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Did the Red Sea Part?Ancient History

Posted on Saturday, April 07, 2007 (CDT) by Thoth

A worker removed sand from the remains of a military fort. The ruins roughly coincide with the timing of the Israelites’ biblical flight from Egypt.On the eve of Passover, the Jewish holiday that celebrates the story of Moses leading the Israelites through this wilderness out of slavery, Egypt’s chief archaeologist took a bus full of journalists into the North Sinai to showcase his agency’s latest discovery.

It didn’t look like much — some ancient buried walls of a military fort and a few pieces of volcanic lava. The archaeologist, Dr. Zahi Hawass, often promotes mummies and tombs and pharaonic antiquities that command international attention and high ticket prices.

But this bleak landscape, broken only by electric pylons, excited him because it provided physical evidence of stories told in hieroglyphics. It was proof of accounts from antiquity.


That prompted a reporter to ask about the Exodus, and if the new evidence was linked in any way to the story of Passover. The archaeological discoveries roughly coincided with the timing of the Israelites’ biblical flight from Egypt and the 40 years of wandering the desert in search of the Promised Land.

“Really, it’s a myth,” Dr. Hawass said of the story of the Exodus, as he stood at the foot of a wall built during what is called the New Kingdom.

Egypt is one of the world’s primary warehouses of ancient history. People here joke that wherever you stick a shovel in the ground you find antiquities. When workers built a sewage system in the downtown Cairo neighborhood of Dokki, they accidentally scattered shards of Roman pottery. In the middle-class neighborhood of Heliopolis, tombs have been discovered beneath homes.

But Egypt is also a spiritual center, where for centuries men have searched for the meaning of life. Sometimes the two converge, and sometimes the archaeological record confirms the history of the faithful. Often it does not, however, as Dr. Hawass said with detached certainty.

“If they get upset, I don’t care,” Dr. Hawass said. “This is my career as an archaeologist. I should tell them the truth. If the people are upset, that is not my problem.”

The story of the Exodus is celebrated as the pivotal moment in the creation of the Jewish people. As the Bible tells it, Moses was born the son of a Jewish slave, who cast him into the Nile in a basket so the baby could escape being killed by the pharaoh. He was saved by the pharaoh’s daughter, raised in the royal court, discovered his Jewish roots and, with divine help, led the Jewish people to freedom. Moses is said to have ascended Mt. Sinai, where God appeared in a burning bush and Moses received the Ten Commandments.

In Egypt today, visitors to Mount Sinai are sometimes shown a bush by tour guides and told it is the actual bush that burned before Moses.

But archaeologists who have worked here have never turned up evidence to support the account in the Bible, and there is only one archaeological find that even suggests the Jews were ever in Egypt. Books have been written on the topic, but the discussion has, for the most part, remained low-key as the empirically minded have tried not to incite the spiritually minded.

“Sometimes as archaeologists we have to say that never happened because there is no historical evidence,” Dr. Hawass said, as he led the journalists across a rutted field of stiff and rocky sand.

The site was a two-hour drive from Cairo, over the Mubarak Peace Bridge into the Northern Sinai area called Qantara East. For nearly 10 years, Egyptian archaeologists have scratched away at the soil here, using day laborers from nearby towns to help unearth bits of history. It is a vast expanse of nothingness, a flat desert moonscape. Two human skeletons were recently uncovered, their bones positioned besides pottery and Egyptian scarabs.

As archaeological sites go, it is clearly a stepchild to the more sought-after digs in other parts of the country that have revealed treasures of pharaonic times. A barefoot worker in a track suit tried to press through the crowd to get the officials leading the tour to give him his pay, and tramped off angrily when he was rebuffed.

Recently, diggers found evidence of lava from a volcano in the Mediterranean Sea that erupted in 1500 B.C. and is believed to have killed 35,000 people and wiped out villages in Egypt, Palestine and the Arabian Peninsula, officials here said. The same diggers found evidence of a military fort with four rectangular towers, now considered the oldest fort on the Horus military road.

But nothing was showing up that might help prove the Old Testament story of Moses and the Israelites fleeing Egypt, or wandering in the desert. Dr. Hawass said he was not surprised, given the lack of archaeological evidence to date. But even scientists can find room to hold on to beliefs.

