December 15, 2019

3 Ethnic Groups: Negroid - Caucasoid - Mongoloid

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We are aware that the adjectives Negroid, Caucasoid, and Mongoloid have offensive connotations in today’s society. The word Negroid has strong racist connotations that diminish the African people; the word Caucasoid has unsupported connotations of superiority of the Europeans, used by the foolish so called white supremacists; and finally, the term Mongoloid, in addition to alluding to the people of a country, it is also used to refer to humans born with Down syndrome.

Modern anthropology no longer classifies humans into four races, as we studied in school: black, white, yellow and red. The term “race” is no longer used to differentiate human groups but to differentiate the human race from the rest of the living beings that inhabit this planet. Today most anthropologists use the term “ethnic group” instead of “race”, and divide the human race into three major ethnic groups: Negroid, Caucasoid, and Mongoloid. There are also those who classify the inhabitants of Oceania as Australoid, but we think that they belong to a subgroup.

Even at the risk of being misunderstood, we will use these terms in the original sense, without any racist connotation because this article wants to prove precisely that the human race had a common cradle in Africa, and that the physiological differences we exhibit today stem from the long adaptation to the different environments of that unique human ethnic group’s migration.

The Rift Valley, the Cradle of Humanity and Its Saviour
A valley is a land depression surrounded by mountains or hills. There are valleys which are formed by the flowing waters of rivers that carved the land for thousands or millions of years, as is the case of the Grand Canyon in the United States which was carved by the Colorado River.

The first great civilizations in the world were formed along the banks of great rivers: the Egyptian civilization, on the banks of the Nile River; the Mesopotamian civilization, on the land between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers; the Hindu or Vedic civilization, on the banks of the Ganges River; the Chinese civilization, on the banks of the Yellow River (Huang He); the Mayans, Aztecs, and Incas in Central America.

These rivers provided not only a constant and inexhaustible source of drinking water, but also fish for food, water for agriculture and enriched the land they passed through with their sediments – the most fertile lands on our planet are without question the valleys crossed by these great rivers. Rivers were also channels of communication between peoples and facilitated trade.

There are other valleys that are formed by the slow movement of glaciers that erodes the land into a U-shape, and still others are formed when two adjacent tectonic plates separate, creating a rift between them; the earth above this cleft collapses and sinks. When the Arabian plate separated from the African plate, the Rift Valley was formed, the longest and deepest on the planet. In fact, on each side of the Rift Valley there are no mountains, as seen around the valleys formed by rivers and glaciers, but plateaus.

It begins at the source of the Jordan River in Israel, between Lebanon and Syria, forms the Jordan River valley to the Sea of Galilee, continues into the Jordan Valley to the Dead Sea, then to the Gulf of Aqaba in the Red Sea, proceeds south to enter Africa through Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, and ends in the middle of Mozambique in the Indian Ocean, after travelling more than 3000 kilometers and descending to 500 meters below the sea level.

The Rift Valley is a chain of great lakes such as Lake Victoria which gives rise to the Nile River, Lake Tanganyika, Lake Turkana, Lake Niassa, and many other smaller lakes and rivers. It is known for its year-round temperate climate and fertile land. The biodiversity in the Rift Valley is far superior to the rest of Africa and one of the most bio-diverse in the world.
 
This valley is the birth place of humanity and its development during the Paleolithic period. It is also where the Saviour of the mankind was born and, precisely at the source of the Jordan River in Caesarea Philippi, where the Apostle Peter recognized in Jesus someone more than a prophet – the Messiah, the Son of God (Mark 8:27-30). Whenever a pot is made, a lid is made to go along with it: the pot is humanity, and the lid is Jesus who is the Way, the Truth and the Life for humanity.

From Primate to Human Being
‘Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue it…’ Genesis 1:28
Sixty-six million years ago a 10-kilometer in diameter meteorite crashed into our planet and provoked a winter night that lasted several years, during which 75% of the living beings on Earth died, among them the dinosaurs. The small rodents survived because they lived underground and were able to hibernate for a long time.

Many years passed and the conditions on the planet became favorable again, these rodents evolved into orangutans living in trees, where it was easier to protect themselves and find food, and from these to monkeys, chimpanzees, gorillas and primates. Chimpanzees, bonobos (or pygmy chimps), and humans descended from a primate that lived 6 million years ago. From this primate, a branch evolved into humans and another into chimpanzees; today’s chimpanzees and bonobos are the last species from this latter branch.

