‘Archaeology in Israel is a popular movement,” Amos Elon wrote in his 1971 book The Israelis: Founders and Sons. “It is almost a national sport. Not a passive spectator sport but the thrilling, active pastime of many thousands of people, as perhaps fishing in the Canadian Lake Country or hunting in the French Massif Central.”
Those words published a
half-century ago, reverberated this week as dramatic archaeological finds hit
the front pages of the newspapers, and squeezed into prime-time television and
radio news shows.
Last week, the
Antiquities Authority (IAA) announced a trove of finds from a wide-scale
archaeological operation ongoing since 2017 in hidden caves in the Judean
Desert, in cooperation with the Civil Administration’s Archaeological
Department.
Among the finds were an
ancient woven basket, believed to be some 10,500 years old, and the
6,000-year-old skeleton of a child. Those were the “universal” finds. Of more
particular Jewish interest were the discovery of fragments of ancient scrolls
of the biblical books of Zechariah and Nahum, as well as coins dating to the
Bar-Kochba revolt in 132 CE.
And these findings come
just a week after another archaeological story was highlighted in the media: an
11-year-old boy hiking with his family in the Negev discovered a figurine,
believed to be a fertility amulet, dating to the First Temple period.
The findings announced from
the Judean Desert were not just stumbled upon this week. The findings were
announced on Tuesday, but the artifacts themselves were discovered over a year
ago.
Why is that important?
Because the IAA seem to have made a decision to announce the findings together
– both those of a universal character and those particularly Jewish.
And why is that
significant? Because Israeli archaeologists have often been accused of focusing
on finds that would validate Jewish claims to the Land of Israel, at the
expense of highlighting discoveries – such as the 10,500-year-old basket and
6,000-year-old skeleton – that do not have an “Israeli angle.”
It is only natural that
a people, accused far and wide of being interlopers in a land not its own,
would find comfort in artifacts testifying to its presence in that land going
back more than three millennia.
From Masada to the City
of David to Tel Shiloh, whenever Israeli archeologists make a startling
discovery shedding light on biblical or Jewish history, they are accused of
searching for and finding only Jewish artifacts in an attempt to whitewash the
history of other peoples that historically roamed and resided in this land.
But finding Jewish
artifacts – or even focusing on the discovery of Jewish archaeological sites –
does not deny the presence of other civilizations here. What those finds are
able to do, however, is to refute the arguments of those who deny that Jews
were among all those people who did roam and reside here, including in
Jerusalem.
By unveiling both Jewish
and general archaeological discoveries on the same day, the IAA made a
statement: we are interested and focused on both Jewish and general
discoveries.
More on this at https://tinyurl.com/tcrzsjxb
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