A new look at history that re-shapes the Middle East conflict.
Exile, A Myth Unearthed - Part 2
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- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
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The exile of the Jewish people from their homeland in the first century AD, following the destruction of the Second Temple in Jerusalem, has been depicted in artwork and lamented in poetry and prayer for nearly 2,000 years. But what if it never happened? This provocative film looks at the exile through the lenses of archaeology, history, myth and religion, asking what it means for our understanding of history and the contemporary struggle over land in the Middle East.
The myth of exile is an essential narrative in Middle Eastern and European history, and of critical importance to both Christian and Jewish theology. The possibility that some Jews simply remained where they lived raises some uncomfortable questions. Could some Palestinians actually be their descendants?
The issues raised in this film are of more than passing historical interest-they can help us re-shape the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in a new way, and illustrate that history can shape our future.
"A compelling documentary… Explores the evidence for the exile of the Jews after their defeat in Jerusalem by the Romans." —The Independent
"Clearly a hot potato!" —The Sunday Times
"Earnest and courageous; issues a challenge to viewers, encouraging them to imagine what a different past could mean for today." —Al Jadid Magazine: A Review and Record of Arab Culture and Arts
Citation
Main credits
Ziv, Ilan (Director)
Ziv, Ilan (Producer)
Breuer, Amit (Producer)
Gordey, Serge (Producer)
Gordey, Serge (Screenwriter)
Peccía, Alfonso (Screenwriter)
Berryman, Dorothée (Narrator)
Other credits
Director of photography, Philippe Bellaiche; editor, Alfonso Peccía; original music, Robert Marcel LePage.
Distributor subjects
No distributor subjects provided.Keywords
WEBVTT
00:00:06.125 --> 00:00:08.709
(mournful music)
00:00:16.959 --> 00:00:17.999
(narrator): For centuries,
00:00:18.000 --> 00:00:20.249
Jews around the world
have been lamenting
00:00:20.250 --> 00:00:22.791
the destruction of Jerusalem
and their Temple,
00:00:22.792 --> 00:00:25.917
which they believe
was the beginning
00:00:25.918 --> 00:00:30.959
of their long 2,000 years
of exile.
00:00:56.709 --> 00:01:00.166
(narrator): But what has been
considered as fact for centuries
00:01:00.167 --> 00:01:03.249
has been challenged
by archaeological evidence
00:01:03.250 --> 00:01:06.375
unearthed across Israel.
00:01:08.959 --> 00:01:11.999
Here,
only 70 miles from Jerusalem,
00:01:12.000 --> 00:01:14.958
in the ancient town
of Sepphoris,
00:01:14.959 --> 00:01:18.958
evidence does not point
to a people driven into exile,
00:01:18.959 --> 00:01:24.125
but, on the contrary,
to a population that flourished.
00:01:26.167 --> 00:01:30.333
So why has exile been perceived
as a tangible reality
00:01:30.334 --> 00:01:32.959
for thousands of years?
00:01:33.417 --> 00:01:35.374
And if it never existed,
00:01:35.375 --> 00:01:37.875
what accounts
for the millions of Jews
00:01:37.876 --> 00:01:41.959
who over centuries
have settled around the world?
00:01:54.626 --> 00:01:56.541
And perhaps
the inevitable question:
00:01:56.542 --> 00:02:00.833
what happened to inhabitants
of places likes Sepphoris
00:02:00.834 --> 00:02:02.959
who were never exiled?
00:02:05.959 --> 00:02:08.542
(music)
00:03:05.000 --> 00:03:07.709
(music playing on radio)
00:03:11.959 --> 00:03:14.541
Jews rebelled
against Rome twice.
00:03:14.542 --> 00:03:17.833
As a punishment,
Jerusalem was destroyed
00:03:17.834 --> 00:03:20.958
and Jews were forbidden
to resettle in it,
00:03:20.959 --> 00:03:23.416
prompting a series of migrations
00:03:23.417 --> 00:03:26.751
to the Galilee and Sepphoris.
00:03:35.626 --> 00:03:38.958
The influx of refugees
after the two rebellions
00:03:38.959 --> 00:03:39.999
must have brought with it
00:03:40.000 --> 00:03:44.124
the hard personal lessons
learned from the failures
00:03:44.125 --> 00:03:46.709
of religious militancy.