For these reasons the Teaching Authority of the Church does not forbid that, in conformity with the present state of human sciences and sacred theology, research and discussions, on the part of men experienced in both fields, take place with regard to the doctrine of evolution, in as far as it inquires into the origin of the human body as coming from pre-existent and living matter - for the Catholic faith obliges us to hold that souls are immediately created by God. Humane Generis of Pius XII, #36

As Humane Generis says, the book of Genesis does not contradict the theory of evolution. It tells the truth of faith, not the truth of science. The fact that human beings have evolved from other living beings and life on the planet comes from a common stock do not constitute a problem to our faith, as long as it is acknowledged that God the Creator of everything and everyone gave the kick start by creating the life that He already knew would flow into a human being. Science cannot really explain in scientific terms how we passed from being a monkey to being a human being.

As the link between us and the monkeys has not yet been found, no one knows how or why humans have evolved while our chimpanzee siblings have not… Was it God who willed this, or genetic mutations, change of climate, food, or all of the above? It may have been a chain of events that occurred like the domino effect: one thing led to another and so on. Some of these factors are the bipedalism that freed the hands, the increase of the cranial capacity that creatively arranges tasks for the hands to perform, tools, the opposable thumb, genetic changes, climate and geological changes that have forced human beings to adapt to the new conditions, etc.

From this highly variable scenario and with many other variables, a monkey emerged smart enough to question its own existence. As an evolutionary chronology of the bipedal human species who have appeared and disappeared in the Rift Valley for 6 million years, anthropology establishes the following species:

•    Ardipithecus ramidus – 4.4 million years
•    Australopithecus afarensis – 3.5 million years
•    Homo habilis – from 2 to 1.4 million years
•    Homo ergaster – from 1.8 to 1.2 million years
•    Homo erectus – from 1.6 million to 150 thousand years
•    Homo neanderthalensis – 150 thousand to 30 thousand years
•    Homo sapiens – from 130 thousand years to date

With the exception of the last one, which is our species, all the others are extinct.

Migration and Miscegenation
The Homo habilis, which is considered to be the first member of the genus Homo, gave rise to Homo ergaster. Some H. ergaster migrated to Asia, where they are called Homo erectus and others to Europe as Homo georgicus, a subspecies of H. erectus. The H. ergaster in Africa and H. erectus in Eurasia evolved separately for almost two million years and presumably separated into two different species.

Homo rhodesiensis, which was descended from H. ergaster, migrated from Africa to Europe and became Homo heidelbergensis and later (about 250,000 years ago) Homo neanderthalensis and Denisova hominins in Asia. The first Homo sapiens, a descendant of H. rhodesiensis, emerged in Africa about 250,000 years ago. Furthermore, around 100,000 years ago, some H. sapiens migrated from Africa to the Levant and joined the Neanderthals living there, with some genetic miscegenation or interbreeding.

Later, some 70,000 years ago, perhaps after the Toba catastrophe, the largest volcanic eruption in 2.6 million years, a small group left the Levant to fill Eurasia, Australia and, later the Americas. A subgroup of them encountered the Denisovans and, after some miscegenation, migrated to fill Melanesia.

In this scenario, most of today’s non-African people are of African origin (“the single-origin hypothesis”, also known as the “Out of Africa” hypothesis). However, there has also been some interbreeding between the Neanderthals and the Denisovans, who evolved locally (“the multiregional evolution hypothesis”). The recent genomic results from Svante Pääbo's group also show that 30,000 years ago at least three main subspecies coexisted: the Denisovans, the Neanderthals, and the Cro-Magnons. Today only the Homo sapiens survived, without the existence of the other species or subspecies.

The Three Wise Men/Magi and the Three Human Groups
On this mountain the Lord of hosts will make for all peoples a feast of rich food, a feast of well-matured wines, of rich food filled with marrow, of well-matured wines strained clear. Isaiah 25:6

The three major ethnic groups are subdivided into several other groups that can also be further subdivided into as many as 5,000 ethnic groups. However, they all descend from Homo sapiens because, as we have seen, all other human species have either merged with the Homo sapiens or disappeared and became extinct. There is therefore no scientific reason for racism, that is, the rivalry between different human groups, since we are entirely and exclusively ALL Homo sapiens who have emigrated from Africa.
  • Caucasoid – Aryans, Hamites, Semites
  • Mongoloid – Mongolians, Chinese, Indo-Chinese, Japanese and Koreans, Tibetans, Malaysians, Polynesians, Maoris, Micronesians, Eskimos or Inuit, American Indians
  • Negroid – Africans, Hottentots, Melanesians/Papua, Negritos, Australian Aborigines
At the Addis Ababa museum in Ethiopia, where 40 % of the skeleton of Lucy (an Australopithecus afarensis dated 3.2 million years ago) is kept, a large sign reads “Welcome Home”. Yes, the Rift Valley is indeed our common home.

