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Salem Witch Trials Get A Second Look

Salem Witch Trial Documentary

First Posted: 11/08/11 07:07 PM ET Updated: 11/08/11 07:07 PM ET

By G. Jeffrey MacDonald
Religion News Service

SALEM, Mass. (RNS) For centuries, scholars have wondered how a farming village in 1692 could have become so hysterically anxious that magistrates would order 20 executions for crimes of witchcraft.

Now a new documentary film about the infamous Salem Witch Trials is stirring fresh debate by heaping blame on the local minister, the Rev. Samuel Parris.

Scholars agree that Parris played a central role, but they're divided on whether he deserves the villainous treatment he receives in the film, "Salem Witch Hunt: Examine the Evidence."

The 35-minute film began showing four times daily last month at the Salem Maritime National Historic Site. Five leading scholars collaborated with the Essex National Heritage Commission, producer of the film, which draws heavily on a recent compendium of nearly 1,000 documents from the period.

"We finally have a chronology that tells us about how it all began," said University of Virginia historian Benjamin Ray, one of four scholars who took questions after a recent screening. "Before we had documents, but we didn't have an orderly sequence. It's hard to give an account of history without a sequence."

In reviewing sermons, journals and court records, scholars began to see how various pieces fit together. Everywhere they looked, they seemed to find fingerprints -- both figuratively and literally -- of Parris and his ally, Thomas Putnam, a wealthy landowner and church member.

The story begins with a community that feels under siege. Reeling from bloody Indian wars and wary of encroaching French Catholics, residents of rural Salem Village feared the Puritan experiment in America's colonies might be nearing a violent end. Into this tinderbox comes the newly ordained Parris, a 36-year-old Harvard dropout who'd been a serial failure in farming and business enterprises.

"This is really his last chance to succeed," says Salem State University historian Emerson "Tad" Baker in the film. "He can't fail at this because if he does, he's really kind of failed at life."

Desperate for an accomplishment, Parris revives rigorous church standards in a bid to stoke a religious revival, according to the film. His fervor heightened tensions between church members and the "reprobate," or nonmembers. When he warns in sermons of an unfolding battle between good and evil, conditions ripen for accusations to fly.

Trouble begins in Parris' own family. After his niece and daughter start acting strangely, the girls cite two local women for cursing and tormenting them. Parris later pressures Tituba, his slave, to confess before the magistrates. Tituba warns them: nine witches remain at large. The hunt intensifies across all levels of society. Even church members are accused.

At various junctures, it seems, Parris could have called for cooler heads to prevail. But he had his own motives to continue the hunt, according to Cornell University historian Mary Beth Norton.

"He wanted to become like Cotton Mather," Norton says in the film, referring to the prominent Boston minister who had become known for describing children afflicted by alleged witchcraft.

Parris lets accusations and trials continue, with help from Putnam, who continually revises court records to make the accused seem guilty. Parris asks forgiveness within a few years of the last trials. He died in 1720, having never found the success he sought, according to the film.

Though scholars worked together on the film, not everyone likes how Parris comes across. One critique: the film could have shown more compassion and understanding for a struggling man who faced enormous, sometimes competing pressures.

"I thought it was a little over the top the way the film portrayed him," said Richard Trask, a historian and archivist at the Danvers Archival Center, which preserves records from the witch trials. "Parris is much more than the bad guy."

Indeed, Salem residents are still trying to make sense of their region's infamous past and Parris' role in it.

"For years, I always had thought of him as fiercely intoxicated with power," said Peter Santos of Salem. "I now really believe that he was a tragic hero. He believed he was God's right-hand man, doing all within his power to protect his fellow Christians."

Parris' role isn't the only new insight from the film. Tituba's ethnic identity is revealed to be Native American (in other renderings, including Arthur Miller's 1952 play "The Crucible," Tituba is African). Also, many of the 150 accused in the region during the 1690s came from nearby Andover, not Salem Village.

"They should really be known as the Andover Witch Trials," Baker said.

Scholars are also casting doubt on the popular idea that those executed in 1692 were principled heroes who refused to repent for a crime they didn't commit. In fact, the accused had no reason to believe a confession would save their lives, according to Margo Burns, a linguist and expert on period documents at St. Paul's School in Concord, N.H.

What filmgoers are apt to remember, however, is the minister's prominent role. Whether they'll give him credit for repenting, or only for escalating hysteria, remains to be seen.

In a written confession, Parris "basically says, God had spit in his face, and he deserved to be lied low in the dust of humiliation," Trask said. "Even some of his enemies said, 'If you'd only said that a year or two ago, things would be different. But it's too late now.'"

