Palestinians’ most dangerous enemy is … archaeology
The mikvah was the latest in a series of discoveries in
Israel during the past year, each of which contradicted the Arab propaganda
narrative.
(October 6, 2020 / JNS) Pundits will tell you that the most
dangerous enemies of the Palestinian Arab cause are the Gulf kingdoms that have
decided to recognize Israel, or the European countries that are moving their
embassies to Jerusalem, or the American politicians who refuse to keep
underwriting the Palestinian Authority’s debts.
I disagree. I say that the Palestinians’ most formidable foe
is … archaeology.
|
Excavated mikvah at bottom of photo |
A 2,000-years-old mikvah (ritual bath) was recently
uncovered in the Lower Galilee. Most people probably would never have heard
about the discovery if not for the dramatic photos of the entire structure
being carried by truck to a nearby kibbutz for preservation.
The remarkable sight of a truck-borne mikvah, however, also
makes one pause and reflect on the remarkable implications of the archeological
find.
It means that 2,000 years ago, the residents of the Lower
Galilee were practicing the exact same religious rituals that Orthodox Jews
throughout the world practice today. Those Galileans, in other words, were
Jews. They weren’t “Palestinians.” The word “Palestine” had not yet been
invented. They weren’t Arabs or Muslims—the invasion of the Land of Israel by
Muslim fundamentalists from the Arabian Peninsula was still 600 years in the
future.
The news of the ancient mikvah must have been quite a
disappointment to Palestinian Authority head Mahmoud Abbas. On Sept. 25, he
told the U.N. General Assembly: “The Palestinian people have been present in
their homeland, Palestine, the land of their ancestors, for over 6,000 years.”
Those meddling archaeologists and their discoveries keep
getting in the way of Palestinian propaganda!
|
The airborne mikvah ready to travel |
To make matters worse for Abbas, the directors of the
excavation were Walid Atrash and Abd Elghani Ibrahim. You can tell by their
names that they are not exactlyodox Jews. The P.A. will have a hard time getting
anybody to believe that Atrash and Ibrahim are agents of a Zionist conspiracy.
The mikvah discovery was just the latest in a series of
archaeological finds in Israel during the past year, each of which contradicted
the Palestinian Arab propaganda narrative.
In the Givati Parking Lot excavation in Jerusalem,
archaeologists discovered Hebrew-language inscriptions dating back 2,600 years.
One was a stone seal with the words “belonging to Ikkar son of Matanyahu.” The
other was a clay seal impression that read “belonging to Nathan-Melech, servant
of the king.” They weren’t in Arabic. And the names weren’t Yasser or Mahmoud.
Elsewhere in Jerusalem, archaeologists uncovered a
2,000-year-old paved road that was used by Jews who made the annual pilgrimage to
the capital at the time of the festivals of Passover, Shavuot and Sukkot. It
wasn’t used by Arabs, or Muslims or “Palestinians”—because there weren’t any of
them around in those days.
Meanwhile, excavators from the University of North Carolina
discovered two stunning mosaics at the site of a 1,600-year-old synagogue near
Huqoq in northern Israel. One depicts a scene from the exodus of the Jews from
ancient Egypt. The other shows images based on verses in the Torah’s book of
Daniel.
Note that the mosaics do not show scenes from the Koran.
There is nothing Arabic of Islamic or “Palestinian” about them. They are
Jewish, they are situated in Israel, and they are 1,600 years old.
Every new archaeological discovery about the ancient Jews
constitutes another stick in the spokes of the wheels of the Palestinian Arab
propaganda machine. Every physical fact in the soil of the country shatters the
P.A.’s lies. Every stone or seal or shard of pottery reminds us who are the
real indigenous people of the Land of Israel.
Stephen M. Flatow is a vice president of the Religious
Zionists of America, an attorney in New Jersey and the father of Alisa Flatow,
who was murdered in an Iranian-sponsored Palestinian terrorist attack in 1995.
His book, “A Father’s Story: My Fight for Justice Against Iranian Terror,” is
now available on Kindle.