book. New York Basic Books. 1996. Pp.

xvii + 222.

I I should like to thank Robert Todd. for encouraging me to undertake this review

essay. and the University of Washington. where I was able to take advantage

of the resources of the Suzzallo Library while I was a visiting professor of

history there in 1997.

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Revisited. which Lefkowitz edits along with Guy MacLean. It is that the

same mythopoeic process that nation states have used in the past has

been rejigged to produce an adhesive that allows racial groups to rohere

within the modern multicultural state. In this case. it is post-World

War II classical studies that is being rejigged.  Martin Bernal's

Black Athena. of which we have two volumes now and two more

promised, is a learned example of the process. Bernal charges that

classical scholars have slighted the Asian and African contribution to

Greek culture for racist motives. notably anti-Semitism. Thus the interpretations

of past scholars should be judged by their racial background.

 

To this, Bernal adds the concept of "useful" history: for

instance: Aeschylus' view of myth in the Suppliants was clouded by

"what can usefully be called Hellenic nationalism"2 and Dynasties I.

XI. XII and XVIII from Upper Egypt were "made up of pharaohs

whom one can usefully call black. "( 3). To be sure. as Bernal pointed out

in a special issue of Arethusa devoted to the Black Athena debate. classicists

are mending their ways. In the 1950s, he asserted. classics was

still a "male. WASP club." but in the 1980s. he noted. more than half

the members of the American Philological Association are women. and

there is a high proportion of Jews. "It is no longer possible to maintain

the old. clubby. sexist. racist and anti-Semitic atmosphere. ". Bernal

presents his reading of Euro-American classical scholarship as part of

a new wave, a correction of the past.

Now. since it is Bernal's view that any classicist's scholarship is

tainted by his ethnicity and politics. I should confess my own background.

I was born on a farm in southern Ontario during the Depression,

went to a one-room school until the eighth grade. learned my

Latin and Greek in the collegiate-institute of a small Ontario city and

went to university on scholarships. I began my career in the "sexist,.

racist and anti-Semitic atmosphere" of the fifties. Yet as I recall. there

were a number of formidable scholars in the field who were women

or Jews. or even both. There was still the conviction in Canadian academia

that Canada did not produce first-rate classical scholars on its

home turf. though some who wisely emigrated did surprisingly well. and 

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2 Martin Bernal. Black Athena. The Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilization.

I. The Fabrication of Ancient Greece. 1785-1985 (London 1987. repro with new

introduction London 1991) 90. Black Athena will be abbreviated as BA. cited with

volume and page number.

3 BA I. 242. The Theban pharaoh Kamose. who initiated an offensive against

the Hyksos. says in an inscription which has survived as a school exercise that he

finds himself between an Asian prince in Avaris and a negro prince in Ethiopia.

that is. Nubia. from which we may "usefully" infer that he considered himself

neither: see Sabatino Moscati. The Face of the Ancient Orient (Garden City 1962)

109-110: A. Erman. ed.. tr. Aylward M. Blackman. The Ancient Egyptians: A

Source Book of their Writings (London 1927. repro New York 1966) 52-54.

• The Challenge of Black Athena. Special Issue. Arethusa (Fall 1989) 19.

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there was also the pervasive conviction that women could not combine

motherhood and academic careers.

 But there were exceptions. and in spite of the cliche to the contrary. no exception ever proves the rule.

From Manitoba to the Atlantic coast. the role of the churches in university

education was still an open wound. In Ontario. this battle from the

preceding century reached its final stage in the 1950s. McMaster University

ceased to be Baptist. the University of Windsor relinquished its

ties with the Roman Catholic church. and the old University of Western

Ontario affiliate. Waterloo College. lost a final struggle to remain

Lutheran. giving birth in the process to two universities, Wilfrid

Laurier and the University of Waterloo. The group in Canada at

mid-century that suffered the greatest discrimination was the native

Indians; in the victimhood stakes they left all other groups far behind,

even though their record of service in World War II was better than

that of any other group.

There were many prejudices on Canadian

campuses in the fifties and sixties. including some that would be labelled

"sexist. racist and anti-Semitic" according to the standards of the

1990s. But in general, the prejudices set their sights in other directions.

So a critique of the Black Athena debate. which has spawned these

two books. should perhaps proceed on two levels. First, how accurate

are Bernal's charges and what is his aim in making them? Second. how

does the debate fit into the sociology of the nineties. Specifically the

sociology of the United States. for in Canada. where the first large influx

Negroes was the black Loyalists after the American Revolution,

the popular image of the Canadian negro was as a deserving member

of society. He had a decent grasp of politics even though the colour of his

skin might render him distinct. In the United States, however. almost a

a century passed between the Emancipation and the Civil Rights movement.

and though the progress of the U.S. Blacks in the last generation

has been great. the cultural scar tissue that remains is not easy for an

outsider to appreciate.

"Culture." wrote Walter Burkert. "is not a plant sprouting from its

seed in isolation; it is a continuous process of learning guided by curiosity

along with practical needs and interests. It grows especially

through a willingness to learn from what is 'other,' what is strange

and foreign." The quotation comes from Burkert's The Orientalizing

Revolution. which was first published in German in 1984.5 and it uses

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5 Walter Burkert. trans. M.E. Pinder and W. Burkert. The Orientalizing Revolution.

Near Eastern Influence on Greek Culture in the Early Archaic Age

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the results of extensive research over the past forty years or so. The

common label for the interval in ancient history when Greece took her

alphabet from the Phoenicians is now the "Orientalizing Period,"

though Oswyn Murray was, I believe, the first to mint the title  only in 1980

in the first edition of his Early Greece. Burkert continued, "The

'Miracle of Greece' is not merely the result of unique talent. It also

owes its existence to the simple phenomenon that the Greeks are the

most easterly of Westerners .... Greece has remained in an uneasy

intermediary position. Hellas is not Hesperia. "

The quotation is relevant to the controversy surrounding Black

Athena. For it is a debate on more than one level. First, there is the

question of what influence Africa and Asia had on the Greek cultural

achievement. Here Bernal is a relative latecomer to the debate which

started more than a century ago with Oscar Montelius and Salomon

Reinach. Even Bernal's hypothesis that the myth of the Danaids is

based on an actual incursion of Hyksos refugees from Egypt was suggested

before him by Frank Stubbings in the Cambridge Ancient History,

VI, and Bernal's contribution to the theory, that the Greek word for

"suppliants" derives from "Hyksos," does not add to its credibility.

