50 Friday, May 12, 1978 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Israel's 3,000 Years By SOLOMON H. STECHOLL JERUSALEM — Unlike Arthur Haley, who con- ducted a lengthy investiga- tion to find his "roots" deep in the jungle of West Africa, Israelis have always known where their roots were to be found: in the soil of Israel, where the history of the He- brews began following the migration of Semitic tribes from the Persian Gulf, 45 centuries ago. The history and origins of the people, their "roots" in Israel, are related in the Bible and other ancient records. There has, however, been a large-scale searching after more knowledge of the past, for details to supple- ment the written biblical record. A new impetus to this quest into the past fol- lowed the establishment of the modern state of Israel, 30 years ago. Archeological excavations became — and remain — the favorite pas- time of increasingly large numbers of Israelis. Under mounds of soil and stone, Israelis find the roots of their past, a record of the period of transition from food gathering to planned agriculture, the beginnings of irrigation and the de- velopment of building, from the earliest fortifications at Jericho through the typical four-room Israelite house, to the synagogues of the early common era. Above all, the way of life of the ancestors are revealed in the day to day domestic artifacts from distant ages. Hundreds of "digs" are conducted every year, strata and pottery carefully dated, where the stress is more on the systematic re- search into the past rather than the collection of removable items of an- tiquity for museums or private collections. It is this difference which dis- tinguishes archeological research in Israel today from the practice before 1948. The roots of the Hebrew nation originated, as told in Genesis, in the Ur of the Chaldees, with the migra- tion of Abraham first northwards to Nineveh and then westward to Haran in the Taurus mountain range, before moving gradually southwards to Canaan, which became the Promised Land. Given this starting point, the present-day search for the past of the Israelis is also conducted in the former Sumerian lands, through which the Patriarchs passed in the 19th Century BCE. The forefathers, nomadic shepherds, living very much like the Bedouin of today, pitching their tents at gracing sites and then moving on, were not likely to have left material traces of their sojourn. There is specific mention of one of the 12 Tribes of Is- rael, the tribe of Asher, in Egyptian documents, and the stele of Pharaoh Mer- neptah singles out the name of a nation, "Israel", a fact which gives evidence that there were Hebrews living in Canaan before the con- quest by Joshua. In other words, not all the Hebrew tribesmen had moved to Egypt, and the Exodus led by Moses was of the people in llgyptian bondage back to the land where other members of the 12 Israel- ite tribes had been living throughout the 420 years of Egyptian exile — from Joseph to Moses. The biblical account of the conquest of Canaan and the resettlement of the Is- raelites on the land, in the book of Joshua, is full of ac- counts of battles. This is fully supported by ar- cheological evidence, which, from the burnt re- mains of the destroyed cities of Lachish, Bethel, Hazor and Tel Bet Mirsim, pin- points the time of Joshua's conquest to the mid-13th Century BCE. There is mystery, also as the earth reluctantly gives up its secrets. Both at Jericho and Ai, two cities razed to the ground accord- ing to the biblical account, archeologists who worked at the sites found no evi- dence whatsoever of fires and destruction relating to this period. There is no cor- roboration from the physi- cal remains, which led some to suggest that the account of Joshua's victories may have been deliberately exaggerated, in order to raise his stature as a mili- tary commander. Excavations at Hazor, Gezer and Megiddo (Ar- mageddon) have revealed that the fortress gates of all these cities had, in King Solomon's time, been built by the royal architects ac- cording to a uniform plan. Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem was destroyed by the Chaldeans in 586 BC, but at Arad, another Tem- ple of Solomon, constructed according to the same three-division plan, was un- covered, providing a deep insight into what was a cen- tral focus of religious prac- tice in the Israel of 3,000 years ago. The excavations at Samaria, Hazor and Megiddo also provide both corroboration and a better understanding into the biblical account of the "might of the House of Omri." There is proof in the form of the palaces and walls, the buildings and the water tunnels. There is proof, also, for the description of the Palace of King Ahab given in the Bible as the "ivory house" (I Kings 22:39). A large quantity of carved ivories was found, which add to our knowledge of the Jewish heritage, as they depict a graphic vis- ual image of the Temple ornaments used by mod- ern Israel's forebears. Of the many excavations, three have pride of place: The excavation of Herod's mountain top retreat at Masada on the Dead Sea, where Jewish independence ended tragically in the year 73 CE with the mass suicide of the remaining rebels against the Romans; The excavations around the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, revealing the high, massive, magnificent walls and esplanades of the greatest builder in the his- tory of Israel, Herod the Great; And the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls in the Judean Desert caves at Qumran, which opened a sealed book, providing rich evidence of the development of Messianism in Judaism at the turn of the era, and the influence which the Qumran sectarians, probably the Essenes, exerted in shaping the doctrines and dogmas of the early Christian Church, which has grown from these roots and developed to em- brace a large part of mankind. But the Israelis are still hard at it, seeking their roots, seeking for more knowledge of the heroes and villains of their past. There is now a massive project under way in Jerusalem to uncover the city of David — the Jerusalem of the time of King David and King Sol- omon, the 70 years known as the Golden Age of Israel. There is work in progress to reveal more of the build- ing works of King Herod. Already much has been un- covered of his massive The excavations of Herod's palace on the summit of building: The Jerusalem Masada were led by Prof. Yigael Yadin, now Israel's Temple Walls, the Jericho Deputy Prime Minister. Mosaic floors, bathrooms and Palace, the Structure in Hebron over the Cave .o• palace chambers were unearthed intact. 30th Year of Statehood Machpela where Abraham and Sarah are reputedly buried, the harbor and walls of Caesarea, where at the amphitheater built by Herod, regular concerts are given every summer; the Herodian palaces at Hero- dian, Masada and Machaerus. There are tangible and heart-rending remains from the last armed struggle for indepen- dence in the Second Cen- tury CE by Bar Kokhba, the last one, that is, until the struggle which re- suited in Israel regaining her freedom 30 years ago; the skeletons in the "Cave of Horrors" in the Judean Wilderness, and the letters of the rebel leader himeslf, stored in- side reeds and found in the bag of household be- longings of one of the rebel women, who died' with all the others in the caves, starved out by the Romans. Investigations into the past already revealed that the destruction of Jerusalem by Titus in 70 CE was not the total end of Jewish settlement in the country. In Galilee espe- cially there remained de- nsely concentrated popula- tions and a rich religious life, attested to by the many synagogues built from the Second to the Fourth cen- turies CE, such as those at Chorazin and Capernaum. The later synagogues, of the Fifth and Sixth Cen- tiu-es at Jericho and at Ein Gedi, are proof that after the destruction ofJudea and exile into slavery of the people, Jews returned five centuries later. Pre-State Heroes Are Recalled By DULCY B. LEIBLER dear friend. In 1915, when Sarah and Lishansky di- Feinberg was arrested and rected the espionage activi- From the World Zionist Press Service falsely accused of having ties in Palestine. The NILI Sarah Aaronsohn was contacted British boats off group did not limit itself to born and brought up in Zik- the coast, Aaronsohn used spying for the British. It hron Yaacov. As a child she his connections with Jamal also aided the Jewish popu- loved reading about Jewish Pasha to set him free. lation, by sending out news heroes, never dreaming Aaronsohn accepted the concerning the situation in that she herself would one basic idea that the British the country , acl smuggling day participate in exploits army's entry into Palestine in letters and funds. which would make her into should be aided by espion- In September 1917, a true heroine. age. Aaronsohn met with Charming, vivacious and Thus the NILI — a secret Chaim Weizmann and his intelligent, Sarah