The Michigan Daily-Sunday, Nov Page 4-Sunday, November 11, 1979--The Michigan Daily Tel A nafa: Linking Israel s past andfiut "I tried to tell her how if you could not accept the past and its burden there was no future, for without one there cannot be the other, and how if you could-accept the past you might hope for the future, for only out of the past can you make the future."R -Robert Penn Warren, "All The King's Men " HE ISRAELI excavation site Tel Anafa rises gently out of an expanse of fruit trees' and cotton fields in Upper Galilee. It is this mound of earth, tranquil in its re a ive isolation, that a team of University ar- chaeologists has chosen as the locus for its in- vestigation into the debris of an ancient culture. For the past two summers the excavators have dug six days a week, seven hours a day, a few handfuls of earth at a time, trying to piece together a 100-by-40 yard section of history. As they recapture and preserve this history, the archaeologists at Tel Anafa (translated "Hill of the Heron") also provide a link between past and future. By acknowledging the importance of distant events, and trying to restore them for posterity, they affirm-the con- tinuity of human existence and express a certain faith in its heritage. The fighter planes that fly incessantly over the tel-situated on the border separating Israel, Syria, and Lebanon-are trying in a very different way to seize those same roots. But history for the par- ticipants in the Arab-Israeli conflict is, quite specifically, a means of proving one's rights to the much-disputed Mideast territories. The diggers and armies basically ignore each other in their respec- tive searches, and the noise of the planes blends into the background. "It sounds intrinsically boring," University junior Nick Cahall says of his work. "But if you're willing to look at it romantically, you are peeling off not just dirt but events of history. It becomes very absorbing." Concurs senior Helen Smith, "Roman- tic is the only word for it-except, of course, dusty and exhausting." This sense of romance, along with the rigorous Elisa Isaacson is associate editor of the Sunday Magazine. By Elisa Isaacson work schedule, absorbs the diggers enough that the fighting plays a small part in their daily lives. "You hear the air raids, you get used to them, and you find they don't mean much," says Cahill, a two-year veteran of the Tel Anafa excavation. "It's really not dangerous up there-in any way. It's sort of like hearing traffic outside-and I'd be much more terrified to dig in downtown Detroit than in the Up=_ per Galilee." Cahill admits, however, that though the raids are "something you get used to, I don't like getting numb about something I feel, on purely moral grounds, should affect me." But other students insist the Arab-Israeli conflict "does affect the way you live in Israel"; the precautions taken have merely been ingrained in the peoples' existence. At the pre-season lecture, diggers are warned not to walk alone'at night and not to pick up "strange metal objects." It is second nature for Israelis to show their purses upon entering stores, and the guards patrolling shops are not looking for shoplifters. XCAVATION AT Tel Anafa began only after Israel took the Golan Heights from Syria in 197. Israel has been hosting more and more excavation teams in the pa ew years; because of its strategic location as a meeting ground between East and West, the coun- try's rich legacy dates back for thousands of generations. Following the 1967 war, the Israeli government promptly invited an archaeologist from the University of Missouri to excavate Tel Anafa while the country's hold on the Golan lasted. The site proved an extremely wealthy one, and digging continued through 1973. In 1978 University Classical Archaeology Prof. Sharon Herbert, a member of the excavation team in the early seven- ties, organized the present program, which is fun- ded by the University and the University of Missouri, and by a matching grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. This particular project-the excavation of a small section at the Hellenistic period level (150-80 B.C.), between one and two meters under-is slated for "completion" next summer. The 1980 session will be eight weeks long, and Herbert said she expects about 50 student diggers. Applications are being ac- cepted through Herbert, who said the two major requirements are enthusiasm and an ability to work hard. Students must pay their own way on the dig, but there is opportunity for up to three University credits for the work. Evening lectures and Saturday field trips to other excavation sites supplement the 'practical knowledge gained during the work day. The fee is "whatever it costs to keep (the studen- ts)," according