00:04:07.209 --> 00:04:09.584
(man speaking Hebrew)
00:04:12.876 --> 00:04:16.541
(narrator): Sepphoris
not only grew and expanded,
00:04:16.542 --> 00:04:18.416
its rabbis tried
to fill the huge gap
00:04:18.417 --> 00:04:21.041
created by the destruction
of the Temple,
00:04:21.042 --> 00:04:22.958
the centre of Jewish worship
00:04:22.959 --> 00:04:25.751
and religious rituals.
00:04:32.083 --> 00:04:34.918
(people singing in Hebrew)
00:04:47.167 --> 00:04:51.249
The rabbis\' efforts cannot
be archeologically supported,
00:04:51.250 --> 00:04:54.124
but found
in the religious rituals
00:04:54.125 --> 00:04:57.374
that emerged
after the destruction.
00:04:57.375 --> 00:04:59.334
(singing)
00:04:59.792 --> 00:05:02.751
(man praying in Hebrew)
00:05:04.000 --> 00:05:07.333
A family sits down
to celebrate the Seder,
00:05:07.334 --> 00:05:09.917
the traditional Passover meal.
00:05:09.918 --> 00:05:11.958
Before the destruction
of the Temple,
00:05:11.959 --> 00:05:16.082
Jews were required to make
a pilgrimage to Jerusalem
00:05:16.083 --> 00:05:19.959
to offer sacrifices
in the Temple.
00:05:44.125 --> 00:05:46.334
(singing)
00:06:13.667 --> 00:06:15.709
(chanting)
00:06:16.250 --> 00:06:17.917
(narrator): The message is:
00:06:17.918 --> 00:06:21.500
Jewish tradition existed
long before the Temple,
00:06:21.501 --> 00:06:23.959
and it can survive its loss.
00:06:24.792 --> 00:06:26.833
New Jewish rituals
were constructed
00:06:26.834 --> 00:06:28.249
in places like Sepphoris.
00:06:28.250 --> 00:06:31.958
They could be performed at home
or in a synagogue,
00:06:31.959 --> 00:06:35.125
and were no longer tied
to Jerusalem.
00:06:51.584 --> 00:06:53.751
(celestial music)
00:06:57.792 --> 00:06:59.917
- But this emerging
Jewish tradition
00:06:59.918 --> 00:07:03.541
was being challenged
by another group of people.
00:07:03.542 --> 00:07:08.958
They, too, were sitting around
the table on Passover Eve.
00:07:08.959 --> 00:07:12.333
Today,
they would be called Christians.
00:07:12.334 --> 00:07:15.958
Back then,
they considered themselves Jews
00:07:15.959 --> 00:07:17.959
who followed Jesus.
00:07:18.209 --> 00:07:21.958
They, too, were trying
to reconstruct their theology
00:07:21.959 --> 00:07:25.333
after the destruction
of the Temple.
00:07:25.334 --> 00:07:28.958
Their Hagada
was not about the Exodus.
00:07:28.959 --> 00:07:32.125
They retold the life of Jesus.
00:08:13.709 --> 00:08:15.584
(hymn)
00:08:19.959 --> 00:08:21.374
(narrator):
This argument revolves
00:08:21.375 --> 00:08:23.958
not only around the concept
of redemption,
00:08:23.959 --> 00:08:26.458
but the meaning
of the destruction
00:08:26.459 --> 00:08:29.334
of Jerusalem and the Temple.
00:08:29.959 --> 00:08:34.208
The new Christians saw this
as the wrath of God.
00:08:34.209 --> 00:08:36.625
Judaism, in contrast,
00:08:36.626 --> 00:08:39.124
chose to emphasize continuity
00:08:39.125 --> 00:08:42.125
over the destruction.
00:08:46.667 --> 00:08:48.291
(thunder rumbling)
00:08:48.292 --> 00:08:50.125
(hymn)
00:09:12.959 --> 00:09:14.959
(hymn)
00:09:17.417 --> 00:09:19.999
- Now, in these circles,
00:09:20.000 --> 00:09:21.833
the defeat of the revolt
00:09:21.834 --> 00:09:24.374
and the destruction
of the Temple
00:09:24.375 --> 00:09:27.166
begin to be seen
as a divine sign,
00:09:27.167 --> 00:09:31.750
a divine sign that God
has pronounced a judgement
00:09:31.751 --> 00:09:33.959
against Israel.