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By G. Jeffrey MacDonald Religion News Service SALEM, Mass. (RNS) For centuries, scholars have wondered how a farming village in 1692 could have become so hysterically anxious that magistrates woul...
By G. Jeffrey MacDonald Religion News Service SALEM, Mass. (RNS) For centuries, scholars have wondered how a farming village in 1692 could have become so hysterically anxious that magistrates woul...
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02:11 AM on 11/15/2011
This ignorant mentality still exists today.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Forester
Overeducated woods worker.
08:19 PM on 11/14/2011
So Samuel Parris was a Cotton Mather wannabe.

That is the defense for his epic failure?

Sometimes history is pretty much what we think it was, and this particular revisionism is nothing more than academic improv. Was Bill Oreilly involved in this project?
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pphhrogg
domestic clown goddess
07:58 PM on 11/13/2011
Compassion for a man who forged trial material to get a guilty verdict for people who were then MURDERED? Not a chance. He is getting his just desserts.
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LintLass
"When you can balance a tackhammer on your head...
01:12 PM on 11/14/2011
Agreed, there. It does seem that the Christian Right, especially, while trying to stoke up *more* moral panic, witch hunts, and 'spiritual warfare' and all, are trying to blunt the obvious object lessons of what the Puritan theocracies that preceded much of our Colonial history perpetrated, ...because they want to have the same sort of theocracy and paranoia themselves.

Whatever Salem was about, it's long served as a *warning* to the American people about what religious hysteria and paranoia end up being. That's part of our national history and myth that they've always found inconvenient. Calling the perpetrators 'sympathetic heroes' is... Disturbing, especially since I'm one of the modern people they call 'witches.' :)
05:25 PM on 11/12/2011
What about the Ergot poisoning?
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LintLass
"When you can balance a tackhammer on your head...
05:07 PM on 11/13/2011
A popular theory, though it's just unclear whether that could have actually been involved, plausible-sounding as it may be. There's some possibility, but in all the theorizing about this, it may have actually been it's been ruled out somewhat: (Can't recall why, though.)

One of the things about it is that if you have a condition of 'moral panic,' you don't actually *need* ergot posioning to have stuff like this happening. You can just look at a 'charismatic' church service and see that.
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pphhrogg
domestic clown goddess
07:59 PM on 11/13/2011
It's more than a mere "possibility".....

http://www.hbci.com/~wenonah/history/ergot.htm
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Wood
A.T.C.G...(sigh)
02:32 PM on 11/12/2011
Culprits ? Myth and superstition. The inability to tell the difference between myth, superstition, and reality has resulted in death and mayhem for many millenia. Today...people bomb buildings, markets, abortion clinics...all in the name of some myth and superstition which has no basis in fact or reality. Salem should be a reminder of awful things myth and superstition has wrought. Reason is a better guide to 21st century life. We can learn from our errors...(sigh)
03:49 PM on 11/12/2011
Funny how the myth and superstitions are created by men and aimed at women.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Wood
A.T.C.G...(sigh)
07:16 PM on 11/12/2011
Yep...there's that...(sigh)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
April Pells
03:36 PM on 11/20/2011
Not at all true. Women used witchcraft accusations just as much as men did.
dancingbones
Teach, lead by example, example, exampl
12:54 PM on 11/12/2011
The question is: If the republicans get in, who will they designate as our modern equivalent of witches? Eh?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joel Mendez
actual atheist reverend
03:26 PM on 11/12/2011
atheists and gays.
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LintLass
"When you can balance a tackhammer on your head...
04:37 PM on 11/13/2011
Pagans. They already do.
dancingbones
Teach, lead by example, example, exampl
12:53 PM on 11/12/2011
It has been estimated that 'christians', both catholic and protestant, put to death over 3 MILLION, and as many as 5 million, women as witches over the years.
05:25 PM on 11/12/2011
Yes, well they would insist on thinking for themselves.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fjg
With Malice Toward None (nearly 85% of the time)
12:05 AM on 11/13/2011
What is your source for this. I believe that your numbers are way off (the population of Europe at the time was not so large), but if you could provide a legitimate source for this, I'd appreciate it.
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LintLass
"When you can balance a tackhammer on your head...
04:50 PM on 11/13/2011
Numerical estimates actually vary: the problem isn't that there wasn't enough population in Europe for that, but actually the records of the witch-hunts were somewhat uneven (And it depends how much of the Inquisition you count, or other things over history) ...but the once-scholarly estimate of nine-million was later shown to have been a result of someone a long time ago compiling the records of where figures were recorded, and then extrapolating that onto the whole population of Europe: the problem being that sample was fairly biased: even though they'd occasionally wipe out entire villages, the witch-hunts didn't actually get everywhere, or in such intensity.

