Shifting Ground in the Holy Land
Archaeology is casting new light on the Old Testament
- By Jennifer Wallace
- Photographs by Robert Wallis
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2006, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 6)
Many Palestinians are understandably skeptical of any research that links biblical events to land they feel is rightfully theirs. “In Israel, biblical archaeology was used to justify illegal settlement policy,” says Hamdan Taha, director general of the Palestinian Authority’s department for antiquities and cultural heritage. “Land was confiscated in the name of God and archaeology. It’s still going on with the construction of bypass roads and the building of the separation wall inside the Palestinian land.”
In Hebron, on the West Bank, where 130,000 Palestinians live close to 6,500 Jews in the settlement of Kiryat Arba, the political implications of biblical archaeology are obvious: the tomb of Abraham, sacred to Jews and Muslims alike, has been effectively split in half since 1994, when a Jewish settler shot 29 Muslims at prayer; now, grilled windows that look out onto opposite sides of the sepulcher separate the members of the two faiths. In 2005, Ariel Sharon said the tomb justified the Israeli presence in the West Bank. “No other people has a monument like the Tomb of the Patriarchs, where Abraham and Sarah are buried,” he told the Israeli journalist Ari Shavit. “Therefore, under any agreement [on the West Bank], Jews will live in Hebron.”
However, most archaeologists who have studied the sites say there is not enough evidence to support assertions that the Hebron site is really Abraham’s tomb. Other contested sites include Joseph’s tomb in Nablus and Rachel’s tomb in Bethlehem. “It’s not real archaeology,” Finkelstein says. “It’s based on later traditions.”
More recently, a find in Jerusalem itself has stirred hope—and skepticism. Until last summer, archaeologists seeking evidence of the city David supposedly built there pointed to the few stone blocks they called the “stepped stone structure” in what is now called the City of David, south of the Temple Mount; they dated the structure to the tenth century b.c.
Last August, Israeli archaeologist Eilat Mazar (a cousin of Amihai Mazar) reported that she had found new evidence of a palace, also supposedly built by David, near the site of the stepped stone structure. Using potsherds and the traditional chronology, Mazar dated huge stones she believes made up part of the palace, to the tenth century b.c. also. The find made headlines around the world.
But detractors note that the conservative Israeli research institute sponsoring her dig, the Shalem Center, is funded by American investment banker Roger Hertog, who is on record as saying he hoped to show “that the Bible reflects Jewish history.” For her part, Mazar says her research is scientific but adds that it is “unwise to dismiss the value of the Bible as a source of history altogether.”
Finkelstein says Mazar’s stones should be dated to the ninth century, or even later. Her find, he says, only “supports what I and others have been saying for the last five years, that Jerusalem took the first step to becoming a meaningful town” a century after the time of David and Solomon.
In 1999, Ze’ev Herzog, a Tel Aviv University colleague of Finkelstein’s, convulsed the Israeli public with an article in the weekend magazine of the newspaper Ha’aretz asserting that archaeologists had shown definitively that the biblical narrative of the Israelites’ origins was not factual. Outraged letters poured into the newspaper; politicians weighed in; conferences were organized so the distressed public could quiz the archaeologists. But once the issues were addressed, feelings cooled.
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Comments (4)
Outstanding article.
I have visited the Holy Land several times and having been to the places mentioned in the Scriptures you never hear those passages read in quite the same way. Instead of black-and-white and monophonic sound, you see them in living color and Dolby stereo!
Unfortunately, due to the political situation, I could only imagine what the altar described in Joshua Ch 8 might have looked like, until now.
Thank you.
Posted by Jim Evans on May 22,2011 | 02:31 AM
praise the Lord!
Posted by Abby Fox on March 11,2011 | 10:26 AM
I have just returned from three months in Ethiopia deciphering 8th century B.C.E. Sabaean inscriptions, two of which speak of 'BR in the area ruled jointly by four kings and three queens of Sheba. 'BR both in Hebrew and Sabaean means "Those who crossed over" and "Hebrew". These inscriptions on two incense burners (I had white paint cleaned off them) were first recorded in 1973 but no other archaeologist was courageous enough to mention the name as it supported the hypotheses of (i)a substantial local Hebrew population in Old Testament times (ii) the veracity of the Sheba-Menelik Cycle of the Kebra Nagast, and (iii) the probability that Judah and Israel before 586 B.C.E. were in West Arabia not Palestine.
Old Testament archaeology is a disgraceful and politicised discipline. Most of its effort is directed to finding evidence to fit preconceived conclusions. The top "minimalists" are too timid and selfserving to consider that the Old Testament is a true story than might have occurred elsewhere and the Israeli intelligensia too morally corrupt to consider that the Promised Land is in the wrong place.
Posted by Dr Bernard Leeman on October 17,2009 | 10:58 PM
Excellent article. Thanks very much. Sometimes the internet DOES work: credible information at my fingertips. ;-)
Posted by Michael Roman on May 20,2009 | 01:14 AM