One of the five central figures that Kendi bases the book around, Cotton Mather was a Puritan minister who was born in New England in 1663. Mather was a descendant of the illustrious Cotton and Mather families (his parents gave Mather his mother’s maiden name as a first name), which were both powerful in shaping the intellectual and political climate of colonial America. At 11, he became the youngest person in history to attend Harvard; after graduating, he became a preacher and encouraged slaveowners to convert their slaves to Christianity. Mather was passionately committed to the belief that, underneath their skin, Black people had “white” souls, which he took to mean that they could be redeemed and saved by God so long as they became Christians. In this sense, he had a decisive impact on the history of racism in America by embedding into the popular imagination the idea that Christianity would redeem enslaved people and make them naturally docile and submissive.