Suppose it's the thought that counts, though. It doesn't suddenly become OK if they only killed hundreds of thousands or tens of thousands and terrorized everyone else. :)
09:47 AM on 11/12/2011
Even in a non-religious sense, we've had our "witch-hunts" and phenomena that parallels them. There was that infamous day-care child abuse scandal, that turned out to be an hysteric hoax of false-memory witness...myths of satanic ritual murders, McCarthyism etc. -- Fear is a motivator, and it seems some sort of group-think hypnosis takes over. I'm thinking of that painting by Goya "the Sleep of Reason creates monsters"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joel Mendez
actual atheist reverend
03:27 PM on 11/12/2011
in academic circles, what you're talking about are referred to as 'moral panic'.
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LintLass
"When you can balance a tackhammer on your head...
01:23 PM on 11/14/2011
Actually, that's the same narrative, by the way: the people most promoting that notion of 'Satanic cults' were in fact the same people we now know as Dominionists and those 'spiritual warfare' types. It was most definitely religious: in the sense that a lot of these churches are to blame for the notion that their own abuses and fears and hysterias needed to be displaced onto some 'evil cult' and their own Devil... 'False Memory' really doesn't come from nowhere, even if it can be shaped by iatrogenic narratives and all. For some beliefs to 'cast out devils,' (especially if it's over non-problems like people being non-straight or not-obedient to fundamentalist religion, ) they generally convince people that the world and they themselves are *full* of them.

Very like McCarthyism: first you need to get people imagining the bolshevik in the root cellar. Or in their neighbors. :)
01:58 PM on 11/14/2011
I think there is something to that... there may be more tendency on the right, even religious right. There may be other instances where it would not be a factor... maybe like "swine flu" pandemonium, or that famous "War of the Worlds" hoax. But I see your point.
03:35 PM on 11/14/2011
I'm having trouble articulating.. I think maybe I blurred analogies, but some of these events might have had layers of ingredients to make them what they are/were.

I was going to bring up Y2K, but chose not to -- because I was going for a non-religious example, Yet... it brought out end-times fear (btw, at that time, I was fearful :)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Wood
A.T.C.G...(sigh)
12:34 PM on 11/11/2011
The Bible says witches exist and to " suffer not a witch to live ". Of course...today we know there weren't any witches, aren't any witches...ain't gonna be any witches.( Sorry wiccans...I'm refering to the turn-the-fields barren and fly about on broomstick variety ). Of course in those days superstition was pretty universal...but that superstition cost thousands of lives across Europe. Salem was a smaller scale.
For people who perceive the Bible as the inerrant word of God...the Witch Delusion should ring a loud and clear warning bell. The Bible was and is wrong concerning witches...that error was devestating to thousands of people.
Reason will better serve the 21st century than will myth and superstition. The Witch Delusion bears witness...(sigh)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
UnderTheHedgeWeGo
Show me some evidence.
07:45 PM on 11/11/2011
Bob, superstition is nearly universal in 21st century America.
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LintLass
"When you can balance a tackhammer on your head...
04:56 PM on 11/13/2011
Trust me, the Dominionists who pursue witch-hunts in Africa and undertake 'spiritual warfare' (And of course political activities an defamations of other religions ) to threaten modern Pagans and 'exorcise' children really don't make the distinction. :)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Wood
A.T.C.G...(sigh)
07:21 PM on 11/13/2011
Yep...these folks give meaning to the term: " Dumb as a box of rocks "...(sigh)
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Dan Agin
Author
11:13 AM on 11/11/2011
At the time, executions for witchcraft were already common in Europe for 300 years--so there was really nothing new in Salem. The answer to the question "Why?" is to be found in medieval popular beliefs in the supernatural and the manipulation of such beliefs for power and self aggrandizement by local clergy.
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thorrsman
Why should I define myself by quoting others?
07:51 PM on 11/11/2011
One difference in Salem was that the so-called witches were tried under civil law, as was done in England, while the infamous witchhunts of Europe were done under Church law. Punishment, under Church law, was burning--alive, unless you recanted. Under English civil law, it was hanging, like a wide variety of other "crimes".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Wood
A.T.C.G...(sigh)
02:21 PM on 11/12/2011
Of course hanging is more humane than burning (although many in Europe were strangled first)...the ensuing death was the same and really long lasting. All of it was due to ignorance and superstition. Which is why we must continually point out that reason is a better guide for 21st century life...than myth and superstition
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wbthacker
Can YOU pass the Turing Test?
02:19 PM on 11/10/2011
""For years, I always had thought of [Parris] as fiercely intoxicated with power," said Peter Santos of Salem. "I now really believe that he was a tragic hero. He believed he was God's right-hand man, doing all within his power to protect his fellow Christians.""

IT'S THE SAME DAMNED THING! Anyone who thinks he is God's right-hand man IS intoxicated with power.
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LintLass
"When you can balance a tackhammer on your head...
04:59 PM on 11/13/2011
"Tragic hero?" For torturing and murdering innocent people and taking their families' homes?

