Add parallel Print Page Options

23 Shem and Japheth took a robe and, holding it in back of them, walked backward toward him and covered their father with it. Having faced backward, they did not see their father naked.

24 When Noah woke up from his drunken slumber, he learned what his youngest son had done to him. 25 Because of this, he said,

“Cursed be Canaan!
    A slave of slaves
    shall he be to his brothers!”[a]

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. Genesis 9:25 According to the Semitic mentality, the blessings and curses of the Patriarchs (generally) are regarded as efficacious and able to determine the lot of the tribe represented by each Patriarch. For this reason, popular stories connected events or characteristics of a human group with blessings or curses uttered by an ancestor. In the present story Noah curses Canaan and therefore the Canaanites. The Canaanites were to be supplanted by the Hebrews in the conquest of the Promised Land. The Phoenicians, too, were Canaanites (see Gen 10:15-19; Jdg 1:31).