A curious reader asks:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh_822bvdagb6Ho5oB0IRHS0btaffIxQCDyxkbLpegbCBNrPfYCp73QtgnTBl8aXfLGSefPxUqeJn623tFpX9nmuJMW682JLVdBK3Jji2ZIu-Ah-YucN0fMPzbLZ2c1emzQgoMyo7nq7PUk/s400/scan0034.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg2OUTff3NU8L95o6x-nlGv6HdHtfZq72nxbDJDhMOtrzJq5kUY3ux6BwWizOavl9eB5bwMDyXnrmEfV2I4EgK1PkclpRXFbsFVEA8vvETnzzTylvlVZC3CkLcf2EO7eTTGAKCZgZb4nFzD/s400/scan0035.jpg)
Yes, the names
Daniel and
Samuel have absolutely
NOTHING to do with "
the Semitic religion of the Hebrews." Really. Just as Kal-El's creators and origins have
no relation at all with Judaism. None whatsoever.
As to the "comparing him to God," the letter and answer were obviously written well before
Superman Returns, which probably blew poor
James Johnson's mind if he was still around to see it...
From Superboy #140 (1967)
2 comments:
In fact, "El" means "of/by/from God" or something like it. Daniel, my brother's name, means Protected by God, while my own, Michel, means Comes from God (it's an archangel's name).
Kal-El must mean "Not at all relevant to God, nosireebob"
Yeah, Daniel and Samuel and Elizabeth are about the worst examples they could have used--unless, of course, Mort Weisinger was being deliberately ironic in his answer.
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