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Response To The Plague

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I believe the Christians and Muslims,during the 1300’s, had very different responses to the”The Black Death” or “The Plague.” The Christians and Muslims had the same foundation in their religions. Each religion has a man who spoke to or is from God. The religions both believe that the disease was a punishment from God, but went about in different ways; however, the religions have done so many things together during the disease, they also agree that the Jews were the ones to bring The Plague to Europe.
The people of Europe believed the Jews were to blame for the Plague. They believed the Jews contaminated their wells and caused the outbreak. Today we know this is not the case, but in this time they needed something, more specifically, someone to blame. The punishment for this crime was, they gathered them into a huge pit in the ground, and burned them all to …show more content…

The Muslims, who lived in the Near East, believed different, but some of the same things. The Muslims ways the Plague was spread, include: Miasma from the stench of dead bodies and evil moistures, shooting stars, warms ovens, fairies and or demons, and sin: alcohol and prostitution. They also had their ways of curing the Plague. These included: Eat pickled onions, pumpkin seeds, and drink sour juices, build fire and fumigate, drink Armenian clay, pass severe law against alcohol and prostitution, stay indoors, use letter magic, and avoid sad talk. In conclusion, the Christian and Muslim responses were completely different, but similar at the same time. They believed in some of the same causes and cures, it being a punishment from God, but how they reacted and what they did about it was completely, the Muslims wanted the Plague and Christians cried in confusion. There is no doubt they were similar and had some connections, but we have to face the truth, we were different then and we are still now and always going to be forever,

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