From here the #HomoSapiens started their migration that took them to all corners of the earth. As they went from place to place in order to survive, their bodies and  physiology adapted to the environments they came to colonize, branching into the three main ethnic groups that exist today: Negroid, Caucasoid, and Mongoloid. Once again, in as much as God is one and three, so humans are also at the same time one and three; three in one, one in three.

Representing each of the three ethnic groups that humanity had branched into, the three wise men returned to the Rift Valley from where their common ancestor the Homo sapiens originated, to pay homage to the ONE who is the exemplar of Humanity, Jesus Christ, who was also born on the slopes of that valley. Jesus came to bring the fullness of physical, moral, spiritual and psychological health to humanity, and especially to be the great model for all to follow as the way, the truth, and the life. (John 14:6)

Cereals and Civilization
Agriculture and the domestication of animals were already important in the Paleolithic period for the survival of the human species and especially to overcome the symbiosis and dependence man lived in relation to Nature. Before the discovery of agriculture and domestication of animals, human beings, like wild animals, spent most of their day searching for food.

Of all the agricultural products, cereals were the most responsible for establishing a total independence from Nature. A human being is considered an omnivore, but from the point of civilization, he is mainly a cereal eater. Cereals are still today the staple food of man’s diet, they are the base of the well-known food pyramid, from the base to the tip: cereals, vegetables and fruits, meat and fish, and finally, vegetable fats and animal fats.

Why cereals? From the point of view of our diet, cereals, composed of carbohydrates, are energy-rich food that can supply energy for a long time. Vegetables and fruits supply quick but short-lasting energy. Furthermore, of all the foods that we know, cereals take the longest to spoil or degrade: at zero humidity they can last for millennia. In fact, archaeologists have found in the tomb of King Tutankhamen, the Egyptian pharaoh, 5,000-year-old wheat grains that had germinated after sowing.

Where there was no grain there was no civilization because grains, as the story of Joseph in Egypt describes in the book of Genesis 37, and the parable of the rich fool in Luke (12:16-20) indicates, unlike other foods, could be stored and preserved for a long time. This frees human beings from the constant need to search for food thus allowing them to devote themselves to other tasks, forming culture and civilization.

Let us take as an example the Indians of the entire American continent; both the North American Indians, as well as the South American Indians, did not build civilizations because they had no cereal. While the Central American Indians, the Mayans, the Aztecs and the Incas built a highly developed civilization. There were three great civilizations in the ancient world and all of them were based on one or more cereals:

The Wheat Civilization: North Africa and Europe – Egypt flourished thanks to the abundance of grains grown along the banks of the Nile River. Wheat, barley, sorghum, and oats were the first grains with the greatest mastery of cultivation techniques. The pharaohs used wheat as currency. The peasants were paid three loaves of bread and two jugs of beer as payment for a day’s work. In the tombs of the Egyptian pharaohs, pasta, honey, fruits, meat, breads and beer have been found.

The Rice Civilization: Asia and Oceania – Rice is the main staple food of approximately two-thirds of the world’s population, and is the most important crop in many countries, especially in Asia and Oceania. Rice cultivation is as old as civilization. Historians believe that this cereal grain originated in China, India and Oceania. Archaeological discoveries in China and India indicate that rice has existed for 7,000 years. Its use in ceremonies, where the Emperor sowed rice, dates back to 2822 B.C. and represents the most concrete reference of its existence.

The Maize/Corn Civilization: the Americas – Maize was known by pre-Colombian civilization as the food of men and gods. It is the third most important cereal in the world, after wheat and rice, and it has ensured the survival of large populations because of its nutritional value. The men who grew corn needed only to work 50 days a year, which allowed these people to work on the construction of great architectural works.

The Mayans, the Aztecs and the Incas used corn in the form of flour in their diet, in porridge, breads, cakes, tamales. These peoples had a mystical and intense relationship with this cereal. Even in the leaders’ luxurious meals, corn was a must. The preparation of corn included the use of salt and pepper, as well as fermented beverages produced from corn, which are still made today by the Andean peoples. The long-lasting and easy storage for transport of corn contributed to Columbus bringing this staple food from America to Europe.

