THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 18 Friday, April 10, 1981 THE FINEST AND LARGEST POOL BUILDER IN THE MIDWEST New Volume Gives Different Hypothesis tri Almost a quarter of century of supplying discriminating buyers has earned an unequaled reputation for Miami Pools. And, if you purchase a pool with Miami, well give $150.00 to your Temple or Synagogue. You are cordially invited to visit our beautiful indoor display at 33060 Northwestern Highway at Fourteen Mile Road. 15 Yr. financing available miami blue water pools, inc. 33060 Northwestern Highway West Bloomfield, Michigan 626 - 5131 SOUTHFIELD OFFICE: 358-0012 ROMEO, MI. OFFICE: 752-6333 By ALLEN A. WARSEN "There are certain advan- tages in being Jewish when attempting to understand the Gospels, especially if one has been brought up in close contact with the Jewish liturgy, the ceremo- nials of the Jewish religious year, the rabbinical litera- ture and the general Jewish moral and cultural outlook. Many aspects of the Gospels which, for the non-Jew, are matters for scholarly 'enquiry, are for the Jew as n s pci G Who was - Barabbas whose given name was Jesus? Was he a rebel like his fellow prisoner, Jesus of ,Nazareth? Was he a bandit as the Gospel ac- cording to St. John as- serts? W IN SALE AT FABULOUS ALL-NEW 29525 Worthwestern Hwy. The Merchant Bet. 12 & 13 Mile • Southfield 354-6505 4050 Rochester Rd. • Troy 689-0900 of VINO AN UNBELIEVABLE PLACE FOR PEOPLE WHO ENJOY THE ROOD LIFE! Featuring Great Kosher Wine Of The World : From . . Italy . . . Israel . . . France .. . California . . . New York ... Spain Plus Every Wine Obtainable AT THE LOWEST CASE PRICES IN TOWN! Also FOODS OF THE WORLD • • • • • Visit Our 8000 Case Wine Cellar & Exciting Array Upstair Exotic Mustards 200 Varieties of Old World Cheese Fresh Pasta Made Daily • Specialty Foods French Baguettes Baked Daily • Gourmet Delicacies SPECIAL GIFT BASKETS MADE TO ORDER There Is Nothing Quite Like 'T Merc nt of VINO If we haven't got the wine you want in stock — we'll get it for you! VISA' master charge P., ,OIC,lotik Can 74 it 1', I w Yo' familiar as the air he breathes." The above passage is from the introduction to Hyam Maccoby's volume "Revolu- tion in Judea," subtitled "Jesus and the Jewish Re- sistance," published by Tap- linger. Maccoby commences his study of the Gospels with a thorough examination of the Barabbas case claiming that it "contains in minia- ture not only the elements that go to make the Gospel story but also the Gospel orientation and attitude towards the life and death of Jesus." a Roman army and the Holy Temple plundered by its commander Sabinus. Enraged by this atrocity, the people ofJerusalem rose in revolt but were over- whelmed by the Romans, who mercilessly crucified 2,000 of the captured rebels. "Crucifixion," writes Maccoby, "was originally not a punishment but a form of human sacrifice used in fertility cults be- cause a slow-dying victim was held to produce more beneficial effects on the crop. It was used particu- larly in the cult of Tam- muz, the dying-and- resurrected god of Leba- non and Phoenicia." Asked, "Is it lawful to give tribute to Caesar or not?" Jesus replied, "Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's and to God the things that are God's." This famous answer, S.G.F. Brandon (quoted by Maccoby) interprets thus: "Let Caesar go back to Rome where he belongs, and leave God's land to the people of God." Maccoby adds: "In other words-, he meant to forbid the giving of tribute, not to allow it." Maccoby, moreover, disputes Matthew's as- sertion that Jesus taught not to resist evil. Such teaching, he insists, "is a negation of everything the Jews stood for." Throughout their his- tory, he points out, "the Jews fought oppression. They battled against the Philistines, Assyrians, Greeks, and even against evil Jewish rulers." It is believed that the Carthaginians were the first to extensively use crucifixion as a punish- ment. The Romans learned it from them. It was the Ro- mans who crucified "hun- Interestingly, the ex- dreds of thousands of Jews pressions robber and ban- during the period of their dit, the author explains, Maccoby, unlike some occupation." "have been used throughout other scholars, is of the history to denigrate The inhuman punish- opinion that Jesus actually freedom-fighters. The ments, the exorbitant taxes considered himself "the Greek word for bandit (les- and "the crass oppression of king of the Jews." Jesus' ter) was