              Second, there is the question of "Orientalism" as defined by Edward

Said: how much has the stereotype of the oriental inherited from

nineteenth-century imperialism coloured our thinking about the classical

period? Bernal gives perfunctory acknowledgement to Said, who is

a Palestinian and a PLO supporter, but he seems reluctant to join his

camp.(8) Yet Bernal's manifestations of "anti-Semitism" in classical scholarship

are often simply examples of "Orientalism" as defined by Said,

and Orientalism has been a recurring theme in classical studies,

though I think it was Xenophon's Anabasis rather than Herodotus' Histories

which launched it.( 9) Then there are two other, nastier levels.

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(Cambridge MA 1992): first published in Sitzungsberichte dc:r heidelberger

Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1984.

6 CAH 3rd ed. II/ I (1973) pp. 633-638. For Bernal's hypothesis. see BA I, pp.88-98: BA II.

pp.361-408, and the critique of John E. Coleman in Black Athena Revisited pp. 181-288. The

argument that the Greek hiketides derives from "Hyksos" seems to assume that

the Hyksos called themselves by that name. The word means something like

"rulers of foreign lands," and it is no more likely that the "Hyksos" would apply

this Egyptian name to themselves than that a European or American in China

would refer to himself as a gwielo.

7 Orientalism (New York 1978).

8 BA I. xvii: p.185.

9 To be fair, it should be pointed out that "Orientalism" has another meaning

among prehistorians that is quite different: it describes the "model" of Montelius and V. Gordon Childe. which regarded the Orient as the catalyst for European civilization.

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 World War II notwithstanding. how much have classical scholars been

influenced by the Aryan myth which the Nazis developed, though

 they did not invent it? And finally there is the indictment by which Bernal updates the propaganda war of the thirties for reuse in the culture

wars of the nineties: that the classical culture which inspired the

Renaissance in Europe, and informed the art and literature of the Enlightenment

and the architecture of the Greek Revival is an unacknowledged

theft from black Africa.

              Here Bernal has a cautious foot in the camp of the late

 Cheikh Anta Diop of the University of Dakar.

whose The African Origin of Civilization: Myth or Reality is a favourite

text for African Studies in U.S. universities. Bernal has denied

that he is a disciple of Cheikh Anta Diop and has given a curious justification

for his title Black Athena: he did suggest it initially. but later

repented. only to have his publisher admonish him that "Blacks no

longer sell. Women no longer sell. But black women do sell."(11)

Black Athena deals far more with the anti-Semitism which Bernal

perceives in classical studies than with Africa. which. except for Egypt.

he largely ignores. but he seems to have made the shrewd. and

probably correct, judgement that classics professors would never require

his book for their courses purely on its intrinsic merits, and African

Studies programmes would ignore it.  Hence he positioned

his book with an astute eye on the market-place.

              Diop's doctrines provide light seasoning for Black Athena. Diop's reading of Egyptian

history has it that the Third and Fourth Dynasties of the Old Kingdom

were negro. and so too were the pharaohs of Upper Egypt in the Middle

and New Kingdoms. But the north was subject to invasion from

Asia whenever authority broke down: the white-skinned invaders

from Asia were supplemented by white slaves who added their genes

to the melting pot in the north, though throughout antiquity Egypt was

able to remain ethnically black. The efforts of the black twenty-fifth

dynasty to restore Egyptian greatness were overtaken by Assyrian

invasion and betrayal by Egypt's alien vassals. (12) As evidence of

Egypt's progressiveness. Diop points to Akhenaton. who conceived of

a universal god before Socrates. Plato or Zeno.(13) On the Hyksos. however,

Diop and Bernal part company. Bernal regards these Asian invaders. Bernal’s view

 of them is positive. Diop says that “ their barbarism was indescribable.”(14)

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10 Tr. Mercer Cook (New York/Westport 1974).

II The Challenge of Black Athena (above. n. 4) 32.

12 Diop. The African Origin of Civilization. 2-4-223.

13 Diop. L'Afrique noire précoloniale (Paris 1960) 29-30.

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 The Asian catalyst in prehistoric Europe was once conventional wisdom.

Towards the end of the nineteenth century. archaeologists in the

English-speaking world accepted the view that development in prehistoric

Europe was stimulated by the diffusion of culture from the Near

East. 15 The great forebear of diffusionism was the Swedish archaeologist

Oscar Montelius. who pointed out, reasonably enough on the basis

of the evidence he had available, that the Orient. particularly the valleys

of the Tigris-Euphrates and the Nile rivers. had a flourishing culture

at a time when Europe was still in state of barbarism.(16) So it was

logical to argue that the arts of civilization moved from east to west. Exoriente Lux-, the title of one of his books,  became the slogan of Montelius' disciples,

though one of the more curious charges in Black Athena suggests that

it was a gibe invented by Montelius' enemies(17) Sir Arthur Evans

speculated that. at the beginning of the Early Minoan period. some

colonists from predynastic Egypt may have provided the catalyst for

the Minoan civilization.(18) Montelius in his last work pointed out that the

architect of the tholos tomb at Menidhi in Attica used a device to relieve

weight from the lintel block that can be duplicated in the Great

Pyramid of Khufu.(19) It would be hard to be more explicit than Margaret

Murray. a disciple of Sir Flinders Petrie. who wrote in 1949:

"Egypt was the Home-land of Science as we know it: it was passed on

to the Greeks who recorded it in writing and so gave it to the world. "20

From the end of the nineteenth century until the years immediately

following World War II. British prehistorians accepted the doctrine of

ex oriente lux as gospel

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14 Diop. African Origin (above. n. 12) 208.

15 Bruce Trigger. "Alternative archaeologies: nationalist. colonialist. imperialist."

Man 19/3 (1984) 364-365.