to Herbert. One student estimates he spent $1,200 on room, board, and air fare last summer. In addition to the University students, the summer-digs are populated by more itinerant amateur archaeologists from all over the world and from all walks of life. Professors, homemakers, journalists and the like will dig a few weeks at a time, some out of long-standing serious interest and others just for a lark. Most pesons in the field agree that on-the-job experience is the best way to learn. "Archeology is one of the few professions left that has an apprentice system," says Herbert. The traditional nine-to-five work day is moved forward four hours at the tel to avoid the sweltering afternoon sun. After a light breakfast of bread and jam, coffee or tea, the diggers hop on a bus for the 20-minute ride to the site. The light repast is enough to tide them over for the first few hours of crouching, trowel in hand, to sift the earth for clues to the nature of a culture that has been extinct for 2,000 years. At times, the work is undeniably monotonous. Israeli natives as well as tourists gather at the edge of the site to glimpse the un- .covering of history, but the thrill of the hunt eludes most of them. "That must be dull," is the cheerful comment most ofen tossed out to the perspiring diggers. "It's a little like being in the zoo," Herbert says of the scrutiny. As the morning wears on, backs become sore and knees become stiff, but practically all the students agree the discomfort is immaterial. "It takes a while to get used to squatting, but it's not like you're digging ditches on a road crew," says Cahill. Ac- cording to Herbert, the only physical prerequisite for a digger is a relatively healthy body. "You have to be in good shape," she explains, "but you don't have to be a Charles Atlas." The most strenuous ac- tivities are hauling dirt and breaking up mud brick with sharp instruments. Nevertheless, the second breakfast, at about 9 a.m., is a welcome diversion from the shovels and pottery shards. This time the.fare is more substan- tial: Hard-boiled eggs, tomatoes, cucumbers, peanut butter, and, on occasion, sweetrolls. Despite the physical exertion, some diggers claim they lose their appetite because of the heat and the early Michael Rosenblum hours. In fact, travel agents have been known to promote "excavation vacations"-the scholar's equivalent to "Send this boy to summer camp"-as weight loss programs. Because the progress is slow (only two or three inches of soil are removed in a single day) games like Botticelli have become popular to wile away the hours.. A cool breeze usually blows in from the Jordan River around 11 a.m., and the diggers take a 15- minute "water break" during which they splash the sand and sweat off their bodies. The work day for most ends at noon, just when urban business executives in the nearby city of Kiryat Schmona are leaving their offices for lunch. The diggers then relax for an hour, washing the day's pottery before they return by bus to the hostel, their summer sleeping quarters. Afternoons are free, as are Saturdays, and usually occupied with sunning, swimming, sleeping, or shopping and sightseeing in Kiryat Schmona. Toothpaste, shampoo, candy bars,, and other necessities of life can be purchased in town, along with 50-cent beer and iced coffee-a blend of coffee beans, ice cream and liquor. HE DIGGING process itself is one of history in reverse: The earliest civiliza- tions have been submerged under layers of later ones. The archeologists must be pa ientenough to wade through the layers that may not correspond to their period of specialization, because none of these once-in-forever artifacfs can be tossed off lightly. "If there's a major period sit- ting on top of the city you want, look for a site that is already exposed," advises Herbert. The Univer- sity's team is concentra at Tel Anafa, because from that era are the m The Israelis, however,v much a part of their ma terested in the earlier 1 500 B.C. They would lik tlements of the Old TeE assert their right to the la The main attraction f appears to be the remai The tel is located at the trade routes-from Dam Sea, and up and down the have unearthed artifact as export vessels, such bottles. The dates on th pinpoint the time in whi "As a Hellenistic site, T important in the Medil While most cities from during the Roman Empi site experienced only mi This preservation of Hel layers of often oppress unusual, and that makes The diggers have been two sessions on the ruins all the trappings of structure's former sple remaining nsaic floors purpose of thL three-yes stand," through this sin workings of an ancient Setting a time limit for restricting, but Herbert reasonable length of tin importance of the site. See DIG Sharon Herbert