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The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

September 27, 1991 - Image 30

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1991-09-27

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1991

I

Los Angeles (JTA) —
Despite the threat of legal
action from Israel, one of the
world's foremost research
libraries went ahead this
week and opened its
photographic collection of
the Dead Sea Scrolls to all
qualified scholars.
The move by the Hun-
tington Library in San
Marino, Calif., was hailed by
many biblical scholars as the
breakup of the tight
academic cartel that for the
last four decades has con-
trolled the rare manuscripts,
which are widely regarded
as one of the most significant
archaeological discoveries of
the 20th century.
But it was bitterly attack-
ed by the Israel Antiquities
Authority in Jerusalem as
tantamount to trafficking in
stolen property and as a
flagrant violation of a
longstanding agreement.
The Antiquities Authority,
an Israeli government agen-
cy that is the official custo-
dian of archaeological finds
in Israel, said it is consider-
ing legal action against the
library.
The library's director, Dr.
William Moffett, received a
faxed message from the au-
thority's director, Amir
Drori, warning Huntington
that it faces litigation if it
insists on granting access to
unpublished extracts from
the scrolls.
The Jerusalem Post quoted
Mr. Drori as saying, "If they
do this, it would be a clear
legal and ethical transgres-
sion. We have informed
them that if this occurs, we
will weigh action."
A decision to take legal ac-
tion was made at a meeting
of the special committee of
scholars overseeing publica-
tion of the 2,000-year-old
manuscripts, the Post re-
ported.
Until now, access to the
scrolls has been restricted to
about 40 scholars around the
world, to whom fragments
have been parceled out for
deciphering and analysis.
They work under the super-
vision of the Antiquities Au-
thority.
Critics have long charged
that the privileged scholars
have been slow and secretive
in researching the
fragments and in sharing
their findings with other
scholars and the public.
But Mr. Drori has been
quoted as saying that 80
percent of the scroll material
has already been published
and the remaining 20 per-

cent should be ready for
publication by a 1997
deadline set by the scholars
committee.
Israeli officials contend
that open access to the un-
completed texts could pre-
vent a "definitive inter-
pretation" of the scrolls.
An unnamed Israeli schol-
ar warned that "black
market publication" of the
remaining fragments would
set off "a gold rush con-
ducive to slipshod scholar-
ship."
Another source said it in-
vited "the law of the jungle."
The Huntington Library
has stored about 3,000
photographic master
negatives of virtually all of
the original scrolls and
fragments. Its announce-
ment last weekend that it
would grant access to them
was an academic bombshell
that made the front- pages of
major newspapers
worldwide.
Dr. Moffett told reporters
that his action will render
restrictive agreements on
translating and publishing
the scrolls "null and void —
or at least pointless. At one

The original scrolls
were discovered
between 1947 and
1956 in caves in
the Judean Desert
near the Dead Sea.
They remained
under Jordanian
jurisdiction until
the 1967 war, when
they came under
Israeli control.

stroke, we liberate the
scholars as well as the
Scrolls," he said.
He described his action as
the scholarly equivalent of
breaching the Berlin Wall
and freeing hostages in Leb-
anon.
But according to Magen
Broshi, curator of the Shrine
of the Book in Jerusalem,
which houses the scrolls,
along with the Rockefeller
Museum, "It's a most scan-
dalous thing."
Mr. Drori accused the
Huntington Library of
breaking an accord under
which the photographic
copies were to be kept solely
for preservation and safe-
keeping.
The Antiquities Authority
claims that in 1980, fearing
loss or damage to the scrolls
in the event of war or other

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