frequently used to such governors as Pilate" transfiguration, he argues, describe the Jewish caused an open revolt in "was neither more or less freedom-fighters by those Judea against Roman rule. who were unsympathetic to Philo, the Alexandrian than a coronation, carried out in magnificent tradi- them." John, for instance, Jewish philosopher, char- claimed, "The Jews favored , acterizes Pilate as "cruel by tional style on a carefully- selected spot, , the lofty Barabbas just because he nature, and hard-hearted, mountain-top of Mount was a bandit." and entirely lacking in re- Hermon." The author refutes John's morse." He continued as allegation and denies the The author concludes his governor of Judea until 36 historicity of the "Passover study thus: "Jesus was a CE "when he was dismissed privilege." He contends that good man who fell among for a brutal and pointless nowhere in the Roman Em- Gentiles. That is to say he massacre of Samaritans." pire did such a privilege The Gospels, written by fell among those who did not exist. It is, therefore, anti-Jewish and pro- understand that to turn him "inherently unlikely that Roman writers, portray into a god was to diminish the Jews of all people of the the Pharisees and Jesus him . . . As a Jew he fought Empire had been granted as antagonists. Accord- not against some metaphys- the unique privilege of fre- ing to the author, the op- ical evil but against Rome. eing a prisoner accused of posite was true. Yet the movement which sedition." denied his life-by deifying Jesus's watchword "the kingdom of God," the author him misrepresented him as In the chapter titled explains, was a metaphor being opposed to the people "Barabbas," the author con- whom he molt loved and on cludes that "Jesus of signifying the end of Roman whose behalf he fought." rule. Nazareth and Jesus Barab- bas were the same man" and that Barabbas' of the Gos- pels is a fictitious character created by the anti-Semitic Gospel writers. held a Bar Mitzva at Zion NEW YORK (JTA) — The author describes National Park and strolled Every summer since 1977, a the Roman conquest of along Fisherman's Wharf in Jewish summer camp pro- Palestine and delineates San Francisco and through gram has sent some 30 the oppressive policies Universal 'Studios, she re- and six adults and rapacity of the teenagers ported. traveling over 4,000 miles Roman rulers. He singles out Julius Caesar of the in the western and north- Roman emperors as the western United States to friendliest toward the present Jewish-oriented Jews. Caesar, for exam- theatrical performances for BONN — In the two years ple, outlawed tax- campers in national parks, since NBC aired the according to the February farming and protected "Holocaust" television "Jewish citizen-rights issue of "The Circle," a pub- series in Germany, the Fed- lication of the National and freedom of worship eral Center for Polit; -1 throughout the Roman Jewish Welfare Board. Education has recei The Oregon "Teens on world." nearly 150,000 requests tor Wheels" is a program of the Maccoby recounts Anti- Additional information con- Mittleman Jewish Commu- pater's and Herod's submis- cerning the extermination nity Center in Portland. siveness to Rome and their Joyce Shields, - director of of Jews by the Third Reich. high-handedness toward Some 70,000 of the queries the summer camp program the Judeans. He states that were sent in by teachers. at the center, reported that Antipater was assassinated When it was broadcast in national camps have been by his enemies and Herod January 1979, "Holocaust," visited by the group in Ore- died "disfigured by madness was watched by 41 percent gon, California, Arizona, and murder." Only after his of the television audience. Utah, Wyoming, New death, notes the author, did Mexico, Colorado and the Jews realize "how far Idaho. Herod had delivered them into Roman hands." He In addition to the basic NEW YORK — Some 200 adds, "It was in the bitter acts of planning, rehearsing American and Canadian conditions of this awaken- and staging the perform- college students will begin a ing that Jesus spent his ances, the participants have program of study this week childhood." at Tel Aviv UniverSity in also baked kugel and halla Soon after Herod's death in the coals of a campfire at the overseas student pro- tierus f alevui wa,,4cciwi.e411y,,,,YRUpwatone NowkiQjipl-V IN*2 „IgranY4 = Camping, Theatrical Group Performs in Western Parks Holocaust Impact High in Germany TAU Program