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Educational II

Monumental Water System of Biblical Times Uncovered By Archaeologists Near Jerusalem

August 2005

Archaeologists this week completed eight weeks of digging at a cave close to Kibbutz Tzuba near Jerusalem, revealing a monumental rock-hewn water system dating back to the time of King Hezekiah, from the eighth century B.C. Last year the site received world-wide attention with the discovery of a cave said to have been used by John the Baptist and his followers for baptism purposes and cultic rituals. Archaeologists say that the new discoveries at the site shed light on the reason why a group of baptizers would have chosen this cave, out of the many thousands existing in the hills of Judah west of Jerusalem, as the scene of their activities.

The archaeological work at this site is being undertaken by a team led by Dr Shimon Gibson and Professor James Tabor of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte in the USA, and with the sponsorship of Kibbutz Tzuba and the Foundation for Biblical Archaeology. “This is one of the most exciting sites I have excavated during my entire archaeological career”’, said Gibson this week. “Not only do we have a cave that appears to have been used by a party of baptizers in the first century A.D., but it would appear that it was chosen for three reasons: for its seclusion, size and antiquity. What baptizers wanted was a place, distant from nearby villages, large enough to contain groups of people coming to be immersed, and ancient enough so that the cultic side of the rituals was put into a context linking them to the time of the Israelite prophets.” The cave associated with John the Baptist was found not far from the village of Ain Kerem, which is regarded as the traditional birthplace of John the Baptist.

The recent excavations have shown that the cave where the baptisms took place was part of a much larger Iron Age water system, rock-cut in places to a depth of some twenty metres (65 feet). It was a monumental enterprise with a vertical shaft, an open horizontal corridor, a flight of stone steps above a tunnel, and three external plastered pools, all of which was on the slope above an underground reservoir. “Excavating this water system was a bit of a nightmare”, said Gibson. “It meant excavating on a steep slope, clearing away large quantities of rubble and soil, and digging through a maze of rock-cut cavities. But we succeeded in the end and the results are amazing.” Pottery finds from the site show that the entire water system was built in the eighth century B.C. at the time of King Hezekiah, at the same time as the hewing of the famous Siloam Tunnel in Jerusalem, which was not too long before the siege of Jerusalem in 701 B.C. by Sennacherib at the head of an Assyrian army. “Similar monumental water systems”, Gibson pointed out, “have been found elsewhere, but hitherto only within Israelite cities, such as at Beth Shemesh and Gibeon. Never before has such a massive water system been found isolated in the countryside without any town or city attached to it.” Such a massive enterprise, archaeologists deduce, could only have been a project undertaken by the kingdom of Judah, and it must have been used by the inhabitants of the nearby biblical town of Suba. The dig showed that the water system fell into disuse in the seventh and sixth centuries B.C., although the reservoir-cave below was still being used for its water. During the Persian and Hellenistic periods the cave was still partially being used, but was eventually completely abandoned in the second century B.C.

 

One hundred years after the cave was abandoned, it was reused by a group of people who practiced cultic rituals in the front portion of the cave and who immersed themselves in water at the back of the cave. These rituals were kept up at the cave from the time of John the Baptist himself and until the second century AD. There was also evidence that the baptizers anointed feet with oil in a stone installation. Eventually, the cave was adapted by Byzantine monks – probably from nearby Ain Karim - to celebrate the memory of John the Baptist, carving an amazing series of large drawings into the walls of the cave, depicting the figure of John the Baptist, his decapitated head, his relic arm, crosses and other symbols. The cave was eventually abandoned with the coming of the Crusaders and the local Christians apparently fled for their lives. “Although the Crusaders were a brutal lot”, says Gibson, “with local Christians fleeing for their lives, side-by-side with Jews and Moslems, the fear of the Crusaders brought about a set of circumstances which meant that the location of the cave was totally forgotten and this allowed for the absolute preservation of this unusual site for the benefit of future generations.” The cave was found by chance during an excursion in 1999. Gibson added that “the new excavations have provided us with a mysterious monumental water system from the time of King Hezekiah. The cave below the water system was subsequently used at the time of John the Baptist for special cultic immersion activities, from the early first century A.D. onwards. Later, in the Byzantine period, in the fifth century A.D., this same cave was used by Christian monks to sanctify the memory of John the Baptist.”

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The Hebrew University of Jerusalem  האוניברסיטה העברית בירושלים

 300 FILMS NOW AVAILABLE FOR VIEWING ON INTERNET SITE OF HEBREW UNIVERSITY’S STEVEN SPIELBERG JEWISH FILM ARCHIVE

Jerusalem, May 15, 2005 -- Cinema fans and researchers can now view more than 300 films on the Internet site of the Steven Spielberg Jewish Film Archive at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. This is due to a major upgrading and expansion of the archive’s “virtual cinema” digitization project.