00:09:37.959 --> 00:09:39.959
(bell tolling)
00:09:42.167 --> 00:09:44.125
(soft music)
00:10:13.042 --> 00:10:15.501
(thunder rumbling)
00:10:26.751 --> 00:10:29.208
(narrator): With the expansion
of Christianity
00:10:29.209 --> 00:10:30.958
throughout the Roman Empire,
00:10:30.959 --> 00:10:34.291
how did this theological
interpretation of exile
00:10:34.292 --> 00:10:39.751
impact the Jewish communities
in the Diaspora?
00:10:43.292 --> 00:10:45.876
(music)
00:11:05.083 --> 00:11:07.751
(indistinct chatter)
00:11:44.876 --> 00:11:48.625
- We are now in one
of the Jewish catacombs of Rome.
00:11:48.626 --> 00:11:49.833
We have entered the catacombs;
00:11:49.834 --> 00:11:52.999
we\'re about 30 feet
below the surface of the earth.
00:11:53.000 --> 00:11:54.958
And catacombs
are underground burial places,
00:11:54.959 --> 00:11:59.667
so this is where the Jewish
community buried its dead.
00:12:03.000 --> 00:12:06.541
(narrator): The catacombs
are the only surviving remnant
00:12:06.542 --> 00:12:09.458
of the Jewish community
in ancient Rome,
00:12:09.459 --> 00:12:11.999
a community that arrived
long before
00:12:12.000 --> 00:12:14.959
the destruction of Jerusalem.
00:12:16.334 --> 00:12:19.374
- The Roman Jewish community
began as an immigrant community.
00:12:19.375 --> 00:12:21.583
We don\'t know
exactly when they came.
00:12:21.584 --> 00:12:23.500
There was a Jewish community
here
00:12:23.501 --> 00:12:25.208
at least in the 1st century BC,
00:12:25.209 --> 00:12:28.959
but it is possible
that they came even earlier.
00:12:29.959 --> 00:12:33.208
The Jewish community, of course,
needed a place to bury,
00:12:33.209 --> 00:12:35.791
and they had to think
about this carefully,
00:12:35.792 --> 00:12:38.791
because they were used
to burying their dead,
00:12:38.792 --> 00:12:39.709
as opposed to cremation,
00:12:39.710 --> 00:12:43.584
which is something that the
Romans practiced at the time.
00:12:45.751 --> 00:12:49.374
The catacombs, in that sense,
also tell us much
00:12:49.375 --> 00:12:52.958
about what Jewish life
in the Diaspora was like.
00:12:52.959 --> 00:12:55.458
The people that constructed
these catacombs
00:12:55.459 --> 00:12:58.958
and used them continuously
for hundreds of years
00:12:58.959 --> 00:13:01.166
were people
that were really at home here.
00:13:01.167 --> 00:13:02.083
This was their home.
00:13:02.084 --> 00:13:06.667
This was the place
where most of them were born.
00:13:09.959 --> 00:13:11.959
(soft music)
00:13:18.959 --> 00:13:20.750
(water dripping)
00:13:20.751 --> 00:13:22.959
(wind howling)
00:13:29.000 --> 00:13:33.833
- A huge majority of Jews
lived in the Diaspora already.
00:13:33.834 --> 00:13:37.958
The number of Jews
who lived in Judea and Galilee
00:13:37.959 --> 00:13:41.416
is really a minority
of the total population
00:13:41.417 --> 00:13:43.416
of Judaism in the Roman world.
00:13:43.417 --> 00:13:47.958
We know, for instance,
that in the city of Alexandria,
00:13:47.959 --> 00:13:51.208
where we have some reasonable
demographic information,
00:13:51.209 --> 00:13:54.082
that there may have been
as many as a million.
00:13:54.083 --> 00:13:57.333
That may be an exaggeration,
but there may have been
00:13:57.334 --> 00:13:59.750
a million Jews
living in Alexandria and Egypt.
00:13:59.751 --> 00:14:03.082
Now, that\'s a huge number
and way more than the number
00:14:03.083 --> 00:14:06.000
of Jews who lived
in Judea and Galilee.
00:14:10.209 --> 00:14:11.958
They had carved out
for themselves -
00:14:11.959 --> 00:14:15.958
in places like Alexandria,
Asia Minor, the major cities
00:14:15.959 --> 00:14:19.333
of what is now
the western coast of Turkey,
00:14:19.334 --> 00:14:23.958
Rome and Italy, North Africa,
then further to the east,
00:14:23.959 --> 00:14:24.918
in Babylon and Syria -
00:14:24.919 --> 00:14:30.375
they had carved out an existence
for themselves for centuries.