This article cites people trying to make him seem sympathetic, and claim that 'The accused had no reason to think they'd get mercy for confessing' (What's that supposed to mean, they were 'guilty?' ) but leaves out the fact that their property would be forefeit... Their families would lose everything if they died 'unrepentant.' As well as, of course, how 'enhanced interrogation' works.
11:52 AM on 11/10/2011
That which must bear most of the guilt for the deaths of these women, and the deaths of countless others over the years, is the "Good Book" itself; which commands that believers not suffer a witch to live.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OtayPanky
You're welcome
01:06 PM on 11/10/2011
Exactly so. The root problem in the Abrahamic religions is their core texts that persuade their adherents that doing evil can be good.
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thorrsman
Why should I define myself by quoting others?
08:35 AM on 11/11/2011
Save, of course, that the original does not say that.


A more correct translation would be "poisoner" rather than "witch", the sense of the word seeming to be more in the line of "assassine", a word--and perhaps a concept--that did not exist at the time when that part of the Christian bible was written.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
UnderTheHedgeWeGo
Show me some evidence.
07:49 PM on 11/11/2011
Here's ten translations not one of which agrees with you.

http://scripturetext.com/exodus/22-18.htm
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bbriani3842
400+ yrs of science & STILL no evidence for a god
11:07 PM on 11/11/2011
Why is it that no one from 12th to 17th Centuries didn't get the same memo that you got?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bill Duckworth
It is a DOOZY
08:14 PM on 11/09/2011
This is really his last chance to succeed," says Salem State University historian Emerson "Tad" Baker in the film. "He can't fail at this because if he does, he's really kind of failed at life."

Sounds like a weak president trying to show success by Extending the Bush Tax Cuts, Droning and Executing without a trial.

A Self made Man
CognitoErgoSum
CogitoErgoSum was taken when I signed up.
11:06 PM on 11/09/2011
Except that Obama was a multimillionaire professor, senator, husband and father and author before he got elected President; hardly someone who was in danger of failing at life. He showed success by getting heath care reform passed, DADT ended, Osama bin Laden and al-Awlaki are dead and many other accomplishments.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bill Duckworth
It is a DOOZY
08:49 AM on 11/10/2011
What you call an accomplishment I call a loser.

1) A college professor of Constitutional Law that executes without a trial. I know little about Constitutional Law, but I know what the Constitution mean by the rights it creates for American Government of Habeas Corpus, Due Process and Trial by Jury. Nothing can deny this without Amendment. That is Constitutional Law that even a fancy pants cannot deny after 12 years of teaching it. What th hell did he teach?

2) DADT ended, a queer military. Politically Correct for you. To me sex is nothing the military or government has a business being involved with. Assalt and Murder are already against the law for women, man, child, gay, black, white, green or blue.
What Precidence is being set at the cost to future generations.

3) Healthcare should be a single Payer, period. Obama did not even try. Proposed Public Option then he threw under the buss as quickly as he proposed.

Letting republican change every bill he proposes and then Vote NO is ironic if not for being so pathetic. Not leadership, WEAKNESS>

Being Bipartisan with the BAD BUSHers. So why is Obama a Bush-droning, unprovoked war, occupation, extending the rich Bush Tax Cut, et al. Writing on the WALL?

He is speaking pretty now once again to be Re-Elected.

Fool me once it is your fault, fool me twice and it is MY FAULT
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joel Mendez
actual atheist reverend
03:35 PM on 11/12/2011
actually, kinda sounds like someone who might write "Soaring Like an Eagle from the EGO self to SPIRIT" in their micro-bio.
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Gregor53
Remembering your past gives power to the present.
07:41 PM on 11/09/2011
It is interesting to read the posts and relate it to a minister, faith or religion. Witch hunts were not uncommon in Europe and believe it or not, Salem was not the only place in the colonies that went though such hesteria. It was part of the culture and society at the time. It will be interesting in many years from now how people will wonder why we did some of the things we do today based on knowledge or values they have 2000 years from now. Parris was just another individual that had such beliefs and he was not the only one in the Mass Colony Bay Colony that condemned people as witches. Ironically, we do the same thing today and feel justified.
FrancisKing
Unitarian Christian
06:21 PM on 11/09/2011
The best guess for what happened is that the wheat which the community relied on for food became contaminated with ergot. One of the side effects of consuming ergot is that it causes writhing, which was described in accounts of the witch trials.
JackVandusen
Switched to coffee
07:09 PM on 11/09/2011
I've read the same thing about ergot. I think to blame it on Parris singularly is probably too simplistic. But then simple thinking is our nation's zeitgeist...
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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11:14 PM on 11/09/2011
Perhaps that also explains the 800 years of the inquisition.