16 Glyn Daniel and Colin Renfrew. The Idea of Prehistory (Edinburgh 1988)

55-56.

17 BAIl. 66.

18 The Palace of Minos at Knossos 1(1921) 13: 17.

19 La Grece preclassique I (Stockholm 1924) 158-160.

20 The Splendour That Was Egypt (London 1949): "Four Square" pbk. (1962) 20.

21 Trigger (above. n. 15) 364-365. On the diffusionist controversy. see Trigger.

Time and Traditions. Essays in Archaeological Interpretation (Edinburgh 1978)

216-228. and G. Elliott Smith. Bronislaw Malinowski. Herbert J. Spinden and Alex

Goldenweiser. Culture: The Diffusion Controversy (New York 1927) passim. The

phrase ex oriente lux could also be used by the Aryanists. since it was Sanskrit

literature which had led to the discovery of the Aryas: Jacques Barzun. Race. A

Study in Superstition (New York2 1965) 101-102.

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 Bernal mentions with respect one of these who is disregarded

nowadays.(22). Sir Grafton Elliott Smith was born in Australia. where he

trained as a doctor. but his interest tended more to research. In 1900

he became professor of anatomy at the Government Medical School in

Cairo and fell in love with Egypt. He was convinced that it was the

cradle of civilization. It was there that homo sapiens sapiens made the

breakthroughs that became the "cultural capital"(23) of civilization: the

techniques of boat-building. masonry. mummification. irrigation and

so on, and from Egypt this "cultural capital" spread to Mesopotamia. to

India and southwestern Asia. through Micronesia and Polynesia across

the Pacific to the Americas.

 This was diffusionist doctrine with a

vengeance.  It rested upon the dogma that inventions were made only

once. and if "Culture Y" used technology which was much the same as

what "Culture X" had used at an earlier date. then "Culture Y" must

have acquired it from "Culture X." Contact between the two cultures

could be taken for granted. The opposing view was termed evolutionist.

and it allowed for independent breakthroughs by early societies

that were not in contact with each other.

               Grafton Smith's position was

Extreme, but the diffusionist hypothesis that he preached was by no

means absurd. It fell to another Australian. V. Gordon Childe. to

whom Bernal dedicates the second volume of Black Athena, to restate it

in reasonable terms which recognized that independent breakthroughs

could occur but nonetheless reiterated the doctrine of Montelius,

that the "cultural capital" of prehistoric Europe came from Egypt

and Mesopotamia(.24). Childe's hypothesis became accepted belief, particularly

in Britain, until it fell victim to nuclear physics. It was not

anti-Semitism that brought it down. Rather it was Carbon-14 dates.

              However. the opposition to the "ex oriente lux" school took on ugly

overtones in the 1930s, for it became associated with the Aryans: not

the Aryans of the linguists but the" Aryans" of Nazi propaganda. The

"Aryan Myth" of the Nazis, like the diffusionist doctrine. had nineteenth-

century roots. The eleventh edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica

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22 BA I, 270-272: BA II. 66-67.

23 The phrase comes from The Growth of Civilization by one of Smith's disciples.

W.J. Perry (New York 1923) I. On Elliott Smith. see Daniel and Renfrew

(above. n. 9) 79-88. Smith's contribution to Culture: The Diffusion Controversy

(above. n. 21) states his hypothesis succinctly.

24 See Childe. Progress and Archaeology (London 1944) 5~. On Childe's career.

see Peter Gathercole. "Childe in history," Bulletin of the Institute of Archaeology

31 (1994) 25-52: Barbara McNairn. The Method and Theory of v: Gordon

Childe (Edinburgh, 1980)

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nica. published before World War I, has a brief but substantial entry

under "Aryan" which quotes Max Muller. eminent mythographer and

Sanskrit scholar: "Aryans are those who speak the Aryan language.

whatever their clan. whatever their blood." and "Aryan" was a synonym

for the "Indo-European" or "Indo-Germanic" family of languages.

(25) The thirteenth edition of the Britannica (1922) omits the

entry. but the fifteenth edition (1974) includes it again: the term

"Aryan" now; we are told. belongs only to linguistics. But the article

finds room to add that in the nineteenth century Comte Joseph Arthur

de Gobineau. followed later by Houston Stewart Chamberlain. had

propagated the notion that there was an Aryan race. endowed with

leadership qualities which Semites and non-whites lacked. and this notion

was taken up and developed by Hitler and the Nazi Party.

              The Aryan mirage in European prehistory antedates the Nazis.

however. Its apostle was Gustav Kossina. whose Die deutsche Vorgeschichte

was first published in 1912. A quotation from Holderlin

beginning "0 heilig Herz der Volker. 0 Vaterland'" introduces his

preface. Pushing Montelius' dates earlier in time. he made northern

Europe and its inhabitants. the Aryans. the forebears of European

prehistory. He rejected outright the Phoenician origin of the alphabet.

(26). Kossina was an able practitioner of archaeology. and before the

Nazi ideologues appropriated his ideas, he attracted followers outside

Germany. Even Gordon Childe produced a book titled The Aryans in

1926. where he too accepted the proposition that the Aryans were the

founders of western civilization. It was a view he rapidly abandoned

as he realized the uses to which the "Aryan myth" was put.

             

              Kossina died in 1931; imbued in Teutonic romantic nationalism though he was.

it remains uncertain whether he would have entirely welcomed the

Nazi embrace. But the preface to the seventh edition of Die deutsche

Vorgeschichte (1936) quotes Hitler's speech in Karlsruhe on 5 December

1934. where he claimed that German civilization antedated Rome's

foundation by a thousand years. We owe nothing, Hitler asserted, to the

Greeks or the Romans or the Gauls or the Britons .... The roots of Hitler's

thousand-year-old Reich were Kossina's assemblages of prehistoric

artifacts.

              World War II discredited the Aryan mirage. and until Bernal resurrected

it ,"Aryan" subsisted as a label for skin-heads and neo-Nazis.

The diffusionist model which made the valleys of the Nile and

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25 This represents Miiller's position at the end of his career. Earlier he had

implied an identity between the "Aryan" language and race. and his late retraction

had little effect on the Aryan-believers: Barzun (above. n. 21) 101-102.

