February 16, 2006
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COLUMN ONE
Bedrock of a Faith Is Jolted
* DNA
tests contradict Mormon scripture. The church says the studies are being
twisted to attack its beliefs.
By William Lobdell, Times Staff Writer
From the time he was a child in Peru, the Mormon Church instilled
in Jose A. Loayza the conviction that he and millions of other Native Americans
were descended from a lost tribe of Israel that reached the New World more than
2,000 years ago.
"We were taught all the blessings of that Hebrew lineage
belonged to us and that we were special people," said Loayza, now a Salt
Lake City attorney. "It not only made me feel special, but it gave me a
sense of transcendental identity, an identity with God."
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A few years ago,
Loayza said, his faith was shaken and his identity stripped away by DNA
evidence showing that the ancestors of American natives came from Asia, not the
Middle East.
"I've gone through stages," he said. "Absolutely
denial. Utter amazement and surprise. Anger and bitterness."
For Mormons, the lack of discernible Hebrew blood in Native
Americans is no minor collision between faith and science. It burrows into the
historical foundations of the Book of Mormon, a 175-year-old transcription that
the church regards as literal and without error.
For those outside the faith, the depth of the church's dilemma can
be explained this way: Imagine if DNA evidence revealed that the Pilgrims
didn't sail from Europe to escape religious persecution but rather were part of
a migration from Iceland Ñ and that U.S. history books were wrong.
Critics want the church to admit its mistake and apologize to
millions of Native Americans it converted. Church leaders have shown no
inclination to do so. Indeed, they have dismissed as heresy any suggestion that
Native American genetics undermine the Mormon creed.
Yet at the same time, the church has subtly promoted a fresh
interpretation of the Book of Mormon intended to reconcile the DNA findings
with the scriptures. This analysis is radically at odds with long-standing
Mormon teachings.
Some longtime observers believe that ultimately, the vast majority
of Mormons will disregard the genetic research as an unworthy distraction from their
faith.
"This may look like the crushing blow to Mormonism from the
outside," said Jan Shipps, a professor emeritus of religious studies at
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, who has studied the church
for 40 years. "But religion ultimately does not rest on scientific
evidence, but on mystical experiences. There are different ways of looking at
truth."
According to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, an
angel named Moroni led Joseph Smith in 1827 to a divine set of golden plates
buried in a hillside near his New York home.
God provided the 22-year-old Smith with a pair of glasses and seer
stones that allowed him to translate the "Reformed Egyptian" writings
on the golden plates into the "Book of Mormon: Another Testament of Jesus
Christ."
Mormons believe these scriptures restored the church to God's
original vision and left the rest of Christianity in a state of apostasy.
The book's narrative focuses on a tribe of Jews who sailed from
Jerusalem to the New World in 600 BC and split into two main warring factions.
The God-fearing Nephites were "pure" (the word was
officially changed from "white" in 1981) and "delightsome."
The idol-worshiping Lamanites received the "curse of blackness,"
turning their skin dark.
According to the Book of Mormon, by 385 AD the dark-skinned
Lamanites had wiped out other Hebrews. The Mormon church called the victors
"the principal ancestors of the American Indians." If the Lamanites
returned to the church, their skin could once again become white.
Over the years, church prophets Ñ believed by Mormons to receive
revelations from God Ñ and missionaries have used the supposed ancestral link
between the ancient Hebrews and Native Americans and later Polynesians as a
prime conversion tool in Central and South America and the South Pacific.
"As I look into your faces, I think of Father Lehi [patriarch
of the Lamanites], whose sons and daughters you are," church president and
prophet Gordon B. Hinckley said in 1997 during a Mormon conference in Lima,
Peru. "I think he must be shedding tears today, tears of love and
gratitudeÉ. This is but the beginning of the work in Peru."
In recent decades, Mormonism has flourished in those regions,
which now have nearly 4 million members Ñ about a third of Mormon membership
worldwide, according to church figures.
"That was the big sell," said Damon Kali, an attorney
who practices law in Sunnyvale, Calif., and is descended from Pacific
Islanders. "And quite frankly, that was the big sell for me. I was a
Lamanite. I was told the day of the Lamanite will come."
A few months into his two-year mission in Peru, Kali stopped
trying to convert the locals. Scientific articles about ancient migration
patterns had made him doubt that he or anyone else was a Lamanite.
"Once you do research and start getting other viewpoints,
you're toast," said Kali, who said he was excommunicated in 1996 over
issues unrelated to the Lamanite issue. "I could not do missionary work
anymore."
Critics of the Book of Mormon have long cited anachronisms in its
narrative to argue that it is not the work of God. For instance, the Mormon
scriptures contain references to a seven-day week, domesticated horses, cows
and sheep, silk, chariots and steel. None had been introduced in the Americas
at the time of Christ.
In the 1990s, DNA studies gave Mormon detractors further
ammunition and new allies such as Simon G. Southerton, a molecular biologist
and former bishop in the church.