The African Profile (Negroid)
The physical characteristics of Africans are the following: round skull, very dark skin pigmentation, and black frizzy or curly hair; round black eyes, wide flat nose, large mouth with prominent and thick lips, short and broad chest, sparse body hair and a thin beard.

The main nucleus of this group is located in the African continent. However, there is an eastern branch of this group which is made up of the Australoids, who are the aboriginal people of Australia, India, Melanesia, and parts of Southeast Asia and East Asia, they are also called the Oceanians. The ones from the Solomon Islands in Oceania are so similar to the black Africans that anthropologists cannot distinguish between the two groups. In general, they have dark skin, wavy black hair, short and narrow face with developed body hair, dark brown eyes, large nose, thick lips, elongated head, taller than the average height and some even considered tall.
 
The European Profile (Caucasoid)
The physical characteristics of Europeans are as follows: broad and round skull, light skin pigmentation, and light hair colour with texture ranging from straight to wavy, wide deep-set eyes, thin lips, broad chest, abundant body hair, full beard. They make up 50% of humanity. The main nucleus of Caucasoids is found in the Old World: Europe, Asia and North Africa. It is subdivided into southern or Indo-Mediterranean and northern or Atlantic-Baltic. The southern race has darker skin, hair and eyes, while the northern race presents with lighter skin, hair and eyes.

Those who represent the southern or Indo-Mediterranean race are: Hindus, Tajiks, Armenians, Greeks, Arabs, Italians and Spaniards, which are characterized by wavy black hair, brown eyes, narrow and slightly curved nose with a prominent bridge, narrow face and head in a dolichocephalic and mesocephalic form.

The northern or Atlantic-Baltic race is represented by the Russians, Belarusians, Poles, Norwegians, Germans, English and peoples who live further north; their physical characteristics are: light skin, blond or red hair, gray or blue eyes, long straight nose and tall stature.

The Asian Profile (Mongoloid)
The physical characteristics of Asians are the following: broad skull, medium skin pigmentation between white and yellow, straight black hair, slanted and oblique eyes, prominent cheekbones, straight nose, thin lips, short and broad thorax, sparse body hair.

The Mongoloid ethnic group makes up about 40% of world population and half are Chinese. They live in Asia, in the northern, eastern, central, and southeastern regions, and extend across Oceania and the American continent. Many members of this group are part of the population in the Asian regions that belonged to the former Soviet Union: Yakut, Buryat, Tunguses, Tchuquetches, Tuvinos, Altaios, Ilacos, Aleuts, and Asian Eskimos.

The Mongoloid race is divided into three subgroups:
The Northern or Asian-Continental – also called Central Asian and to which the Buryat and the Mongolians belong. They are known to have lighter skin, hair and eyes, finer hair, thin lips and large flat face.

The Southern or Asian-Pacific – they are represented by the Malays, Javanese, and inhabitants of the Sunda Islands. Their physical characteristics are: tanned skin, narrow and short face, thick lips, wide nose, sometimes wavy hair, shorter stature than the northerners and the Chinese.

The Native American Indians – Their physical characteristics are: straight thick black hair, underdeveloped body hair system, yellowish-white skin, dark brown eyes and broad face.

Physiological Variables
The most notable physiological variables among the three human groups are the skin colour, the type and colour of hair, the shape and size of the nose, the eye shape and colour, and to a lesser extent, the prominence of the cheekbones.

The Skin – From the white of a Scandinavian to the black of a Congolese, the only difference is the latitude at which these two people live. The further north of the equator, the whiter the person becomes, and the closer to the equator, the darker the person becomes. Our bodies need vitamin D which is synthesized by exposing the naked skin to the sunlight. Where the sun is abundant, the skin, acting like a curtain, closes to let in only the amount it needs, and where the is sun is scarce, the skin opens up completely to soak in as much sunlight as is available.

The Nose – In addition to filtering the air of dust and fumes, thus preventing them from reaching the lungs, the nose also regulates the air temperature. Long nose with small nostrils corresponds to cold climates, and small flat nose with wide nostrils corresponds to warm climates.

The Eyes – The greater or lesser concentration of melanin in the skin is responsible for its colour, and this is the same with the colour of the eyes – the darker the colour the more melanin, and the lighter the colour the less melanin. Current studies show that people with blue eyes all descended from the same individual who lived 6,000 years ago in Scandinavia where 89% of people have blue eyes. This percentage goes down as we head south, and changes from blue to green, from green to brown, and then to black, as we move further south. Like the skin and hair colour, the amount of melanin is responsible for this feature.