 

26 Die deutsche Vorgeschichte, Leipzig 1941) pp.12-13.

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 Tigriis-Euphrates the cradles of civilization was generally accepted. The

revised edition of Childe's What Happened in History gave Mesopotamia

priority: it provided the catalyst for Egypt. "However indirectly,

Sumerian ideas were surely influencing Upper Egypt: Nilotic

barbarism was being fertilized by contact with Mesopotamian civilization."

Childe wrote,(27) and he refers in passing to the legend of conquest

by the "followers of Horus" which other Egyptologists

developed into an hypothesis of an invasion of Egypt by a dynastic

race from the Persian Gulf. Frank Yurco and Kathryn Bard both deal

briefly in Black Athena Revisited with the "dynastic race" theory

which began with Flinders Petrie and was surely a manifestation of

diffusionism rather than the" Aryan Model." as Yurco and Bard seem

to believe: the evidence now indicates that the culture of the Nile Valley

was developed by an indigenous people with physical resemblances

to the people of the northern Sudan, but differing from those

of Anatolia, the Near East and sub-Saharan Africa.

              But the priority of the Afroasiatic world remained historical dogma until the first radiocarbon

dates showed that agriculture in Anatolia. the Levant and the

Danube region was earlier than archaeologists had believed, and that

neolithic Egypt was relatively backward. Tree-ring calibration of the

radiocarbon dates only increased skepticism for Childe's diffusionist

model. The earliest stone buildings in the Mediterranean region are

not, it turned out, in Egypt, but on Malta. The west European Bronze

Age is older than anyone imagined. and its debt to the Aegean world

is less.(28) "Evolutionism" (Bernal prefers the label "isolationism"(29),

which argues for a model that allows for independent technological

breakthroughs, has emerged again as a respectable theory. and the

Aryans, like Lazarus, have risen from the graveyard of discarded

hypotheses in a book by Cambridge professor Colin Renfrew, an

"Ultra-Europeanist" according to Bernal's labelling.(30) Black Athena is

an attempt to breath new life into a model which commanded the

imagination of prehistorians longer than he claims, and collapsed only

in the face of new evidence supplied by nuclear physics.

Bernal's outline of the plot is this. The ancient Greeks saw their

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27 Gordon Childe. What Happened in History. Rev. ed. (Harmondsworth 1954).

p. 113·

28 See Colin Renfrew. Before Civilization (London 1972) passim: see also 1.A.S.

Evans. "Redating prehistory in Europe." Archaeology 30 (1977) 1'6-85: and "How

radiocarbon dating has revolutionized our ideas about prehistory." Science Forum

10/3 (1977) 30-32·

29 BA II, pp. .64-67

30 BA ll. p. I5.

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own prehistory within "a framework that I believe can usefully be

called 'The Ancient Model.' "(31) This model posited a Phoenician and

Egyptian settlement in Greece in the second millennium B.C. This

model continued to be accepted without much question until the eighteenth-

century Enlightenment, though for reasons of "cultural pride"

the ancient Greeks themselves played down their debt to the East.J2

But by the mid-nineteenth century a new hypothesis appeared which

posited an invasion from the north analogous to the conquest of India

by people who called themselves "Aryas." This new "Aryan Model"

took two forms. the "Broad" and the "Extreme." The "Broads" accepted

Phoenician influence on Greece but denied a place to the Egyptians.

The "Extremes" eliminated the Phoenicians as well.

              The villains of the piece. the intellectual forebears of Gustav Kossina and his ilk.

were F.A. Wolf and. in particular. Karl Otfried Muller.(33) whom Bernal

calls a "founder of modern classics" and fingers as the person who

overthrew the "Ancient Model." But Julius Beloch, Reinach. J. B. Bury

and, last but by no means least, Rhys Carpenter all contributed coffin

nails. Carpenter diminished the Semitic contribution by lowering the

date when the Greeks acquired their alphabet to 720 B.C. He also said

"unpleasant" things about the Semitic alphabet. such as that the Semitic

"Z" was "low and squat with a slanting bar." and that the "H" had two

instead of three bars "and these are slanting"(!34).  Routed by this unpleasantness,

the champions of the orientalizing view left the academic

battlefield.

              Black Athena Revisited is Bernal's confrontation with the experts.

who examine his theories in the light of their erudition in their own

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31 Martin Bernal. Cadmean Letters. The Transmission of the Alphabet to the

Aegean and Further West before 1400 B.C (Winona Lake 1990) p. 6.

32. BA I, p. 84.

33 For a corrective to Bernal's handling of MUller and Wolf. see Josine H. Blok.

"Proof and persuasion in Black Athena: The case of K.G. Muller." ]HI 57 (1996)

705-724. The romantic love affair with Greece which developed in the nineteenth

century can, in fact, be dated to the publication of Joachim Winckelmann's

Gedanken uber die Nachahmung der Griechen in der Malerei and Bildhauerkunst

(Dresden 1755). Before that, Lord Chesterfield expressed the conventional wisdom

when he wrote in 1751 to Lord Huntingdon. "The broken pyramids and ruined

temples [of Egypt and Greece] are below your attention" (quoted from G. Bagnani,

"Winckelmann and the second Renascence. 1755-1955." AJA 59 [I955] pp. 107-118).

As the passion for Greece grew. esteem of Egypt as a source of ancient wisdom

declined. but at the same time. after Napoleon's expedition opened the country to

western savants. respect for Egyptian technological expertise increased and has

remained high even though Carbon-14 dating has revised views of Mediterranean

prehistory.

34 Cadmean Letters (above. n. 31) 3-4:  cf. BA I pp. 1-3.

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 fields. Bernal comes off poorly. but the experts are not by any means

totally unsympathetic. Bernal's reading is vast. In only one sphere

does he appear incompetent. and that is linguistics. His command of

various languages is impressive. but his linguistic method is inconsistent

and impressionist: if a Greek word appears to sound like one in

Egyptian or in a Semitic language, then it must be a borrowing. even

if the words in question have quite different meanings.

