Few details are known about the
birth of Onesimus, but it is assumed he was born in Africa in the late
seventeenth century before eventually landing in Boston. One of a thousand
people of African descent living in the Massachusetts colony, Onesimus was a
gift to the Puritan church minister Cotton Mather from his congregation in
1706.
Onesimus told Mather about the
centuries old tradition of inoculation practiced in Africa. By extracting the
material from an infected person and scratching it into the skin of an
uninfected person, you could deliberately introduce smallpox to the healthy
individual making them immune. Considered extremely dangerous at the time,
Cotton Mather convinced Dr. Zabdiel Boylston to experiment with the procedure
when a smallpox epidemic hit Boston in 1721 and over 240 people were
inoculated. Opposed politically, religiously and medically in the United States
and abroad, public reaction to the experiment put Mather and Boylston’s lives
in danger despite records indicating that only 2% of patients requesting
inoculation died compared to the 15% of people not inoculated who contracted
smallpox.
Onesimus’ traditional African
practice was used to inoculate American soldiers during the Revolutionary War
and introduced the concept of inoculation to the United States.
No comments:
Post a Comment