You'll fincrAbraham not in the soil of Ur iut ANGELA HIMSEL Special to the Jewish News t the turn of the century, archaeol- ogist Leonard Woolley spent 12 years excavating the city of Ur, located in modern-day Iraq and presumed by many to be the Ur referred to in the Bible as Abraham's homeland. The wealth and sophistication of the objects from Ur on display through May at the Detroit Institute of Arts beg the'question: Why did Abraham, with- out protest, leave a city of riches at the crossroads of important trade routes for an unknown country? We meet Abraham in Genesis 11, which opens with the story of the Tower of Babel and ends with Abraham's aenealogy. After a whole list discover that Abraham of "begots," is the seventh generation after Shem, one of Noah's sons. Abraham is the son of Terah. His wife, Sarai, is barren and they are leaving Ur. This genealogical information places Abraham firmly within his tribe and his people. A descendant of Shem, he is a Semite. But he is also, from the moment he sets foot on biblical terrain, an exile. This notion of Hebrews in exile is a recurring motif throughout the Bible as well as throughout Jewish history. In fact, the word "Hebrew" itself might contain echoes of an exiled people. Scholars have speculated that the word might derive from Habiru or Apiru, a nomadic band of people who lived do the fringe of society in the sec- ond millennium B.C.E. Another possibility is that "Hebrew" is from the word "eber." Eber, the great-grandson of Shem, is also translated as the "other side of the river," perhaps referring to the Euphrates. Both possibilities reinforce the idea of being an outsider, as Abraham chose to be when he left Ur for Canaan. Abraham wasn't just leaving behind a wealthy metropolis. He was also leaving behind thousands of gods who ate and drank, wore clothing, had sex, fought and frolicked. These gods, according to Mesopotamian myths, had created man as servants to provide food, drink and clothing for them. What Abraham would discover, only after leaving, was a God who created the world for man — a God who worked for man, clothed him and pro- vided him with food. The Mesopotamian gods were not known for their ethical or consistent behavior. They were capricious — you never knew what they were up to, which was why you needed to be ever watchful for signs in nature. Abraham would come to know and understand the Divine not through interpreting a sheep's gall bladder but directly from God's mouth, via lan- guage. The Bible is a text, composed of lan- guage, and it was from the Sumerians that cuneiform, then Akkadian and Hebrew, are derived. For Jews, language is considered the way to understand God. According to Genesis, the world was originally of one language but when men began to build a city and a tower that would reach up to heaven, God decided to confound their language and spread them across the earth. amulets on her right arm. She wore a cuff of semiprecious metals on the other arm and rings for every finger. Elsie Holmes Peck, the DIJ6is curator of Near Eastern art, incorporates quotations from ancient myths and poems to augment many of these luxury items, including a statement about eye makeup and a Sumerian love song. Cylinders And Vessels In addition to its art, ancient Mesopotamia was the cradle of writing and law. Cylinder seals were used in administrative affairs, like notary stamps, for offi- cial documentation. More than 400 seals were found in the royal tombs, engraved on both sides, usually with a banquet scene on one side and a combat scene on the other. A number of these ancient Near East cylinder seals are part of the DI/Vs permanent collection. Other objects in the permanent collection related to the period include a neo-Sumerian statue of Gudea of Lagash, one of the Sumerian city-states, and clay tablets. Ceramics from the period are on long-term loan from New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art. Another important object in the exhibit is a gold vessel in the form of an ostrich egg, hammered from This tower, the Tower of Babel, looms over Genesis 11 like an admoni- tion. The beginning of the chapter serves not only as a foreshadowing, but even as a catalyst, for Abraham's depar- ture from Ur at the end of the chapter. Aside from excavating graves, Woolley uncovered something else that is not a part of the Ur exhibit. He uncovered a huge ziggurat, a temple seeming to reach up to the heavens and dedicated to the Sumerian moon god, Nanna. That ziggurat, and others discovered in the area, is certainly reminiscent of the Tower of Babel. What Abraham discovered was that God could not be found by building a temple to bridge heaven and