Dr. Mohamed Abdel-Maqsoud, the head of the excavation, seemed to sense that such a conclusion might disappoint some. People always have doubts until something is discovered to confirm it, he noted.

Then he offered another theory, one that he said he drew from modern Egypt.

“A pharaoh drowned and a whole army was killed,” he said recounting the portion of the story that holds that God parted the Red Sea to allow the Israelites to escape, then closed the waters on the pursuing army.

“This is a crisis for Egypt, and Egyptians do not document their crises.”

Copyright: New York Times

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Re: Did the Red Sea Part?
by nevermore on Saturday, April 07, 2007 (CDT)
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Very informative post, not that I agree with it. But, I do thank you for bringing this to light. I firmly DO NOT agree with Hawass, How can he emphatically, without hesitation say this? Then he goes on to state that the Jews were never in Egypt, asside from one find. How can a man of this stature make a statement like this?? How does he know what tomorrow or the next day will bring??Seem's he isn't a Dr. but a POLITICAL PUPPET!!!!!!
I gave the posting the best rateing, not because I agree with it, but for bringing my attention to it. Greatly informative, thank You TOTHWEB!!!!

NEVERMORE




Re: Did the Red Sea Part?
by Curlybird on Saturday, April 07, 2007 (CDT)
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There is a very interesting DVD set called The Secrets of The Bible Code Revealed that shows how the Red Sea could have parted very easily and gives a model demonstration of it. It also shows satellite images of the area that show that a large migration of people came through the area and appear to have crossed at that particular point as the migratory evidence resumes on the other side.

At this particular point, the Red Sea is very shallow and with a high wind, could have very easily parted allowing the Israelites to cross over at that point. When the high wind died down, the seas would have returned to their normal state.

Zahi Hawass has always been a figure of controversy in Egyptology, ruling it like a personal fiefdom. Many alternative Egyptologists have run afoul of him and his extremely limited and biased views. He certainly won't win any contests for open-mindedness.

Curlybird



Re: Did the Red Sea Part?
by whalebeing on Sunday, April 08, 2007 (CDT)
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Hi ,
I read about this on the web the other day and although I can't remember which site it was they said;
They had found a very shallow part of the red sea where there was a kind of causeway and after going down with camaras they actually took pictures of 4 spoke cartwheels and compared them to sketches from the same time period in history and they appeared to be acurate.
regards



Re: Did the Red Sea Part? (Score: 1)
by Inewitwuzu on Sunday, April 08, 2007 (CDT)
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Whalebeing this is one of the sites on the crossing, one of Ron Wyatts sites:


http://www.wyattmuseum.com/red-sea-crossing-04.htm

and another:

http://www.pilgrimpromo.com/WAR/index.ht

very interesting , finding the forts, the markers on both sides of the sea, with a shallow underwater bridge that has chariot wheels and axles.


]


Re: Did the Red Sea Part?
by JudyLou on Sunday, April 08, 2007 (CDT)
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Archaeologists are discovering new evidence all the time – so the time will come when there will be more evidence of the parting of the red sea and the presence of the Israelites in Egypt.

This article makes me think of a story I one heard.

A homeless man that was given a bible by someone the previous week was sitting in a park close to a university. Now being the first time to read the bible and getting more and more exited the further he went, just got to the part where God parted Red Sea for Moses to lead the Israelites through the Red Sea. Hallelujah!, he shouted.
At that moment a professor in archaeology was just walking past. Curious at what was happening, he stopped to ask the man what he was so exited about.
Full of enthusiasm the man explained about the parting of the Red Sea. O said the professor, that wasn’t such a great deal. They discovered that, at that time the Red Sea in that area was a sea of mostly reeds and the water was only about six inches deep.
The professor seeing the man’s face turning from excitement to disappointment turned and started walking further. About twenty meters away he heard again a very excited hallelujah! Curious, he turned and went back to the man saying – I just told you it was no great deal, so why so excited again.
Yes said the man. But imagine, God drowned all the Pharaoh’s warriors plus the horses in only six inches of water!


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