The Hebrew People Or Jews In Lamentations 4:8 Were BLACK not pale skinned or so called white Jews - For Dummies .




 Lamentations 4:8 (KJV):

Their visage is blacker than a coal; they are not known in the streets: their skin cleaveth to their bones; it is withered, it is become like a stick.


Lamentations 4:8 speaks to the devastating physical toll of suffering: “Their visage is blacker than a coal; they are not known in the streets: their skin cleaveth to their bones; it is withered, it is become like a stick.” 

This description is not merely metaphorical; it vividly portrays the extreme physical deterioration caused by starvation, disease, and environmental exposure, where human bodies are reduced to mere shells of their former selves.

In historical events such as the Holocaust, the survivors of concentration camps were often described as "pale" or "ashen" due to the starvation, abuse, and deprivation they endured. 

The lack of proper nutrition and care led to their skin becoming nearly translucent, with bones protruding beneath taut, emaciated skin. 

Similarly, during the Boer War in South Africa, tens of thousands of Boer civilians, including women and children, died in British-run concentration camps due to poor conditions, malnutrition, and disease, they  were often described as "pale" or "ashen" due to the starvation similar ghoulish ghostly pale white devoid of color, pale.

In the Syrian crisis, millions have suffered from hunger, disease, and the physical ravages of war. Refugees in makeshift camps and conflict zones display the same signs of emaciation—where skin clings to bones, and faces become drawn and reddish, pale white -beige / devoid of any actual color due to dehydration and exposure to the elements. 


The Rwandan Genocide and the Biafra famine are also stark examples where entire populations were starved and subjected to brutal violence. In these cases, the survivors often bore the marks of severe malnutrition, their skin becoming darker, their bodies weakened and emaciated, as they lived through some of the most horrific conditions humanity has seen.

These examples provide powerful, modern-day parallels to the suffering described in Lamentations. In all cases, people’s appearance changes as a direct result of extreme deprivation. For those with darker skin, such as those in Africa or the Middle East, starvation and exposure often cause their skin to darken further, a contrast to lighter-skinned populations whose suffering leads to pallor. 

This physiological difference offers a clue that those described in Lamentations 4:8, whose faces become "blacker than a coal," were not of a lighter-skinned, European descent, but of a darker, African background, as seen in the ancient Israelites and many African peoples today.

The passage in Lamentations, then, provides a vivid, historical and physical  evidence at least in biblical context that the individuals described in Lamentations 4:8 can be understood as people whose darker skin tones are even more pronounced during the depths of their suffering.  Africans


 The Hebrew People Or Jews In Lamentations 4:8 Were BLACK not pale skinned or so called white Jews - For Dummies .




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