Why do people think the Hebrews were "Black"?

Or maybe you mean “Caucasian” like Anwar Sadat? http://www.lpb.bwue.de/aktuell/bis/2_3_03/bilder/sadat.jpg

You could be talking about those “Cauacasians” from ancient history, like Egypt’s Mentuhotpe II: http://www.egyptarchive.co.uk/images/cairo_museum/22_mentuhotep.jpg

Or Queen Tiye:http://www.umb.edu/academics/departments/africana_studies/images/queen_tiye.jpg

Or King Tutankahmen:http://www.freemaninstitute.com/Gallery/Egyp059_big_copy.jpg

Would it be wasting my breath to point out that “Semitic” is a linguistic designation, and has little to do with “race,” whatever that difficult term has come to mean? Modern linguists recognize the Semitic languages as part of a larger family called Afro-Asiatic. Other languages in the Afro Asiatic family include Ancient Egyptian, Hausa, Somali, Amharic and other languages of Ethiopia.

The ancestral home of proto Afro Asiatic is thought to be the highlands of East Africa, what is now Ethiopia and Kenya. The ancestors of Semitic languages migrated from East Africa into the Arabian peninusula where they may have mixed with speakers of languages related to the Indo European family. Other branches of Afro Asiatic speakers migrated into ancient Egypt, and what is now Nigeria and Chad. The greatest number of Afro Asiatic languages are found in Ethiopia.

What we call “racial mixing” today was a fact of life in the ancient Middle East. There’s no “racially pure” past to hark back to. Some the ancient Hebrews were “black,” if we accept the popular definition of that term.

In that case, I’m a regular soul brother.

And I’ve noticed that you’ve been a bit cranky lately, which surprises me given the fact that you’re one of the most enlightened and thoughtful posters here. May I ask that you cut me a little slack, please? No one – including yourself – was giving the Afrocentrism explanation sufficient heed; I felt it needed to be re-emphasized.

First, there was little if any scorn in my reports; on what grounds did you presume there was? I would say instead that my comments were reasonably sympathetic; certainly my first was, which laid the context for the second.

Second, the OP wasn’t about Jews. The question raised is best answered by the mythology of Afrocentrism, whether you wish to account for every single possible additional explanation or not.

Great, we’re back in harmony!

He was banned. Twice. But he has a webpage out there where he comments on the middle-east news.