Ben Ammi’s Adaptation of Veganism in the Theology of the African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem

IF 0.3 0 RELIGION
Michael T. Miller
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article will look at the ideology of veganism in the AHIJ. Since the early 1970s their diet has been a core part of their ideology and of their message to the world. Acknowledging that a black/Jewish meat-free diet is far from the exclusive property of the group, let alone a new development on their part, I will argue that it is an expression of the syncretic “bricoleur” nature of Black Israelite thought (Dorman 2013), reflecting, drawing on, and transforming traditions existing in both African American and Jewish thought in and before the twentieth century – principally articulated as a concern for health in the former and a messianic return to the peaceful Edenic existence in the latter. However, Ben Ammi skillfully intertwines it into their theology by arguing that a return to the veganism of the Garden of Eden is part of the community’s redemption of humanity from primordial sin and ultimate overcoming of the curse of death.
本·阿米在耶路撒冷的非裔希伯来以色列人神学中对纯素食主义的改编
这篇文章将着眼于AHIJ中素食主义的意识形态。自20世纪70年代初以来,他们的饮食一直是他们意识形态的核心部分,也是他们向世界传递信息的核心部分。我承认黑人/犹太人的无肉饮食远非该群体的专属财产,更不用说他们的新发展了,我认为这是黑人以色列思想中融合的“杂色”本质的一种表达(Dorman 2013),反映,借鉴,以及在二十世纪和之前改变存在于非裔美国人和犹太人思想中的传统-主要是前者对健康的关注,后者是对和平伊甸园存在的弥赛亚式回归。然而,本·阿米巧妙地将其与他们的神学交织在一起,他认为回归伊甸园的纯素食主义是社区将人类从原罪中救赎出来并最终战胜死亡诅咒的一部分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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