“SALEM WITCH TRIALS”
This past
week was one of traveling and reflecting, after my lecture at Princeton
Seminary. We took the African-American
heritage tour in Boston and then went to Salem to look at the extraordinary 10
months or so in 1692, which became know as the Salem witch trials. Our daughter Susan had devised and directed a
play last year on the Salem girls who had become possessed by demonic powers
and had accused many, many people of being witches. Nineteen of those who were accused were
executed, eighteen by hanging, and one by the medieval torture of “pressing,”
where more and more weight was gradually added to the person’s body until it
was crushed. More died in prison
awaiting trial or were unable to pay their way out of prison before they died. It was a time when mass fear seemed to
overwhelm everyone.
Susan led
us on this tour, and it was sobering and powerful, because in many ways, we
seem to be hovering around there in 2018.
The Salem Witch Museum had a formulary for various periods in American
history, where similar occurrences happened.
Their formula was “fear+trigger= scapegoat.” They emphasized that fear was ever present in
Puritan New England, and that when the girls got possessed, that served as a
trigger that led to many people becoming scapegoats, with disastrous
consequences. The Museum asked visitors
to give suggestions for more episodes in American history. I suggested the time of lynchings in American
history. There was a great white fear of
African-Americans, triggered by the new amendments to the Constitution which
affirmed the citizenship and even the humanity of African-Americans. This fear and trigger led to the lynchings of
so many African-Americans, and yes, there is still no federal law against
lynching.
And, I also
added 2018 to the suggestion. It was no stretch to put our time into that
category. I have been thinking that we
are close to the time of the 1850’s, when the country split apart into the
Civil War. Or, at times, I think that we
are close to the 1890’s, when the white Southerners, who lost the Civil War,
reconstructed their power with both laws and violence, with the conservative
Supreme Court ratifiying their work.
Our time at Salem makes me wonder if we are
not closer to 1692. With the Trump
administration’s evil policy on family separation, we see the outcome of the
fear plus the trigger leading to scapegoats.
Trump built his campaign and now his presidency on cultivating fear of
the other, especially immigrants from Mexico and south and from Africa. Trump seems to be doing this in order to get
votes, but the Salem history should give us pause. If this fear persists and begins to grow,
there will be a tipping point at which the process takes on a life of its own
and is no longer under any person’s or group’s control. The Salem terror was relatively short lived,
lasting only 10 months or so. I asked
Susan when and why it ended, and while she named several reasons, there were
two main reasons. First, a judge finally
stood up and no longer allowed “spectral” evidence, meaning that those
possessed could no longer cite ghosts as the verification of someone’s being a
witch. Most of the evidence evaporated
at that point. Second, the girls accused
the governor’s wife of being a witch, and the usual political power stepped
in. However, nineteen innocent people
had been given the death penalty by then (most of them were women).
Are we in
that kind of time now? I hope not, but I
am uneasy about the kind of demonic power that has been loosed in our current
times. The best current cure is for all
of us to step up and be witnesses for justice and equity and mercy, and of
course, all of us must register to vote in the November elections. The Democrats are no saviors, but in these
difficult times, they may be our best political hope. So, register to vote, and get your friends
and neighbors and colleagues to register and vote.
No comments:
Post a Comment