Biblical Allusions In Banneker's Let My People Go

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“Let my people go”1 is the statement Banneker communicates to Thomas Jefferson in his letter. Banneker pleads this by utilizing different means to sway Jefferson’s opinion about the continuance of slavery, as God, through Moses, did to Pharaoh for the Israelites. However, instead of a plague, swarm of locusts, or blood in the water, Banneker exhibits biblical allusions, Jefferson’s personal work, and a respectful and educated tone. In the beginning, Banneker recaps America’s recent history of their emancipation from the British Crown. He then summarizes this through biblical allusions in its “miraculous” nature and as being a “blessing from heaven.” Banneker is aware of Jefferson’s deist ideologies, and of the importance religion has held

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