Perpetrator silence: Obadiah’s depiction of Israel as victim and Edom as perpetrator

Journal of Interdisciplinary Ethical Research

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Perpetrator silence: Obadiah’s depiction of Israel as victim and Edom as perpetrator
 
Creator Snyman, Gerrie F.
 
Subject Theology; Ethics; Sociology; Political studies; Obadiah; Edom; chosen trauma; perpetrator studies; implicated subject; moral injury; ethics of vulnerability; apartheid; racism
Description Background: The depiction of Edom in the book of Obadiah is peculiar: Edom remains voiceless. What we see as readers is how the intended audience is silenced and rendered vulnerable: Edom is simply delivered to the audience as perpetrators in their nakedness and destituteness, stripped of everything, even their dignity and integrity.Objectives: This study will endeavour to utilise some of the results of perpetrator and trauma studies to elucidate vulnerability within perpetrators in the book of Obadiah in comparison with vulnerability within post-apartheid whiteness.Method: Comparative textual study of the book of Obediah and a particular South African ethnography in a socio-political context.Results: In Obadiah, Edom is accused of standing idly by with Judah as the innocent victim of the Babylonian Kingdom’s imperial expansion. Within South Africa, whites are accused of standing idly by with the passing of the apartheid laws, allowing the creation of separateness in social structures.Conclusion: Edom remains silent, and its representation is one-dimensional from the victim’s side. Perpetrator testimony is a complex issue and fraught with pitfalls in terms of justifications for the inequities committed. Looking at the perpetrator as an implicated subject (whiteness) in South Africa, whiteness can only respond with integrity if it develops a sense of vulnerability.Contribution: Constructing a credible response as an implicated subject towards the current national dialogue.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor
Date 2026-01-08
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — textual study
Format text/html application/epub+zip text/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/jier.v2i1.24
 
Source Journal of Interdisciplinary Ethical Research; Vol 2, No 1 (2026); 11 pages 3078-2260
 
Language eng
 
Relation
The following web links (URLs) may trigger a file download or direct you to an alternative webpage to gain access to a publication file format of the published article:

https://ethicalresearchjournal.org/index.php/jier/article/view/24/111 https://ethicalresearchjournal.org/index.php/jier/article/view/24/112 https://ethicalresearchjournal.org/index.php/jier/article/view/24/113 https://ethicalresearchjournal.org/index.php/jier/article/view/24/114
 
Coverage South-Africa, Ancient Near-East 1948-2025 none
Rights Copyright (c) 2026 Gerrie F. Snyman https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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