As for the shape of the eyes, the most distinct difference is between Chinese or Asian eyes and the rest of the world. Studies show that this feature is the result of adaptation to the environment and climate. In the Asian steppes, the constant strong winds, the dust that they raise, the cold, as well as the need to see far, have led the eyes to adapt over the centuries to how they are today.

The Hair – The same melanin that is responsible for the colour of the iris of the eyes and the colour of the skin, is also responsible for the hair colour. The hair texture is related to the temperature of the environment: straight hair is typical of cold climates, curly and frizzy hair like those of the Africans, are typical of hot climates – by turning a thousand and one times, curly hair allows a cushion or air chamber to form between the scalp and the air, thus protecting the head from sunstroke; Africans have what it seems to be an air conditioner on their head.

The Essence of Racism
There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus. Galatians 3:28

The affirmation and defense of the thesis of the biological inequality of the human races constitute the essence of racism. Racists consider the white race as superior and all other races, like the black and yellow, as inferior. They confuse the concepts of race and nation. What they don’t realize is that race is a biological concept while nation is a sociological concept.

Cultural level does not depend on physiological characteristics, but is determined by economic and social factors. Racist thinking has no scientific basis, instead it shows gross errors in logic and in facts. As the result, it confuses race with nation, people, culture or linguistic group, attributing to social factors, and therefore hereditary, behaviours which have nothing to do with race but are conditioned by culture, the social environment and economic conditions.

Beauty Standards
“Beauty is in the eye of the beholder”, the standard of beauty is conventional; in Africa, there are tribes that like women with long necks; in southern Ethiopia, women cut a slit in their lips to place within this space a small clay disk that they say makes the woman more beautiful; in China and Japan, women with small feet are considered beautiful.

However, Western civilization has inflicted and imposed its beauty standards across the four corners of the globe in such a way that it seems that everyone thinks and perceives what is beautiful like an European or North American. I noticed this during my years in Ethiopia when I tested a group of young people on what they viewed as beautiful. In the mission there was a local nun, young and beautiful, and another Italian nun not as young nor as beautiful; I was astonished to hear the young people when asked which of the two was more beautiful, that they chose the Italian one. I suppose this is the reason why the singer Michael Jackson never accepted his skin colour and sought through several plastic surgeries to make himself white.

It took time for non-Caucasian models to appear on catwalks in fashion shows. Naomi Campbell was the first African supermodel and in some way shocked certain standards and customs of the fashion world. The point is that the beauty standard is not at all scientific, but is purely conventional, arbitrary and circumstantial. If Africa was as successful as Europe and America, the concept of beauty standard would likely be African.

The Irrationality of Racism
There are no Asian, no African, no Caucasian man, because all men came from the African continent from a common stock. Despite having other species of Homo like the Neanderthals who also left Africa, the only Homo species that survived is the Homo sapiens. All others died out or were absorbed into the Homo sapiens pool, so that since 30,000 to 40,000 years ago, there has only been one species of Homo.

The physiological differences of the three main ethnic groups are the result of an adaptation to the environment and are all reversible in the sense that if we moved a tribe from the Congo to Norway, in less than 25,000 years, its members would become blonde with straight hair, blue eyes and white skin. This is why what Martin Luther King said on the day before his murder makes a whole lot of sense, “I dream of the day when men will be judged not by the colour of their skin, but by the content of their character.”
Fr. Jorge Amaro, IMC

December 1, 2019

3 Periods of the Metal Age: Copper - Bronze - Iron

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The Metal Age is the last stage of the Prehistoric Period, significantly shorter than the previous one. It started approximately in 6500 B.C. and continued until 1500 B.C. In search of more suitable materials for his tools, man moved from stone, wood and bone to harder and easier to shape materials. Therefore, he went from copper, the first metal to be discovered, to bronze which is an alloy of copper and tin. Finally, man discovered iron.

Despite iron being the most abundant metal on our planet, it was the last one to be discovered. We can say that since its discovery, we’ve never left the Iron Age because it is still the most used metal in the world today. It conforms to the most sought-after properties in metals – malleability, durability or hardness – so several alloys emerged, like carbon steel, stainless steel, etc. which have more diverse applications, the most important ones being in the automobile industry, shipbuilding and construction industry.