               Bernal is not above assigning his own glosses to Greek words: Jay H. Jasonoff and

Alan Nussbaum ("Word Games: The Linguistic Evidence in Black

Athena") point out that he glosses Greek kudos as "divine glory"

rather than "renown" in order to connect it with the Semitic root

meaning "sacred"; the derivation of the Greek word for chariot

(harma) from the Semitic root for "net" is made more plausible by

assigning it the additional meaning "tackle." and the Greek ker is

given the meaning "soul" in order to derive it from the Egyptian ka

(k). "soul" or "spiritual companion." Lawrence A. Tritle in a later essay

in this book remarks on another oddity of Bernal's method here:

he uses late Greek and Coptic inscriptions to elucidate the derivation of

ker from ka. leaping over the millennia with insouciant abandon.

              More damaging is the criticism of Bernal's methods: he has ignored the developments

in linguistic science of the last hundred years. and uses

much the same methods as the learned Jesuit in early eighteenth-century

Quebec. Fr. J.-F. Lafitau. who connected the Iroquoian of the

Kahnawake Reserve at Montreal with Hebrew. with results no less plausible

than Bernal's. Bernal has not discovered "hundreds" of

Greek-Egyptian and Greek-Semitic etymologies. as he claims. The

opinion of Jasonoff and Nussbaum is that he has uncovered no

etymology that was not already known. Moreover. as Tritle points out.

Bernal has failed utterly to exploit the most convincing method of

proving Greek linguistic borrowing from Egyptian. which is to demonstrate

parallelisms in grammatical structure.

              Edith Hall's contribution. "When is a Myth not a Myth? Bernal's

'Ancient Model,'" is a cautionary essay which examines the central doctrine

of Black Athena: that the ancient Greeks regarded their own civilization

as an offshoot of Egypt and the Levant. and that this" Ancient

Model" survived until it was overthrown by the" Aryan Model" in the

late eighteenth and nineteenth century. For evidence Bernal points to

Greek mythology, specifically the myths of Cadmus the Phoenician.

the founder of Thebes, the story of the Danaids. which he connects

with a Hyksos invasion of Greece, and of Europa, daughter of Phoinix,

which he glosses as "the Phoenician." But myths change and develop to

remain relevant to the contemporary world. Variant renditions jostled

each other off the stage. There was no authorized version. Bernal's

"Ancient Model" had a rival in the "Pelasgian theory." which claimed

that the Greek aborigines were Pelasgians, speakers of a non-Greek

language. according to Herodotus (1.57). who asserted that the Athenians

were Pelasgian by origin.(35)  Hall's message is that myths change

according to time. place and climate of opinion. and historians who

would use them must be sensitive to the mentality that produced them.

Paul Veyne's Did the Greeks Believe in their Myths? does not appear

in Bernal's bibliography. It should.

              Tritle's essay "Vision or Dream of Greek Origins?" includes a brief

section. with photographs, on the hilltop "Tomb of Amphion and

Zethus" outside Thebes; Theodore Spyropoulos(36) excavated this in 1971

and reported a mini-stepped pyramid with a tomb on top. which he

compared to the Dynasty III pyramid of Djoser at Saqqara. and conjectured

that the "Minyans" who drained Lake Copais were Egyptians,

whom he, like Grafton Smith. considered irrigation experts. Bernal

recognizes this as important evidence for his thesis. The "pyramid"

that Spyropoulos published does look like a mastaba surmounted by a

much smaller mastaba to make a mini-stepped pyramid, but as far as I

know, no mastaba ever served as the platform for a tomb. Tritle. who

visited the site in 1993, claims that the hill of Amphion and Zethus is

simply a tumulus-style mound of the sort that is common in Greece.

and compares it to the more impressive tumulus tombs at Cerveteri in

Italy.

              Yet one should not be too skeptical. The draining of Lake Copais

required technical skill that may have been imported from Egypt.

where the pharaohs of Dynasty XII partially drained the Fayum in a

similar engineering feat. But conditions for irrigation in Egypt were

unique. The Fayum could be drained simply by manipulating the

flow of water through the Bahr Yusuf from the Nile. Greece had no

Nile river with its regular floods, and I suspect that the Minyans might

have found more versatile irrigation experts in the Tigris-Euphrates

valley. The "Tomb of Amphion and Zethus" looks more like a

mini-ziggurat than a pyramid, but the only mini-ziggurat surmounted

by a tomb that I know is the tomb of Cyrus at Pasargdae. which is far

too late to provide an exemplar. But its design may have drawn on

earlier models. One suspects that Tritle has discarded Spyropoulos'

hypothesis too hastily because Bernal pounced on it as evidence for his

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

35 Bernal (BA I. pp. 75-83)

attempts to fit the Pelasgians into his "Revised Ancient

Model" but finds Herodotus' asseveration that they spoke a non-Greek language

difficult to explain.

36 "Aigyptiakos epioikismos en Boiotia." AAA 5/1 (1972) 16-26: cf. BA II, pp.128-.

135

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Egyptian connection. for on the whole Tritle's contribution is solid and

well researched.

              Neither space nor. for that matter. my own abilities will permit a

full overview of all the essays in this volume. Frank Yurco approaches

Black Athena as an Egyptologist. Like Tritle. he doubts a Hyksos empire

that extended into Greece, though he notes the recent discovery of

Minoan frescoes of bull-leapers at Tell el-Dab·a. ancient Avaris. the

Hyksos capital. This, at least, shows that Cretan artists worked in

Egypt., whether as itinerant craftsmen or as captive slaves. Sarah P.

Morris. in her contribution "The Legacy of Black Athena." notes that

these bull-leaper fragments were found in a disturbed context.  The

dominant culture at Avaris was Canaanite, as it also is at Tell Kabri in

northern Israel where fragments of Minoan-style frescoes have also

been found. It is no surprise to find  Minoan influence in ancient Canaan.

              Robert Palter contributes two essays. The first is on Egyptian science

where he defends Otto Neugebauer against Bernal and argues

that Egyptian mathematics never reached the level of the Babylonians,

much less the Greeks. and that they never invented mathematical astronomy

at all. The second titled, "Eighteenth-Century Historiography

in Black Athena”, deals with an area where Bernal has escaped serious

criticism.  His technique has been to skip through the fields of

history, snipping off a quotation here and an inference there,

which he then arranges into a pattern of increasing hostility to Egypt.