Southerton, a senior research scientist with the Commonwealth
Scientific and Industrial Research Organization in Australia, said genetic
research allowed him to test his religious views against his scientific
training.
Genetic testing of Jews throughout the world had already shown
that they shared common strains of DNA from the Middle East. Southerton
examined studies of DNA lineages among Polynesians and indigenous peoples in
North, Central and South America. One mapped maternal DNA lines from 7,300
Native Americans from 175 tribes.
Southerton found no trace of Middle Eastern DNA in the genetic
strands of today's American Indians and Pacific Islanders.
In "Losing a Lost Tribe," published in 2004, he
concluded that Mormonism Ñ his faith for 30 years Ñ needed to be reevaluated in
the face of these facts, even though it would shake the foundations of the
faith.
The problem is that Mormon leaders cannot acknowledge any factual
errors in the Book of Mormon because the prophet Joseph Smith proclaimed it the
"most correct of any book on Earth," Southerton said in an interview.
"They can't admit that it's not historical," Southerton
said. "They would feel that there would be a loss of members and loss in
confidence in Joseph Smith as a prophet."
Officially, the Mormon Church says that nothing in the Mormon
scriptures is incompatible with DNA evidence, and that the genetic studies are
being twisted to attack the church.
"We would hope that church members would not simply buy into
the latest DNA arguments being promulgated by those who oppose the church for
some reason or other," said Michael Otterson, a Salt Lake City-based
spokesman for the Mormon church.
"The truth is, the Book of Mormon will never be proved or
disproved by science," he said.
Unofficially, church leaders have tacitly approved an alternative
interpretation of the Book of Mormon by church apologists Ñ a term
used for scholars who defend the faith.
The apologists say Southerton and others are relying on a
traditional reading of the Book of Mormon Ñ that the Hebrews were the first and
sole inhabitants of the New World and eventually populated the North and South
American continents.
The latest scholarship, they argue, shows that the text should be
interpreted differently. They say the events described in the Book of Mormon
were confined to a small section of Central America, and that the Hebrew tribe
was small enough that its DNA was swallowed up by the existing Native
Americans.
"It would be a virtual certainly that their DNA would be
swamped," said Daniel Peterson, a professor of Near Eastern studies at
Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, part of the worldwide Mormon educational
system, and editor of a magazine devoted to Mormon apologetics. "And if
that is the case, you couldn't tell who was a Lamanite descendant."
Southerton said the new interpretation was counter to both a plain
reading of the text and the words of Mormon leaders.
"The apologists feel that they are almost above the
prophets," Southerton said. "They have completely reinvented the
narrative in a way that would be completely alien to members of the church and
most of the prophets."
The church has not formally endorsed the apologists' views, but
the official website of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Ñ http://www.lds.org Ñ cites their
work and provides links to it.
"They haven't made any explicit public declarations,"
said Armand L. Mauss, a church member and retired Washington State University
professor who recently published a book on Mormon race and lineage. "But
operationally, that is the current church's position."
The DNA debate is largely limited to church leaders, academics and
a relatively small circle of church critics. Most Mormons, taught that
obedience is a key value, take the Book of Mormon as God's unerring word.
"It's not that Mormons are not curious," Mauss said.
"They just don't see the need to reconsider what has already been
decided."
Critics contend that Mormon leaders are quick to stifle dissent.
In 2002, church officials began an excommunication proceeding against Thomas W.
Murphy, an anthropology professor at Edmonds Community College in Washington
state.
He was deemed a heretic for saying the Mormon scriptures should be
considered inspired fiction in light of the DNA evidence.
After the controversy attracted national media coverage, with
Murphy's supporters calling him the Galileo of Mormonism, church leaders halted
the trial.
Loayza, the Salt Lake City attorney, said the church should
embrace the controversy.
"They should openly address it," he said. "Often,
the tack they adopt is to just ignore or refrain from any opinion. We should
have the courage of our convictions. This [Lamanite issue] is potentially
destructive to the faith."
Otterson, the church spokesman, said Mormon leaders would remain
neutral. "Whether Book of Mormon geography is extensive or limited or how
much today's Native Americans reflect the genetic makeup of the Book of Mormon
peoples has absolutely no bearing on its central message as a testament of
Jesus Christ," he said.
Mauss said the DNA studies haven't shaken his faith. "There's
not very much in life Ñ not only in religion or any field of inquiry Ñ where
you can feel you have all the answers," he said.
"I'm willing to live in ambiguity. I don't get that bothered
by things I can't resolve in a week."
For others, living with ambiguity has been more difficult. Phil
Ormsby, a Polynesian who lives in Brisbane, Australia, grew up believing he was
a Hebrew.
"I visualized myself among the fighting Lamanites and lived
out the fantasies of the [Book of Mormon] as I read it," Ormsby said.
"It gave me great mana [prestige] to know that these were
my true ancestors."
The DNA studies have altered his feelings completely.
"Some days I am angry, and some days I feel pity," he
said. "I feel pity for my people who have become obsessed with something
that is nothing but a hoax."