These developments took place in different regions of the world, but mainly in the Middle East, where the Western culture originated, comprising the countries of Mesopotamia, Israel, Assyria and Egypt. With metals, not only did a new activity appeared – metallurgy – but also all human tasks were made easier and became more productive – agriculture, farming, hunting and fishing – thus creating surpluses and giving rise to another new activity: trade. Trade led humans to create means of transporting merchandise and so the wheel, the horse as the driving force and the sail for boats were invented.

Unfortunately, not everything has been positive; metals have also made it possible to manufacture weapons that were used for the first time for purposes other than hunting animals, that is to say, they are now being used against other human beings. It was in the Metal Age that the first kings, the first nations and the first empires were formed out of wars between peoples; thus, another profession appeared, that of warriors. Mesopotamia and Egypt were the first civilizations to appear.

The Copper Age: 6500 B.C. to 2500 B.C.
It is also called the Chalcolithic Age when it is viewed as a transition from the Neolithic and the Bronze Age. Discovered probably by chance, copper rapidly replaced stone, bone and wood in the making of tools. Chalcolithic represents a qualitative leap in relation to the Stone Age, because wood and bones were readily available in nature, while metals are minerals that had to be melted down to be used.

Once copper was discovered, the path to the Bronze Age and from this to the Iron Age represented quantitative leaps. Man realized that the future was in metals and the search for harder and more resistant metals was what gave rise to the transition from copper to bronze and from bronze to iron.

At first, metals were worked with a hammer to be shaped. Later, they realized that it was better to melt it down to achieve more specific and perfect shapes. This is how metallurgy was discovered as a process for making metal objects and tools.

Copper is a very soft and malleable metal. The objects made of copper are not very resistant. It was also at this time that other metals as soft or even softer than copper were discovered: gold and silver. When copper was discovered, man replaced all his tools with this metal, but he quickly realized that, for certain tools, flint stone was more suitable because it was harder and far less malleable than copper. Therefore, rather than for tools or weapons, copper was used for pots and ornaments, and for funeral rituals.

The Bronze Age: 2500 B.C. to 1500 B.C.
In search of a harder metal, man began mixing minerals, until he invented bronze resulting from a mixture of two softer metals: copper and tin. Bronze is an alloy composed of 90% copper and 10% tin. Paradoxically, combining two soft metals produced a hard metal.

Since its discovery, this metal has been widely used throughout the known world; in search of the metal, the first routes leading to the mines were created. Thus, the wheel for land transport, and the boat and sail for sea transport were developed. The expansion of trade brought the Bronze Age to all of Europe and Asia, and to parts of North Africa. Copper came to be more sought after to make bronze than to be used on its own. Since bronze had no match in hardness and strength, all tools were soon made of bronze.

Replacing stone and copper tools and instruments with those of bronze increased the overall production (mainly in agriculture) and the durability of these tools because, as we’ve said, bronze is stronger and more wear-resistant than copper.

The weapons of combat were made of bronze, giving the people who dominated this process more power of conquest, domination and warlike superiority. Bronze was also used in the making of household artifacts (knives, axes, etc.), and hunting weapons, improving the quality of execution of certain services. Finally, it also had an artistic (masks, figurines, etc.) and adornment use (necklaces, bracelets, rings, etc.).

The Iron Age: 1 500 B.C.
It started in the southwestern Asia Minor, in what is today Turkey, and rapidly spread into the Middle East and the rest of Europe. The Hittites were the first people to work with iron and to use it mainly in weapons with which they quickly subjugated other peoples. The warrior using an iron sword broke the bronze sword of his opponent at the first strokes.
 
Iron, more abundant in nature than the previous two metals, required more metallurgical expertise because of its higher melting temperature. For this reason, it was necessary to first improve the production of furnaces in order to subsequently reach higher temperatures to work with iron.

The introduction of iron in the fabrication of the most diverse equipment, tools and weapons brought great changes in the lives of people of that time. Iron came to be used in the production of stronger and more resistant tools, which ended up prompting development in agriculture and facilitating the work of planting.
  
In as far as weapons are concerned, iron helped build swords and other types of stronger weapons. With the introduction of this material, the armies with the strongest weaponry ended up dominating other peoples more easily. Thus, the great empires arose and the emergence of increasingly more powerful kings and rulers.

According to historians, the discovery of writing marks the end of the Iron Age and Prehistory. However, from another point of view, as we mentioned before, we stayed in the Iron Age until the nineteenth century as this metal continued to be the most extensively used material. Just as the combination of copper and tin started the Bronze Age, so the combination of iron with carbon in the last century has ushered in the present Steel Age, as this is the most widely used metal on this planet.