00:14:33.834 --> 00:14:35.958
- The funerary inscriptions
are very interesting.
00:14:35.959 --> 00:14:38.500
They\'re a prime source
of information for us
00:14:38.501 --> 00:14:42.082
to learn more about the Jewish
community in ancient Rome.
00:14:42.083 --> 00:14:44.458
And the interesting thing
about these inscriptions
00:14:44.459 --> 00:14:47.500
is not just the fact that
they are in Greek and Latin,
00:14:47.501 --> 00:14:48.292
in any Greek or Latin,
00:14:48.293 --> 00:14:51.791
but that they were written
in precisely the Greek and Latin
00:14:51.792 --> 00:14:53.750
that were spoken in Rome
at the time.
00:14:53.751 --> 00:14:56.833
So linguistically the Jews
are completely integrated
00:14:56.834 --> 00:15:00.626
into the society
that they lived in.
00:15:07.250 --> 00:15:09.583
(narrator):
The Jewish community in Rome
00:15:09.584 --> 00:15:12.958
was part of a Diaspora
that historians now trace
00:15:12.959 --> 00:15:16.333
to the destruction
of the ancient Israeli kingdom
00:15:16.334 --> 00:15:19.082
almost a millennium
before the destruction
00:15:19.083 --> 00:15:21.959
of Jerusalem by the Romans.
00:15:33.167 --> 00:15:35.584
(soft music)
00:15:40.501 --> 00:15:41.459
- Traditionally, normally,
00:15:41.460 --> 00:15:44.625
the Diaspora is seen
as something of an anomaly,
00:15:44.626 --> 00:15:48.374
as sort of a temporary situation
that needs to be resolved
00:15:48.375 --> 00:15:49.833
by the whole Jewish community
00:15:49.834 --> 00:15:51.917
going back
to the land of Israel.
00:15:51.918 --> 00:15:53.500
Well, nothing
in the catacombs here
00:15:53.501 --> 00:15:56.374
suggests that these were people
ready to go back.
00:15:56.375 --> 00:15:58.958
They were building up
a new life.
00:15:58.959 --> 00:16:03.416
The artwork and the inscriptions
in the catacombs as we have them
00:16:03.417 --> 00:16:03.959
testify to that.
00:16:03.960 --> 00:16:08.959
They did find a good life here
and they were here to stay.
00:16:12.667 --> 00:16:14.959
(street traffic)
00:16:16.459 --> 00:16:18.709
(distant siren)
00:16:27.959 --> 00:16:30.374
(woman): At the beginning
of the 20th century,
00:16:30.375 --> 00:16:31.958
it was basically
a peaceful period...
00:16:31.959 --> 00:16:34.208
(narrator): If Rome\'s Jews
were once the centre
00:16:34.209 --> 00:16:36.958
of a large Jewish community
in the Roman Empire,
00:16:36.959 --> 00:16:40.958
today it is
but a small congregation
00:16:40.959 --> 00:16:43.959
in a far larger Jewish Diaspora.
00:16:44.292 --> 00:16:47.208
A Diaspora that has spread
for centuries
00:16:47.209 --> 00:16:49.584
all over the world.
00:16:50.751 --> 00:16:52.542
(prayer)
00:17:04.292 --> 00:17:07.249
We will never know
how each community
00:17:07.250 --> 00:17:11.291
came to be
or where it is originally from.
00:17:11.292 --> 00:17:13.958
But like the Jewish community
in Rome,
00:17:13.959 --> 00:17:18.958
they share the same rituals
and the same sense of exile.
00:17:18.959 --> 00:17:22.750
Once a year,
Jews all over the world lament,
00:17:22.751 --> 00:17:23.958
fast,
00:17:23.959 --> 00:17:26.833
and mourn the fall of Jerusalem
00:17:26.834 --> 00:17:30.333
and the destruction
of the Temple.
00:17:30.334 --> 00:17:31.959
(prayer)
00:19:06.709 --> 00:19:08.751
(sheep bleating)
00:19:35.167 --> 00:19:36.917
(soft music)
00:19:36.918 --> 00:19:38.959
(thunder rumbling)
00:19:43.125 --> 00:19:44.917
(narrator): The Torah
and Jewish laws
00:19:44.918 --> 00:19:49.709
were handed down in the desert,
not in the Holy Land.
