Keepers of the Lost Ark?
Christians in Ethiopia have long claimed to have the ark of the covenant. Our reporter investigated
- By Paul Raffaele
- Photographs by Paul Raffaele
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2007, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 6)
On the way back to the boat, we passed small log huts with conical thatched roofs—the monks' cells. Abba Gebre entered one and pulled from the shadows an ancient bronze tray set on a stand. He said Menelik brought it from Jerusalem to Aksum along with the ark.
"The Jerusalem temple priests used this tray to collect and stir the sacrificial animals' blood," Abba Gebre went on. When I checked later with Pankhurst, the historian said the tray, which he had seen on an earlier visit, was probably associated with Judaic rituals in Ethiopia's pre-Christian era. Lake Tana, he said, was a stronghold of Judaism.
Finally, Abba Gebre led me to an old church built from wood and rock in the traditional Ethiopian style, circular with a narrow walkway hugging the outer wall. Inside was the mak'das, or holy of holies—an inner sanctum shielded by brocade curtains and open only to senior priests. "That's where we keep our tabots," he said.
The tabots (pronounced "TA-bots") are replicas of the tablets in the ark, and every church in Ethiopia has a set, kept in its own holy of holies. "It's the tabots that consecrate a church, and without them it's as holy as a donkey's stable," Abba Gebre said. Every January 19, on Timkat, or the Feast of the Epiphany, the tabots from churches all over Ethiopia are paraded through the streets.
"The most sacred ceremony occurs at Gonder," he went on, naming a city in the highlands just north of Lake Tana. "To understand our deep reverence for the ark, you should go there."
Gonder (pop. 160,000) spreads across a series of hills and valleys more than 7,000 feet above sea level. On the advice of a friendly cleric, I sought out Archbishop Andreas, the local leader of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church. As Andreas ushered me into a simple room in his office, I saw that he had the spindly frame and sunken cheeks of an ascetic. Despite his high position, he was dressed like a monk, in a worn yellow robe, and he held a simple cross carved from wood.
I asked if he knew of any evidence that the ark had come to Ethiopia with Menelik. "These stories were handed down through the generations by our church leaders, and we believe them to be historical facts," he told me in a whisper. "That's why we keep tabots in every church in Ethiopia."
At noon the next day, Andreas, in a black robe and black turban, emerged from a church on a slope above Gonder and into a crowd of several hundred people. A dozen priests, deacons and acolytes—clad in brocade robes in maroon, ivory, gold and blue—joined him to form a protective huddle around a bearded priest wearing a scarlet robe and a golden turban. On his head the priest carried the tabots, wrapped in ebony velvet embroidered in gold. Catching sight of the sacred bundle, hundreds of women in the crowd began ululating—making a singsong wail with their tongues—as many Ethiopian women do at moments of intense emotion.
As the clerics began to walk down a rocky pathway toward a piazza at the center of town (a legacy of Italy's occupation of Ethiopia in the 1930s), they were hemmed in by perhaps 1,000 more chanting and ululating devotees. At the piazza, the procession joined clerics carrying tabots from seven other churches. Together they set off farther downhill, with the trailing throng swelling into the thousands, with thousands more lining the road. About five miles later, the priests stopped beside a pool of murky water in a park.
All afternoon and through the night, the priests chanted hymns before the tabots, surrounded by worshipers. Then, prompted by glimmers of light sneaking into the morning sky, Archbishop Andreas led the clerics to celebrate the baptism of Jesus by playfully splashing one another with the pool's water.
The Timkat celebrations were to continue for three more days with prayers and masses, after which the tabots would be returned to the churches where they were kept. I was more eager than ever to locate the original ark, so I headed for Aksum, about 200 miles northeast.
Just outside Gonder, my car passed Wolleka village, where a mud-hut synagogue bore a Star of David on the roof—a relic of Jewish life in the region that endured for as long as four millennia, until the 1990s. That was when the last of the Bet Israel Jews (also known as the Falasha, the Amharic word for "stranger") were evacuated to Israel in the face of persecution by the Derg.
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Comments (585)
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this sounds a bit fishy, I thought it was in Israel. But who am i to tell you what to believe?
Posted by jane Kels on May 8,2013 | 10:25 AM
I Donot doubt the Ethiopian Connection, remember that Salomon divided his robe into 12, told his brother to take 10 tribes and incline to the North but that he would take 2 tribes and incline to the South. Some claim that the 10 lost tribes went to Europe, the founding states of the E U were 10, the pope’s claim to High Priesthood is unfounded while it is said that the true High Priesthood is in Ethiopia. What did Salomon know about the endgame problems of the North that made him wanted his line to be in the south and not in the north?
Posted by Ansel Thompson on May 2,2013 | 09:14 PM
My am a born again christian and since I was a child of ten years old I have heard about the ark of the covenant and I through it was a fariy tale to keep me scared or just to keep me from asking to many questions. I am a idealist. I want to now what else the goverment and the church has to hide. What is the price we have to pay to no the truth the real hard truth. And I no we are not alone in this world people wake up its time for a change and we are headind down dark days soon and when the children of satan return the world will be in chaos and they will enslave us ans we will no longer be here. The truth is out there how much longer will the human race be cattle and be lied to. We the people of the real world they are here and walk with us everyday. Jesus is coming soon and like a thief in the nite. He is coming soon. I want to the truth and I will pay any price even my soul to no it.