              Emily Vermeule. in her "The World Turned Upside Down." reacts to

Black Athena as an archaeologist. Bernal is an eclectic "archaeologist"

who has skimmed archaeological literature to find evidence he likes

but declines to allow lack of documentation to crimp his conceptual

model. How do we know that the shaft graves at Mycenae were Hyksos

burials? Vermeule wants to know. Bernal rises above such questions.

for to expect archaeological science to provide the evidence to answer her question is to

commit the sin of "positivism." It fits Bernal's "Revised Ancient

Model" to have Hyksos king s buried at Mycenae.

              Frank Snowden Jr.'s "Bernal's 'Blacks' and the Afrocentrists" is a

scholarly essay on negroes in the world of ancient Greece, written by

an expert on the subject. He deals briefly with Herodotus 2.104, a favourite

gobbet of what W.K. Pritchett(37) calls "The Liar School" of

Herodotean studies.  The historian reports that the Egyptians had

dark skins and curly hair like the Colchians whom he considered to be

Egyptian settlers left at the eastern end of the Black Sea by the campaigns

of Sesostris. Egyptians do, in fact. have curly hair and darker

skins than the Greeks. and in modern Georgia there are still, I 

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

37 The Liar School of Herodotos (Amsterdam, 1993, pp. 12-16; cf.  Detlev Fehling.

Herodotus and his Sources (Leeds 1989> 17-21.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 belive some remnants of the swarthy Colchians. Snowden concludes

that it is unacceptable to use "black," "Egyptian" and "African" as

synonyms of "blacks/Negroes in the modern sense." Yet. should anyone

wish to believe that Eurybates. the broad-shouldered, swarthy,

curly-haired herald whom Odysseus greatly esteemed (Od. 19.246).

owed his genetic code to Africa, nihil obstat. Richard Jenkyns deals

briefly with Egypt in the imagination of the nineteenth century. and

Guy MacLean Rogers' "Multiculturalism and the Foundations of Western

Civilization" is partly a defense of George Grote against Bernal's

charge of anti-Semitism, and partly a note on Bernal's purblind vision

of the contributions of ancient Mesopotamia and Babylon. He is kind

enough not to suggest that while black women sell, as Bernal's publisher

reminded him, the Gulf War has jinxed sales of any book crediting

Greek culture to ancient Iraq for the immediate future.

              Bernal's reading is wide and his views challenging. There is no

doubt that classicists should look at their fields of research in a multicultural

context. and in Late Antiquity that has already happened.

Moreover. Bernal has thrust classics into the mainstream media. for

which he deserves thanks. I have met persons for whom classical studies

used to mean only the half-forgotten declension of puella, who now

think that the field has something to offer the contemporary Weltanschauung.

              But Bernal's method is disturbing. First. he seems to assume

that cultures are like computer software programmes: they are copyright

and can be stolen. Behind this idea there seems to lurk the concept

of pure" Ur-cultures" which ethnic groups can claim as their

property. Second. it appears that what is important about a "culture" is

its roots rather than its ultimate development. as if the proper way to

study modern United States culture were in terms of a "theft" from

Britain which took place in the colonial period. Third. he applies

"models" to intellectual history, and armed with them makes a Cook's

Tour through scholarship of the last three centuries. snipping segments

of ideas with authors’ names attached, that can be fitted into his preconceived

models. Finally. he has revived the last century's vocabulary of

racism. Examples of "Orientalism" in Edward Said's sense of the term

are labelled "anti-Semitism," and as for Houston Stewart Chamberlain(38), though he

may have used "Semite" in its broader sense. and even considered

the Jews the best of the Semites. the fact is that in this century at

least "anti-Semitic" has meant simply "anti-Jewish."

              The term "Aryan"is assigned a broader meaning than even the Nazis gave it. "Aryas"

(the noun) and "Aryan" (the adjective) were labels which the

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

38 Foundations of the Nineteenth Century. tr. John Lees (London/New York

1912) 116.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 Indo-European speakers who invaded India and Iran gave to themselves.

but as far as I know. no other ancient Indo-Europeans used the

term. It is time to be more careful about our usage. To be sure, the age

that began with the American and French Revolutions released a

heady mix of nationalism, imperialism and romanticism, and a new

variety of racism to accompany them, but we need not be subservient

to the tyranny of past "isms." The Aryan people are the Iranians and

Hindi-speaking Indians. No one else.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

              Mary Lefkowitz's award-winning Not Out of Africa(39) falls into five

main sections. In the first of them she metes out rough treatment to

some of the "myths" peddled by Africanists. Was Socrates black? What

about Hannibal, Aesop and the Roman playwright Terence? Was

Cleopatra black? This last question is worth a second look. Lefkowitz

takes issue with Shelley P. Haley. a black professor of classics at Hamilton

College. whose essay "Black Feminist Thought and the Classics:

Re-membering, Re-claiming, Re-empowering" appeared in an anthology

on feminist theory and the classics(40).  Haley relates that her

grandmother told her. "Remember. no matter what you hear in

school, Cleopatra was black." We should recall the context. Haley's

grandmother lived at a time when a drop of negro blood made a person

black. She was the product of a melting pot which had West African.

Caucasian and Iroquois genes in its genetic mix, but she was

considered black. Cleopatra VI, had she been living in Washington.

D.C. in the late 1940S. might have had to sit at the back of the bus even

though the line of her ascendants went back to Macedonia. Lefkowitz

assembles the evidence against the black Cleopatra theory with scholarly

precision. Yet it will make no difference, for Haley is presenting

history as her grandmother perceived it. and as others have. too.

whose number may include Shakespeare and. as Afrocentrist J. H.

Clarke(41) has pointed out. Believe It or Not (Ripley).

              Yet Haley's description of how the black Cleopatra hypothesis won

her as a convert is a fascinating exercise in logic. Cleopatra's father.