00:19:51.584 --> 00:19:53.708
That land,
according to the Bible,
00:19:53.709 --> 00:19:58.125
had to be conquered
in a cruel and violent campaign.
00:20:01.250 --> 00:20:04.458
According to scholars
like Israel Yuval,
00:20:04.459 --> 00:20:07.875
no other ethnic
or religious group
00:20:07.876 --> 00:20:09.875
has a similar founding myth
00:20:09.876 --> 00:20:13.458
that describes the birth
of a people in exile
00:20:13.459 --> 00:20:18.292
and its promised homeland
as the result of conquest.
00:21:25.959 --> 00:21:27.958
(narrator):
Jews see their homeland
00:21:27.959 --> 00:21:29.999
as a conditional gift of God,
00:21:30.000 --> 00:21:32.833
so when Christians
interpreted exile
00:21:32.834 --> 00:21:34.333
as God\'s punishment,
00:21:34.334 --> 00:21:38.542
the Jews were able
to accept this explanation.
00:22:15.959 --> 00:22:18.625
(narrator): This complex
Jewish-Christian theology
00:22:18.626 --> 00:22:21.166
assumed a far more ominous
dimension
00:22:21.167 --> 00:22:24.334
after the Christianization
of Europe.
00:22:52.083 --> 00:22:54.709
(silent-film music, piano)
00:23:00.250 --> 00:23:01.583
(narrator): The Wandering Jew:
00:23:01.584 --> 00:23:05.958
an early 20th century
silent film depicting
00:23:05.959 --> 00:23:07.041
a centuries-old myth
00:23:07.042 --> 00:23:10.291
of Jews condemned
to roam the earth forever,
00:23:10.292 --> 00:23:15.124
an anti-Semitic image
of Jews in perpetual exile,
00:23:15.125 --> 00:23:17.709
the eternal foreigners.
00:23:19.751 --> 00:23:21.918
(piano music)
00:23:30.292 --> 00:23:32.125
(praying)
00:23:35.792 --> 00:23:37.458
(narrator):
The acceptance of exile
00:23:37.459 --> 00:23:39.500
as an explanation
for Jewish suffering
00:23:39.501 --> 00:23:43.458
led to the growing belief
in the messianic dream
00:23:43.459 --> 00:23:46.542
of returning to the Holy Land.
00:24:10.959 --> 00:24:12.959
(praying)
00:24:46.834 --> 00:24:48.166
(narrator):
The reality of exile,
00:24:48.167 --> 00:24:51.208
which has become associated
with suffering,
00:24:51.209 --> 00:24:53.666
even with genocide,
00:24:53.667 --> 00:24:57.291
helped to transform
the messianic dream of return
00:24:57.292 --> 00:24:59.751
into a political project.
00:25:06.918 --> 00:25:08.500
In November 1947,
00:25:08.501 --> 00:25:13.833
after the United Nations voted
to establish a Jewish state,
00:25:13.834 --> 00:25:16.958
some Roman Jews chose
to celebrate the event
00:25:16.959 --> 00:25:18.249
in front of Titus Gate,
00:25:18.250 --> 00:25:22.082
an enduring symbol
of the destruction of Jerusalem
00:25:22.083 --> 00:25:24.959
and the beginning of exile.
00:25:32.334 --> 00:25:33.958
Centuries of anti-Semitism
00:25:33.959 --> 00:25:36.374
reawakened
a Jewish national dream
00:25:36.375 --> 00:25:40.416
that was defeated in Jerusalem
in 70 AD,
00:25:40.417 --> 00:25:44.125
a dream first articulated
by Josephus.
00:25:45.459 --> 00:25:49.374
But to understand what happened
when the dream met reality,
00:25:49.375 --> 00:25:54.709
we have to go back
to the Galilee and to Sepphoris.
00:26:05.167 --> 00:26:07.334
(Middle Eastern music)
00:26:20.959 --> 00:26:23.542
(indistinct chatter)
00:26:25.959 --> 00:26:27.625
Suleiman Abu Ali
00:26:27.626 --> 00:26:30.459
is returning to his village.
00:26:32.250 --> 00:26:37.584
He was 14 years old
when he left it 63 years ago.
00:26:43.167 --> 00:26:45.958
Suleiman is accompanied
by a young relative
00:26:45.959 --> 00:26:49.751
whose family
was born in the village.
