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Israel’s National Rebirth and the Dead Sea Scrolls

By: David Parsons, ICEJ VP and Senior Spokesman

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As David Ben-Gurion prepared to declare the reborn State of Israel 75 years ago this May, another major event in Jewish history was transpiring—the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls. In fact, on the same day the United Nations voted the previous November to create a Jewish State in Mandatory Palestine, a leading Hebrew University archaeologist confirmed the far-reaching historical significance of the scrolls.

The Dead Sea Scrolls are widely recognized today as the most significant treasure trove of ancient original religious manuscripts ever found. They verify sacred biblical texts and reveal intricate details of Jewish faith and culture in the late Second Temple era.

The timing of these two events could not have been more striking—right as Israel was about to be revived as a nation in its ancestral homeland after 2,000 years of exile, that land gave up incredible secrets of its rich Jewish past. The timing also could not have been more critical, for if the archaeologist had waited another day to take custody of and examine the first batch of scrolls, they might never have made it into Jewish hands.

The first scrolls were found in February 1947 by a Bedouin shepherd boy searching for a lost sheep near the ruins of Qumran, an ancient Jewish community at the north end of the Dead Sea. He tossed a stone into a cave opening above him, heard the sound of pottery cracking, and climbed into the cave with a friend to discover two large jars filled with old parchments.

Months later, the boys showed the scrolls to two antiquities dealers in Bethlehem. The Arab dealers accompanied the shepherd boys back to the cave to search for more and found seven intact scrolls.

Curious about what they had discovered, they asked an Armenian acquaintance in the Old City of Jerusalem to find an antiquities expert to assess their significance. He, in turn, contacted Eleazar Sukenik, an archaeology professor at Hebrew University.

By now, British forces were about to leave Mandatory Palestine, and violence was brewing between Jews and Arabs. The British had divided Jerusalem into military zones with barbed wire separating Jewish and Arab neighborhoods. It was hard to move between zones, but Sukenik agreed to meet the Armenian broker near a checkpoint and got his first peek at one of the scrolls through the security fence. He noticed it resembled the Hebrew scripts found etched in first-century Jewish tombs around Jerusalem.

This spurred his interest enough to consider venturing to Bethlehem to meet the two Arab dealers and see their scrolls up close. But the United Nations was about to vote on partition that very day, November 28, 1947, and he knew clashes would erupt immediately if a Jewish State was approved. When Sukenik learned the vote had been delayed for a day, he decided at great personal risk to head to Bethlehem the next morning and return with the scrolls before the United Nations convened again in New York.

On November 29, 1947, Sukenik boarded an Arab bus for Bethlehem and met the dealers, who loaned him three parchments for closer analysis. He rushed back home with the scrolls and immediately deciphered them as ancient Jewish religious manuscripts, which today are known as the “Thanksgiving Scroll” and the “War Scroll” from Qumran Cave 1. The third scroll contained portions of Isaiah (the entire book of Isaiah was later found and today is housed in the Shrine of the Book in Jerusalem).

As Sukenik pondered the enormity of these finds, news bellowed over the radio that the United Nations had approved the creation of a Jewish State. He joined his family and neighbors out in the streets of Jerusalem to celebrate the decision.

And by the next morning, fighting had erupted on numerous fronts across the Land.

Sukenik died just a few years later, but his son, Yigal Yadin, a renowned IDF military commander, took up his father’s profession and became one of Israel’s foremost archaeological experts. Yadin would later write of his father’s breakthrough discovery: “I cannot avoid the feeling that there is something symbolic in the discovery of the scrolls and their acquisition at the moment of the creation of the State of Israel. It is as if these manuscripts had been waiting in caves for 2,000 years, ever since the destruction of Israel’s independence until the people of Israel had returned to their home and regained their freedom.”


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