Ptolemy Auletes. was illegitimate. Who was his mother? Haley seems

to consider this a question never voiced by white male classicists. But

in the first edition of the Cambridge Ancient History, Martin Charlesworth

called Cleopatra half-Macedonian and half-Greek "with a

slight tinge of Iranian," and in a footnote he speculated that in view of

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

39 .Not Out ofAfrica has been selected for the Peter Shaw award from the National

Association of Scholars.

40. Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz and Amy Richlin. Feminist Theory and the

Oasssics (New York/London 1993) pp. 23-43·

41  Quoted by Snowden in Black Athena Revisited p. 120.

 

the peregrinations of Cleopatra's grandfather, Ptolemy IX Lathyrus,

his mistress might have been Syrian(42).  But for Haley, Cleopatra's unknown

grandmother could have been black by the standards which

put her own grandmother at the back of the bus, and that must be

admitted. Since the hypothesis is not impossible, her logic leads her to

the conclusion that it is probable, and finally, that the African oral tradition

which her mother transmitted to her was right.

               Houston Stewart Chamberlain once upon a time used a similar logical progression to

show that Jesus was of Aryan stock.(43).  It went like this: when Christ was

born in Galilee, it was populated by a mixed ethnic stock, and so it is

possible that some pure Aryan blood had been transplanted there. The

possibility rapidly developed into a probability, which matured in a

few paragraphs of prose until, a page or so later, the probability "that

Christ had not a drop of genuinely Jewish blood in his veins is so great

that it is almost equivalent to a certainty." Logic of this sort mixes perception

with prejudice, and transmutes the product into historical fact.

              It is a dangerous procedure. White classicists who three generations

ago used to accept the "fair-haired Achaeans" as beyond dispute

should not be too quick to throw stones at "black Cleopatra" or "black

Socrates" assertions, but they are right to dissent, firmly, publicly, but

with understanding and courtesy.

              Lefkowitz deals next with ancient myths of cultural borrowing.

Afrocentrists who argue for massive infusion from ancient Egypt into

the culture of ancient Greece can point to the second book of Herodotus'

Histories and the first book of Diodorus for proof. Herodotus'

later reputation for mendacity was based in part on his account of

Egypt, which has inspired a succession of attacks that stretch from Manetho

to Detlev Fehling. The Dynasty XXVI Saite pharaohs saw to the

training of professional interpreters who served as "Intourist guides"

for Greek visitors and immigrants whom the Egyptians disdained, but

also needed as mercenaries and traders, and possibly they "dumbed

down" their information to tailor it to the Greek mentality.

Why did Herodotus (2.50.1) relate that the names of nearly all the

Greek gods came from Egypt? The simplest answer, which neither

Bernal nor Lefkowitz gives, is that Herodotus himself knew only Greek names

for most of the gods of Egypt, and since Egypt's antiquity was beyond

doubt, it followed that these gods were discovered there. Herodotus

knew the warrior goddess of Sais, Neit, the mother of the crocodile

god Sobek, only by the name “Athena”. No Egyptian told him, "But we call her Neit,"

let alone hinted that she was not a virgin.

=======================================================================

42 Reprinted with the title From Republic to Empire (New York 1996) 45.

43 Chamberlain (above. n. 38) 174-250

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 At the same time. it appears that the Greeks regarded Egypt as an

excellent "finishing school" for their savants. Lefkowitz argues that the

Egyptian priests. conscious of Egypt's decline. were eager to present

themselves as the teachers of the Greeks. and no doubt that is true. but

the Greeks themselves were willing to accept the same view. One reason

was the persona cultivated by the early Greek philosophers. which

Louis Gernet described in a half-forgotten essay.(44) Philosophers were

professional intellectuals whose dress and demeanour bespoke their

calling. and in Egypt, there were in the temples whole communities of

apparently similar "intellectuals" whose shaved heads and white linen

garments marked them off as votaries of wisdom. Moreover. these

temples had libraries. It is hard for us to recapture the sense of awe

with which Herodotus must have listened to the hierogrammateus(45) of

the temple of Neit. the keeper of its book collection. as he gave him a

potted history of Egypt while consulting a scroll which may have contained

a king list like the Turin Canon. By contrast, Greece's earliest written record

seems to have been the homicide law of Drakon! The Ptolemaic

temple of Horus at Edfu had its catalogue inscribed on the walls of its

library room(46) and the books it once contained seem far removed

from Greek philosophy. But it must have seemed extraordinary even

to a Greek of the Ptolemaic period. much more one of the fifth century

B.c., that temples had libraries at all.

              Lefkowitz's last two topics are the "Egyptian mystery system" and

the myth of the "Stolen Legacy." The myth of "mystical Egypt" has its

roots in Freemasonry. which in turn borrowed from "Thrice-Great

Hermes" and Horapollo. the first of whom was particularly influential

in the Renaissance: Giordano Bruno (1548-1600) was burned at the

stake for preaching Hermeticism. The connection between Hermeticism

and education was made in the eighteenth century in a

three-volume fictional account by Abbe Jean Terrasson: Sethos: A History

or Biography based on Unpublished Memoirs of Ancient Egypt.

The idea germinated in a number of intellectual byways, particularly

Freemasonry. until it flowed into the mainstream of Africanist studies

with the "Stolen Legacy" doctrine,which is expounded in a little book

published first in 1954 and ignored by all classical scholars: George G.

M. James' Stolen Legacy: Greek Philosophy is Stolen from Egyptian Philosophy.(47)

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

44 Cf. The Anthropology of Ancient Greece. tr. John Hamilton and Blaise Nagy

(Baltimore 1981) 352-364.

45 On the duties of the hierogrammateus, see J.A.S. Evans. "A social and economic

history of an Egyptian temple in the Greco-Roman period," YC5 17 (1961), pp.

190 - 191.

46 Garth Fowden. The Egyptian Hermes (Cambridge 1986) 57-59.

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              James. whose Stolen Legacy appeared in 1954. as the Civil Rights

movement in the United States was getting under way. announces a

noble purpose: "The aim of this book is to establish better race relations

in the world. by revealing a fundamental truth concerning the

contribution of the African continent to civilization." He argues that

Aristotle with the help of Alexander the Great plundered the royal

libraries and temples of Egypt. notably the Royal Library of Alexandria.

which Aristotle's school turned into a research centre. Yet the

temples and their schools survived as centres of the Egyptian mysteries

until the emperor Justinian closed them, and the philosophy for

which the Greeks claim the credit was appropriated from them.