00:27:34.792 --> 00:27:35.958
(mournful music)
00:27:35.959 --> 00:27:38.958
(narrator): Suleiman\'s village,
Safuri,
00:27:38.959 --> 00:27:40.999
does not exist anymore.
00:27:41.000 --> 00:27:46.209
It was destroyed
in the War of 1948.
00:27:51.042 --> 00:27:53.416
Safuri, the Palestinian village,
00:27:53.417 --> 00:27:58.542
was built on the ruins
of ancient Jewish Sepphoris.
00:27:58.918 --> 00:28:02.166
This picture was taken
by the archaeological team
00:28:02.167 --> 00:28:05.374
that came here
in the summer of 1931,
00:28:05.375 --> 00:28:08.751
three years
before Suleiman\'s birth.
00:28:11.918 --> 00:28:12.958
Leroy Waterman,
00:28:12.959 --> 00:28:15.958
a professor
from the University of Michigan,
00:28:15.959 --> 00:28:18.583
led the first
archaeological expedition
00:28:18.584 --> 00:28:22.958
to unearth the ancient
Jewish city of Sepphoris.
00:28:22.959 --> 00:28:26.833
Like all archaeologists
who came before him,
00:28:26.834 --> 00:28:29.918
Leroy was a devout Christian.
00:28:36.501 --> 00:28:40.959
He felt he was a traveller
in a biblical landscape.
00:28:45.459 --> 00:28:49.083
For him,
Safuri was barely visible.
00:29:15.792 --> 00:29:16.958
The Christian-Jewish town
00:29:16.959 --> 00:29:19.374
that Leroy Waterman
began to unearth
00:29:19.375 --> 00:29:22.333
had evolved
since the 7th century
00:29:22.334 --> 00:29:24.875
into a bustling,
primarily Muslim, village
00:29:24.876 --> 00:29:29.501
with a population
of more than 5,000 people.
00:29:35.959 --> 00:29:39.333
Slowly, ancient Sepphoris
was coming to life,
00:29:39.334 --> 00:29:44.125
and soon
it was going to devour Safuri.
00:29:49.209 --> 00:29:50.958
(distant explosion)
00:29:50.959 --> 00:29:53.125
(distant gunfire)
00:30:13.959 --> 00:30:18.124
The village was occupied
on July 16, 1948,
00:30:18.125 --> 00:30:19.958
as part of the last phase
00:30:19.959 --> 00:30:24.334
of what Israel calls
its War of Independence.
00:30:25.959 --> 00:30:28.959
The Palestinian villagers fled.
00:30:29.667 --> 00:30:31.333
Their village was destroyed,
00:30:31.334 --> 00:30:34.792
and they were barred
from returning.
00:30:58.959 --> 00:31:03.249
- Safuri villagers settled
in a nearby town
00:31:03.250 --> 00:31:04.958
and in neighbouring countries.
00:31:04.959 --> 00:31:10.374
The village\'s lands were divided
between an Israeli settlement
00:31:10.375 --> 00:31:13.083
and an archaeological park.
00:31:38.876 --> 00:31:42.374
(narrator): Safuri
was a densely populated village,
00:31:42.375 --> 00:31:47.542
so Leroy Waterman
was limited in his digging.
00:31:47.751 --> 00:31:50.958
The destruction
allowed Zeev Weiss,
00:31:50.959 --> 00:31:51.959
many years later,
00:31:51.960 --> 00:31:56.459
to unearth the full glory
of ancient Sepphoris.
00:32:01.959 --> 00:32:06.041
In the national park,
a visitor won\'t find out much
00:32:06.042 --> 00:32:09.875
about its 1,300 years
of Muslim history.
00:32:09.876 --> 00:32:10.958
The park\'s museum,
00:32:10.959 --> 00:32:12.875
formerly one
of Safuri\'s schools,
00:32:12.876 --> 00:32:17.542
highlights primarily
the Jewish history of the place.
00:32:27.125 --> 00:32:29.334
(sombre music)
00:32:32.250 --> 00:32:34.249
- Did the older generation
tell you
00:32:34.250 --> 00:32:37.208
where the roots
of the village from?
00:32:37.209 --> 00:32:39.334
Where did you come from?
00:34:29.959 --> 00:34:32.958
(narrator): This village
cemetery escaped destruction
00:34:32.959 --> 00:34:36.542
only after
a long legal struggle.