Metal Age Inventions
The furnace – Its invention gave rise to metallurgy in the Metal Age. The improvement of the furnace made it possible to reach higher temperatures to melt iron and create other alloys. It is true that it was also used later in cookware to cook food like bread and meat, and to make ceramic utensils.

The wheel – It allowed the progress of surplus trade, making it possible to transport cargo in less time and with less effort.

The channels – They allowed the water of the rivers to be conveyed to lands far from them, thus obtaining more agricultural surpluses; they were also used to supply water to villages and, with the use of boats, also served as a means of transporting goods.

The boat – The first boats were small boats or rafts; the sail made it possible to build boats of greater draught to carry more people and more goods.

The sail – It served to boost the trade of surpluses created by an increasingly technical and diversified society. The sail was used on boats, but also in windmills; at first it was made of leather, then of more flexible fabric, so as to take better advantage of the driving force of wind.

The plow – Using working animals in combination with the plow made it possible to cultivate more land; it goes without saying that it was first made of copper, then of bronze and finally of iron, as it is still today. With ploughing, the cultivated area quadrupled and the agricultural surpluses caused further development in the previous trade.

The mill – The mill of water, wind and tide increased the production of flour for the making of bread. Before the mill, it was necessary to use the force of man and two stones to grind the grain; after the mill, the driving force of nature was used to generate a continuous movement that allowed large quantities of grain to be ground in a short time.

Weaving – Not yet with maximum strength, but man began to weave or interlace plants to form baskets. Afterwards, linen, cotton and wool were discovered, and threads appeared which, intertwined on the looms, gave rise to the first fabrics, which replaced the skins of animals in clothing.

Stone construction – It was in the Metal Age that walls began to be built around the cities, temples and fortresses. In was at this time that the world’s tallest building was built, at such a height that it was surpassed only 3,000 years later by the Lincoln Cathedral in England. This would be the Great Pyramid of Giza or the Pyramid of Cheops, built around the year 2560 B.C., at 146 meters in height, was surpassed in 1311 by Lincoln Cathedral with the Spire height of 160 meters.

Metal Age Professions
Bosses or kings -- They were distinguished by their leadership skills and physical strength.

Priests – They were in charge of rites and relations with the divinity, they interceded for the people and placated the gods with sacrifices.

Farmers – A profession that was born in the Stone Age that replaced hunting and fishing as a means of obtaining food, and their storage, allowing man a certain independence from land and nature.

Shepherds – It was the activity that replaced hunting; with the domestication of animals, man learned to reproduce them and thus to amass food. For primitive peoples, it was like having money in the bank, for when they sold an animal, they received the interest of a capital invested in the purchase of the animal when it was small.

Blacksmiths or metallurgists – They were the ones who specialized in this new art and craft of the metal era; they became responsible for the making of all the tools that man used.

Potters – They also used furnaces, although at lower temperatures, to bake the clay. It is a very old profession, because apart from baskets, clay was the material most used for all types of vessels, both for storing liquids like water, wine and olive oil, as well as for solids like cereals.

Bonders, weavers, bakers – These were other minor professions that appeared as society structured and organized itself, and diversified its functions and professions.

Merchants – They were born out of relations between the peoples, from agricultural or other surpluses, and from increasing specialization. They were the ones who took products that were plentiful in one place to be traded in another place where they were scarce, making exchanges possible.

The Matriarchy and the Concept of God
“Your wife will be like a fruitful vine within your house; your children will be like olive shoots around your table.” Psalm 128:3

Anthropologists are confident that the first deity to be worshiped was a goddess and not a god. This deity was worshiped as the mother of all that lives; she was identified with the Earth, and with the soil. Therefore, in all languages where there is no neutral gender and everything is defined as either masculine or feminine, uppercase Earth as a planet and lowercase earth as soil are feminine words, and they are also referred to as mother Earth and mother nature, respectively.

Primitive men lived, as animals still do today, in symbiosis with nature, like a baby connected to its mother by the umbilical cord, not in opposition or against her in their thinking. On Earth they lived, and from the earth they drew the sustenance they needed to stay alive.

The same thing seems to happen in relation to themselves: from the woman, like a fruitful land, came the new life that populated the world. It is clear that the connection between the sexual act and the birth of the baby had not yet been established at the time. And why was that? Human intelligence was not yet sufficiently developed to establish the relationship between a cause and an effect, precisely because so much time separated the two (in this case nine months).