              James' sources are mainly secondary. some of them undergraduate textbooks.

and his book is not serious history. Even Bernal, who esteems it. does

not praise its accuracy. But he devotes three chapters to Hermes Trismegistus

and the influence of Hermetic literature. with which

Lefkowitz takes issue. Isaac Casaubon in 1614 dated the corpus of

Hermetic texts to the late first century A.D.. and his arguments are

still sound.(48). But the question of how much they owe to Egyptian tradition,

and how much to Greek speculation remains open. Bernal uses the

rise and fall of esteem for Hermetic literature since the Renaissance as

a barometer of hostility towards Egypt, which is unfair. for what has

driven scholarly evaluation of it has been the increase in our knowledge

about ancient Egypt over the past two hundred years. The

re-evaluation continues: prior to World War II. the scholarly verdict

was that these texts reflected Greek thought. and Egyptian input was

confined to the "spirit and temper of the writers."(49) But the discovery

of a cache of Coptic texts at Nag Hammadi has broadened our understanding.

and now Prof. Jean-Pierre Mahe(50) argues for a much greater

contribution from Egyptian religious literature. Neither Bernal nor

Lefkowitz mentions the work being done at the Universite Laval on

the Nag Hammadi texts.

              In a valuable chapter titled "The Myth of the Stolen Legacy"

Lefkowitz traces the stemma of this idea. through Masonic literature

and the black Masonic lodges to the black writers of the U.S. Recon-

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

47 Repr. Trenton. N.J. 1992.

48 Fowden (above. n. 46) xiii-xvii.

49 Walter Scott. ed. and tr.. Hermetica. The Ancient Greek and Latin Writings

Which Contain Religious or Philosophic Teaching Ascribed to Hermes Trismegistus

(London 1924. repro Boulder 1982) 10-1 I.

50 Hermes en haute Egypte: Les textes hermetiques de Nag Hammadi et leurs

paralleles grecs et latines (Quebec 1978).

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

struction period and later. The former slave Frederick Douglass noted

that the ancient Egyptians had skins as dark as many who were considered

genuine negroes in the United States. W.E.B. DuBois accepted

the same view. and Marcus Mosiah Garvey. probably the most important

black leader in the United States before the Civil Rights Movement.

went further: ancient Egypt became a black utopia where

Europe did not merely find the roots of her civilization. she filched it.

This was a fact which white people were at pains to keep secret from

blacks. With James' Stolen Legacy we get a developed account of the

conspiracy. Alexander the Great looted the library he found at Alexandria. Never mind that the library was founded by Ptolemy II Philadelphus long after Alexander’s death.

Then the "School of Aristotle" moved to Egypt from Athens

and converted this library first into a research centre, then a university

and finally a repository of the knowledge the students gained

from their research,and the oral instruction they received from the

Egyptian priests. But before that. the pharaoh Amasis had opened

Egypt to the Greeks with the foundation of Naukratis. and after him

the Persian conquest threw open all Egypt to Greek scholars. Without

Egypt, Greek philosophy would never have amounted to anything.

for the Greeks had limited intellectual capacity.

              Lefkowitz's concluding chapter is recommended reading. She realizes

that there must be room for multiple viewpoints in any university

community and that the ancient historian needs to ask the question

"What is history?" more frequently. But we can. perhaps. define the

parameters of legitimate academic debate. Hypotheses should be supported

by evidence before they become anything more than suppositions.

History courses may. as a by-product. empower certain groups

in society. but that should not be their aim. and never their sole aim.

Innuendo. a weapon in Bernal's arsenal, and personal attacks never

destroy a good argument. but they reveal a totalitarian mindset which

is the enemy of a free society. Lefkowitz pleads for academics who

teach rather than indoctrinate.

              However. one may wonder what the fuss is all about. My oId  high-

school ancient history textbook recognized Egypt as the cradle of civilization

long before Black Athena. and it added some complimentary

remarks about ancient Mesopotamia, which Bernal neglects. Bernal's

conspiracy lacks a plot. Yet I read James' Stolen Legacy with a sense of

sadness. for it is a black man's appeal for respect for his people. and at

the same time a back-handed compliment to the classical tradition

which he valued enough that he wanted an African contribution to it

recognized. At the same time. when all is said. what Classical Studies

needed was not Black Athena but a well-researched book on the effect

 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

51. James (above. n. 47) 1-6; 41-53: 139-155.

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of "Orientalism," as defined by Edward Said, upon classical studies

and how it has shaped the mentalities of intellectuals since the Renaissance.

Bernal's anti-Semitic model would be a distorting mirror for

such a study, for Byzantium was the paradigm of Orientalism for Edward

Gibbon,(52) and for Aristotle it was the Persians, whose claim to be

"Aryas" is indisputable. Orientalism infected the Enlightenment: Gibbon

learned from Montesquieu, and a couple of generations of Americans

of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries learned it from

the popular histories of the French Jansenist Charles Rollin.(53) There is

also a place for a book on how the classics have influenced modern

attitudes towards blacks, and while we are at it, towards the native

Indians as well. In the United States there have always been two

melting pots and the one that produces black persons has a greater

native component than its larger counterpart that produces whites. In Canada there have been two melting pots, one English-Scottish and the other French. There is also a new Indigenous melting pot which will have an interesting future.

              Bernal, for all his learning, gives the impression that he is still fighting

theories concocted by Alfred Rosenberg which suffered a mortal

blow with the defeat of the Nazis. Let them die.

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52 Cf. J.A.S. Evans, "The shadow of Edward Gibbon," in Paul Fritz and David

Williams, ed., City and Society in the Eightenth Century (Toronto 1973, pp. 248-249. Orientalism

in the eighteenth century was coupled with effeminacy and decay. To the

modern reader, it is curious how gender-specific decay was!

53 Carl J. Richard, The Founders and the Classics. Greece, Rome and the

American Enlightenment (Cambridge MA 1994

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