The site is accessible at http://www.spielbergfilmarchive.org.il/kv/index.html.

The ongoing, five-year digitization project, begun in 2002, is aimed at providing access for the general public to the archive’s extensive collections. It is funded by the American Friends of the Hebrew University in Los Angeles in honor of Motion Picture Association of America Chairman Jack Valenti.

The films may be viewed by PC and MAC users with a minimum of Internet Explorer 6, Media Player 7, and broadband/ADSL Internet access. The films are viewable online through streaming video, a technological infrastructure provided by Israeli high-tech company CastUp.

 A number of rare historical items are included in the latest additions to the “virtual cinema.” These include the film “Work and Ceremony in Palestine” (1926), donated to the archive by Gerard Yuness, whose father had hidden the film in the backyard of his house in Tunisia before fleeing to France during World War II. After the war he dug up the film and brought it with him to France. The film “Flight to Freedom” (1949) is a unique documentation of the Yemenite immigration to Israel and includes scenes from the community in Yemen as well as footage from the journey in the desert to Israel.  

These films may be selected for viewing on the Internet site either by categories or through the archive’s searchable online catalogue, in order to accommodate the needs of both general viewers and seasoned researchers.

In all, the Spielberg Jewish Film Archive has more than 10,000 film titles

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Vice Prime Minister Shimon Peres Announcesthe Establishment of the First University in the Galilee region (3-28-05)

Businessman Arnon Milchan Donates 100 Million Dollars

Vice Prime Minister Shimon Peres announced the donation of one hundred million dollars by U.S. businessman Arnon Milchan to establish the first university in the Galilee region. Peres, whose mandate includes the development of the Negev and Galilee regions, added that the university would be built in Carmiel.

During the press conference Vice Prime Minister Peres convened today at the Knesset together with Minister of Finance Benjamin Netanyahu, Minister of Education Limor Livnat, Deputy Minister Orit Noked, and businessman Arnon Milchan, Peres stated,  "The establishment of the University in the Galilee will significantly contribute to the strengthening and development of the educational, cultural and economic life of the Galilee region, much in the same way that the Ben Gurion university impacted the Negev region."

Arnon Milchan said, 'I am proud to contribute to such an important enterprise as a University in Israel's Galilee region that will nurture and promote the education of the next generation of Israeli leaders in their fields. The University's establishment in a region such as the Galilee, whose nature embraces initiative and diversity, rendered this location a perfect fit for this enterprise."

The university, to be located in Carmiel, is slated to include the six regional campuses that exist in the Galilee region. In the future, the campuses will each focus on related specialties.

Israeli Finance Minister Benjamin Netanyahu thanked Milchan, and noted that his Ministry intended to assist in this very important and Zionist  project's success.

Education Minister Limor Livnat also thanked Milchan for his charitable contribution and pledged her assistance as well in facilitating this enterprise. Livnat praised the fact that Vice Prime Minister Peres assembled this project in such a short amount of time since his becoming Vice Prime Minister only a few months ago.

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Israel Antiquities Authority excavations at Kfar Kana uncover Galilee village identified by excavator as New Testament site of Jesus’ first miracle; ; settlement site of priestly Elyashiv family.

Excavations conducted by the Israel Antiquities Authority in the west Kerem el- Ras sector of Kfar Kana in Lower Galilee uncovered remains of a settlement that existed for 700 years – throughout the Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine periods. Building remains of planed stones surviving to a height of one and a half meters, household utensils (grinding stone, tabun ovens), and a miqve (Jewish ritual purification bath),  measuring 2m x 4.5m, with an arched roof and six steps, survived to a height of c.. two meters were found. It was coated in hydraulic plaster and entered from inside a building. At some point during the Roman period, it ceased to be used and was closed with stones.

 

Archaeologist Yardena Alexander, excavation director on behalf of the Antiquities Authority, identifies the site with Kana in the Galilee, known from both Jewish and Christian tradition. The Gospel according to John, Chapter 2, verses 1-11 tells of the town of Kana in the Galilee where Jesus performed his first miracle by turning water into wine at a Jewish wedding. Alexander added that about 100 years later, Kana was the home of the Priestly reservation of Elyashiv. “When the Holy Temple was destroyed and the Bar Kokhba Revolt failed, the Jews of Judea fled from the Romans to the Galilee.. Priestly families settled in a number of Galilee towns and continued the tradition of ritual bathing as was the custom during Holy Temple times in Jerusalem. Based on the mikvaot that were excavated at the site and its 2nd century date, it appears that this could be the priestly neighborhood noted in the Lamentations of Elazar Kallir and a Roman inscription from Caesarea referring to the priestly reservation”.





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