Posted by Jeremy Justice on May 1,2013 | 02:48 PM
Great blog. Keep up the good work. A new discovery has caused much excitement amongst many archaeologists from around the globe and causing some debate on this issue as it was previously thought that the Ark of the Covenant was permanently lost. Of all places in the world Panama it would seem to be the most unlikely place to have discovered this ancient relic the Ark of the Covenant, however new evidence substantiates the claims that the lost Ark of the Covenant was smuggled to Mesoamerica by Malchiah using the Phoenicians and was hidden in a cave in Volcan Chiriqui in the republic of Panama. Check out their link at The Ark of the Covenant Website Chiriqui archaeological sites.
Posted by arkofthecovenants on February 4,2013 | 02:19 PM
The serenity of the Mountain has appealed immensely to the spiritual imagination of different sages from different civilizations throughout history. For instance, the Egyptian myth that came down around 15,000 BC and 10,000 BC spoke of lands of gods and paradise in the south. The old Egyptian paradise in the south was called Ta Neteru in reference to Mount Kenya, where the three Egyptian principle gods were known to live long before the president of the land of the south made voyage to Egypt. This is an elaborate and complete Nile Valley system and at later dates the dispersal of man from the cradle of mankind. It must be noted when the myth came over it is not the years that the principle gods and the president of the land of the south made voyage. The myth is in reference to periods before the creation of man when gods had habitation in the Nile valley. The legends are a reflection of collective memory that recognizes the movements of blacks or Inu from Mount Kenya region or East Africa to the North. There lacks clear water line to determine when gods left and when men arrived because their history is shrouded in mystery and intertwined personalities in anthromorphic nature. www.yamumbi.com copyright 2012
Posted by kamau on December 21,2012 | 02:56 AM
where ever the arc may lie it should be left in peace for it is a holy object not ment for public display and in the wrong hands a dangerous weapon
Posted by hope on December 11,2012 | 03:23 PM
Very Iteresting!
Posted by Jon reed Evans on September 23,2012 | 05:07 PM
Only God knows where the ark of covenant is located now only time will tell folks or my dear christian brothers and sisters.
Posted by on August 5,2012 | 08:24 PM
Hi my name is gage Laubscher I start this comment by saying the ark of the covenant has always been a huge intrest to me I do believe it was taken to Ethiopia and I do believe it is in that chapel gaurded by the gaurdian of the ark you must of felt honered and privliged to be in his presence and only yards away from one of the biggest mysteries wrapped inside an inigma in the history of human beings, one of the most religous and sacred items that still exist I wonder what that priest does everyday I wonder how it feels to be the only person to know the exact where abouts of the ark of the covenant he wakes up with it only feet away from him. And gets to be in its presence of it everyday he pretty much admitted it was the saying no one can see it besides him you and me both know that its in there I think another trip should be made and you should go back and try to talk to him again this time be like off the record just for my own curiosity and for my own religous beliefes is the ark of the covenant inside that chapel. I also would like to kno what the ark looks like if he has seen the capabilities of the power of the ark I would love to stand outside the chapel where its supose to be held just so I could be that much closer to something more powerful than any man somethin with that much history somethin directly related to god. I would give it my all to try to ask that guardian any questions concerning the ark
Posted by gage laubscher on August 4,2012 | 12:12 AM
@how about some evidence... You do realize that the minute a person becomes skeptical that God will pull away from the person right? Skepticism according to every religious leader and mystic that I have contacted is considered a POISON to God that harms faith. In short had you managed in theory to go back in time and witness the raising of Jarus' daughter and had been there, Jesus would not have been able to raise her until you left the house as your skepticism would have hindered him. God will never act for or near a skeptic as the source of the poison (Socrates) got his teachings from a demonic witch. In short anyone who is a skeptic is doomed never to see any evidence from God becuase it requires faith before evidence something your school of thought forbids.
Posted by RSM on August 1,2012 | 07:52 AM
Oh Jah stand for rightious and uplift the opressed ones like I.
Posted by Simphiwe W Vena on July 11,2012 | 09:23 AM
Many of scholars have no confidant on what the ethiopian claims on ancient history .Lack of deep research creats confussion and mistrust.not only the ARK,there are many documenties hiden to our modern world in order to reserve for unkown time. Recently ethiopian government tried to abolish all the documents where it might be suspected to stored. Readers must put their intention that many of the bibical records were taken from ethiopia to stablish this today's bibile book.still ethiopia has many documents remain uncoverd which can not be dismised by Authorties repression. Not only the ark,ethiopian is the only were broght a gift for new born jesus,the king of kings meant many kings (country-state )under the king of Ethiopia by the prist Maji three countrs which were under the rule of ethiopia present there gift to the born son
Posted by goban gergo on July 2,2012 | 07:24 PM
I havent foud the ark but i know where the covenant is, leviticus is one of the tablets and deuteronomy is the other. leviticus instructs the israelites to construct the national temple, and deuteronomy is the law for the formation of national government. and numbers calls for the seperation of church and state. the covenant of God is the seperation of church and state on which the colonist established the United States.
Posted by Russell on June 27,2012 | 07:24 AM
Suppose for a moment that the ark isn't there - then for Ethiopians, all their suffering is in vain, just another desperately poor, war-torn hell-hole. Who wants to face that? They believe out of NEED. But this makes them no different than other religious believers. If I were to ask "for all this supposed ark's power, why did it prove so useless while the Babylonians were sacking Jerusalem?", I'm sure a logical answer will be provided. "God had forsaken the Jews because of their wickedness" or some such pathological nonsense. Maybe the Ethiopians should focus on what's real? They do have stewardship of an important slice of the Rift Valley, which in time will tell us more about human history than all the worlds delusional books combined!
Posted by Johnny on May 12,2012 | 02:17 AM
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