had pro-British spying organ- colleagues in London and many admirers, among ization, came into being. Its succeeded in convincing whom was Avshalom Fein- name came from tire initial them of the importance of berg. Since he was virtually letters of "Nezah Yisrael Lo NILI's work. But that penniless, however, Sarah Yeshakker" (The Strength very month, the Turks dutifully wed the wealthy of Israel Will Not Lie, I Sam. caught a carrier pigeon man her parents chose for 15:29). It operated under sent from Athlit to Egypt. her and moved with him to Turkish rule in Syria and The intercepted message Constantinople in 1914. Palestine during the years gave clear proof of es- Her marriage to Hayyim 1915-1917. pionage activity within Abraham was such an un- Establishing initial the Jewish population. happy one that Sarah soon contact with the British Fear of reprisal killed felt she must return to her headquarters in Egypt most of the support the parents' home. En route to was far from easy. NILI group had enjoyed Palestine, she was an eye- Aaronsohn had gathered among the settlers. witness to the savage perse- together a group of Internal conflicts cution of the Armenians by young men from Zikhron weakened the organiz ' a- the Turkish authorities. Yaakov, Hadera, Petah lion. Sarah's older brother Tikva and Rishon Le On Oct. 1, 1917, soldiers Aaron, a tall, broadshoul- Zion, organized them, surrounded Zikhron dered man, gifted with qual- trained them and placed Yaacov. Sarah was among ities of leadership, devoted them in agricultural the many arrested. himself to a study of Pales- work at his experimental For four days and nights tine's soil and plants. In station. There, he also she was subjected to brutal 1906 he made a discovery prepared them for es- torture. She replied only that brought him world- pionage. His sister Sarah with words of defiance or wide fame: he found wild joined the group, as did stony silence. Fearing she Emmer wheat in Galilee - Yosef Lishansky, who could no longer hold out, she the mother of all wheat! headed a watchmen's committed suicide rather During a visit to the organization, which pro- than divulge any informa- States, at the invitation of tected the small Jewish tion. the U.S. Department of settlements in southern Agriculture in 1909, he Judea. met with influential Much information was Jewish leaders who pro- collected but it was not until vided him with the means January 1917, when Aaron- to establish his Agricul- sohn went abroad on a sci- tural Experimental Sta- entific mission, that he was tion at Athlit near Haifa. able to gain the confidence Not even Aaron knew at of the British. They sent this point that the scien- him to Egypt to organize the tific research institute espionage work on a large would turn into a center scale. of espionage. By 1915, Lishansky and Feinberg however, Aaron was tried to join Aaronsohn in convinced of the need to Egypt. They went to fight the Turks. Beersheba and then set out Lishansky escaped death many times, both at the hands of the Turks and of his fellow Jews. The latter feared that the Turks would carry out their threat to destroy entirely any village in which Lishansky was found. But, in the end, he was captured by Bedouin who found him trying to sneak into Egypt. They turned Lishansky over to the Turks, who executed him. The remaining members Feinberg came from one for the desert dressed as Be- of the earliest pioneer douin. A band of armed Be- of the organization contin- families. Brought up in douin attackejl them and ued their spying activities Hadera, he spent much of Feinberg was killed. until British forces invaded his time among local Be- Lishansky was badly Palestine. Weizmann sent douin, read a great deal and wounded, but managed to Aaronsohn on many prop- kept a diary. He was a crawl through the sand, half aganda missions to the member of the Gideonites, a dead, until he was rescued United States and Europe. society of young men who by an Australian cavalry On May 15, 1919, en route wanted to form a Jewish patrol. Later, a search was from Paris to London, Army to revolt against the made for Feinberg's body. It Aaronsohn was killed in an Turks. wasn't found and it was airplane crash. Feinberg worked in thought that shiftingdesert After the 1967 Six-Day Aaronsohn's agricultural sands had covered it for all War, Israelis discovered station, and he regarded his eternity. Avshalom Feinberg's re- boss as both a teaches and After Feinberg's death, mains in Sinai.