I like to take as an example the intelligence of other mammals, for example, mice. If I put a yellow poisonous powder on the ground, some mice will eat this powder and soon after they will die. The other mice immediately establish a sequence of cause and effect and, after a short time, no matter how much yellow powder I put out, no mouse will die because the cause and the effect occurred very close in time, and the mice now know that if they eat of the yellow powder they will die. There was a time when human intelligence was as simple as that of a mouse.

But let us suppose that we put as poison an anticoagulant like warfarin for the mice; the mice eat the poison at will and nothing happens to them, until one day in a fight with other mice or they get injured, they will bleed to death. Nowadays, this poison is the most used to control mice population, because it does not allow them to establish a cause and effect relationship.

The same was true of primitive human beings who did not establish a link between the cause (the sexual act) and the effect (the birth of the infant). For this reason, the woman was seen as the correspondent to Mother Nature, to the mother earth: just as the life of plants on which the animals depended appeared from the womb of the earth, so also the new life was born from the woman’s womb.

It is true that primitive men realized that they were physically stronger than women; but they did not dare to raise their hand against them, just as no man dares even today to raise his hand against his own mother – this is a taboo. We observe this in the mammals closest to us. In the evolution of the species, the breastfeeding females are very aggressive against the males and do not let them approach. Theoretically, these males would win the fight against the females, but they do not react but withdraw out of instinctive respect.

Since the connection between the birth of children and the sexual act had not yet been established, women were the ones who held the power; their fertility gave life to the individual and immortality to the tribe. Because a woman was the origin and source of life, God was conceived as woman, as mother.

Beyond the gift of reproduction and source of life, as still happens today with mammals, man was attracted to the woman who held the power of the sexual act that he craved, for the pleasure it gave him and for the release of the libido.

Self-Consciousness and Patriarchalism
God blessed them, and God said to them, ‘Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue it...’ Genesis 1:28

(...) To the woman he said, ‘I will greatly increase your pangs in childbearing; in pain you shall bring forth children, yet your desire shall be for your husband, and he shall rule over you.’ And to the man he said, ‘Because you have listened to the voice of your wife, and have eaten of the tree about which I commanded you, “You shall not eat of it”, cursed is the ground because of you; in toil you shall eat of it all the days of your life.’ Genesis 3:16-17

When the connection between the sexual act and the birth of a new life was established, the status of man began to rise. The human being has always formed his concept of God based on what he values and considers important, that is, his needs and the concept of himself. For a time, women still enjoyed some of her former status; in fact, god was then represented as matrimony.

The original goddess/mother/earth was complemented by a consort, a father of sky. The rain came down from the sky, it is the divine semen sent by the god-father to impregnate mother earth, so that life can emerge.

Machismo or patriarchalism arose with the outbreak of self-consciousness: when the umbilical cord between man and nature was cut, and he ceased to live in symbiosis with nature, and began to see himself as distinct from her, separate from her. Thus, a difference was established between man and his environment, nature, instinct and self-reflexive thought.

Once the human being was born as a person, survival became less a function of a woman’s reproductive capacity and more a function of a man’s capacity and ability to force nature to meet his needs. The subjugation of the earth corresponded to the subjugation of the woman, for it is the man who now holds the power of reproduction. While the ovum was not identified until 1928, it was thought that the woman was only the receptacle where the man, with his semen, placed the new being in the woman’s womb, the homunculus or very small human, as St. Thomas Aquinas called it.

The story of Abraham can be reinterpreted in this context. Abraham, a man, left his homeland, severing the ties that bound him to Ur of the Chaldean, around 1800 B.C. In an act of self-affirmation and overcoming the need for security, he thus responded to the call of a deity who was also not tied to any place, and he set out into the unknown, as if in search of himself and this deity. From the time of the story of Cain and Abel, it has been known how Yahweh favored the shepherds over the farmers, who are given the more feminine values of fertility.

Throughout human history, only Jesus treated women as equals. We don’t have the space to develop this theme here, but his disciples did not understand or accept this characteristic of the Master and soon returned to the machismo of their cultural environment.

Saint Thomas Aquinas even came to the conclusion that a woman was inferior in nature to a man, and therefore he decreed that the inferior should serve the superior. This attitude has not yet changed, not only in some places on earth, but also in some minds of today’s Western civilization. Therefore, when Pope John Paul I said in public that God was also a mother, he left many Catholics much scandalized. The pope who succeeded him took years to assimilate the same concept, until one day he too declared it in public.
Fr. Jorge Amaro, IMC