earth. Rather, one's words, one's prayers, could reach Him. Why did Abraham, who traded with the pharaoh of Egypt and the king of Jerusalem and who is described in Genesis as a "prince among us," leave Ur? Historically; people emigrate because of external forces, like war or poverty or famine. If the Ur exhibit is reflective at all of Abra.hards reality, Ur was more than a decent place, materially, to live. Perhaps he was not running away from something external but toward something internal, something not revealed in the position of the stars. Or maybe he left not because he needed Israel, but because Israel needed people like him who, as a Hebrew, an outsider, would be willing to move on and make his way in a strange land. The midrash proposes that Abraham was not only physically but also spiritu- ally "on the other side" He stood not a single sheet of gold with colorful geometric deco- rations of semiprecious stones at the top and base. In antiquity, the ostrich was venerated for its swiftness and strength. Later, the egg became associ- ated with regeneration and resurrection as it found its way into Christian and Islamk art. The idea of the egg and fertility remains today in the symbolism of Easter and the Passover seder plate. Tumblers, bowls and other vessels for eating and drinking emphasize the importance of ritual in the afterlife. Particularly outstanding is a tall, fluted tumbler made of electrum, an alloy of gold and sil- ver. Chased patterns of herringbone and double zig- zags indicate craftsmanship of the highest order. Because gold does not corrode, these objects have retained their original beauty without blemish. High above one of the drinking vessels is a panel about how the ancients made beer. Jewish history puts these amazing finds in per- spective. David was King of Judah and Israel 1010- 970 B.C.E. Solomon built his Temple at Jerusalem circa 950 B.C.E. That "Treasures from the Royal Tombs of Ur" predate these venerable Jewish forefa- thers by about 1,500 years places the exhibit on an even more awesome note. 0 on the side of popular opinion but on the side of morality and ethical behav- ior. Thus, when Abraham pleaded with God to save Sodom and Gomorrah, he was standing alone and questioning God. "Will you also destroy the right- eous with the wicked Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?" Unlike the Sumerians, Abraham expected ethical behavior from God, and in return, God required a certain level of righteousness from man. The Ur exhibit is exciting in that it very possibly reveals the land in which Abraham was born and grew up. From it, one might speculate why he left. In the tombs that Woolley excavated, not only were the deceased and all their finery interred, but also their atten- dants, who presumably committed sui- cide in order to serve in the next life. In contrast, Abraham is buried, accordina to tradition, in the Cave of Machpelah b in Hebron. And in that grave, unlike in Ur, no gold jewelry, no musical instruments, no seals and no grave companions have been found. At the Ur exhibit, you will not find a great statue depicting Abraham. But'to look for physical evidence of Abraham's existence is to miss the point alttsgether. If you want to know Abrahain, you won't find him by sifting through the soil but the language., The legacy Abraham left behind is contained with- in text, within words, in ethical and moral behavior. What he left behind is the possibility of a real relationship, a covenant, between man and God. 0 Angela Himsel is ' a New York-based freelance writer "Treasures from the Royal Tombs of Ur" will be on exhibit at the Detroit Institute of Arts Feb. 25-May 6. Tickets to the exhibition are $8 adults/ $5 children/free for DIA members. Prices include an Acoustiguide audio tour and museum admission. Museum hours are 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Wednesdays-Fridays, 11 a.m.-9 p.m. the first Friday of every month, and 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. For exhibi- tion information, call (313) 833-8499; for group tours information, call (313) 833-7981. A series of lectures, classes and workshops accompany the exhibit. Most are free of charge. First up is a 2 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 25, lecture, titled "The Excavation of Treasures from the Royal Tombs of Ur." It will be delivered by Dr. Richard L. Zettler, associate professor of anthropology in the Near Eastern section of the University of Pennsylvania Museum, organizing curator of the exhibit and co-editor of its accompanying catalogue. For a complete list of exhibition activities, call (313) 833-4249; or go to our Web site at ww.detroitjewishnews.com .