00:34:37.083 --> 00:34:39.291
It has a historical importance
to Muslims
00:34:39.292 --> 00:34:42.917
as the resting place
of some of the descendents
00:34:42.918 --> 00:34:45.334
of the prophet Mohammed.
00:35:58.334 --> 00:36:00.334
(soft music)
00:36:20.834 --> 00:36:22.625
(narrator): Eti Koriat Aharon
00:36:22.626 --> 00:36:24.791
was born
in the Jewish settlement
00:36:24.792 --> 00:36:26.875
established on the lands
of Safuri.
00:36:26.876 --> 00:36:30.959
Today she is a guide
in the national park.
00:37:25.584 --> 00:37:28.374
(narrator): To erase
the memory of the village,
00:37:28.375 --> 00:37:29.958
the Jewish National Fund
00:37:29.959 --> 00:37:33.501
covered the original site
with this forest.
00:37:33.876 --> 00:37:38.082
Young refugees like Suleiman
used to sneak in at night
00:37:38.083 --> 00:37:39.583
and uproot the saplings
00:37:39.584 --> 00:37:43.167
that were planted on the ruins
of their homes.
00:37:43.250 --> 00:37:45.583
The forest grew
over the village,
00:37:45.584 --> 00:37:47.959
but its memory survives.
00:38:27.000 --> 00:38:31.791
- In 1985, Eti participated
in the first expedition
00:38:31.792 --> 00:38:36.751
of the Hebrew University
to excavate Sepphoris.
00:38:39.876 --> 00:38:41.999
It is here, as an archaeologist,
00:38:42.000 --> 00:38:46.124
that she found
her family\'s name, Aharon,
00:38:46.125 --> 00:38:48.375
in the mosaic.
00:39:20.834 --> 00:39:23.249
(narrator):
There are many missing pieces
00:39:23.250 --> 00:39:24.958
in the thousands of years
00:39:24.959 --> 00:39:26.875
of Sepphoris\'s
and Safuri\'s history.
00:39:26.876 --> 00:39:31.374
The city was destroyed
and resettled several times.
00:39:31.375 --> 00:39:32.833
Yet in 1948,
00:39:32.834 --> 00:39:38.334
the city was for the first time
permanently erased.
00:39:40.167 --> 00:39:43.542
(distant gunfire)
(indistinct voices)
00:39:45.459 --> 00:39:46.958
During its long history,
00:39:46.959 --> 00:39:51.625
Jews left and resettled
Sepphoris several times.
00:39:51.626 --> 00:39:55.833
Yet the only record
of an actual exile
00:39:55.834 --> 00:39:56.792
is that of Suleiman
00:39:56.793 --> 00:40:00.751
and the 5,000 villagers
who once lived here.
00:40:02.250 --> 00:40:05.917
Is it possible
that some of these refugees
00:40:05.918 --> 00:40:07.082
are distant descendants
00:40:07.083 --> 00:40:09.958
of the Jewish population
of Sepphoris
00:40:09.959 --> 00:40:12.751
who were never exiled?
00:41:27.959 --> 00:41:29.082
(narrator): The evidence
00:41:29.083 --> 00:41:32.208
of this complex multiethnic
history of the region
00:41:32.209 --> 00:41:35.708
can be found everywhere
in the Galilee.
00:41:35.709 --> 00:41:39.291
The tantalizing possibility
that some Palestinians
00:41:39.292 --> 00:41:44.667
are descendents of ancient Jews
haunted many.
00:41:44.959 --> 00:41:46.166
Zvi Messinai,
00:41:46.167 --> 00:41:49.041
an activist
and an amateur historian,
00:41:49.042 --> 00:41:51.958
has made it his life\'s mission
to collect
00:41:51.959 --> 00:41:56.751
what he claims is evidence
of such a connection.
00:41:58.167 --> 00:41:59.958
(birds chirping)
00:41:59.959 --> 00:42:02.125
(soft music)
00:42:14.751 --> 00:42:15.958
In the Galilee,
00:42:15.959 --> 00:42:19.124
the faithful still observe
Jewish rituals
00:42:19.125 --> 00:42:21.709
in many Muslim shrines.
00:42:46.209 --> 00:42:49.958
(narrator):
Lighting candles is a ritual
00:42:49.959 --> 00:42:51.917
associated with Jewish tradition
00:42:51.918 --> 00:42:55.959
and not commonly practiced
in Islam.
00:42:57.000 --> 00:42:58.958
In a nearby Muslim cemetery,
00:42:58.959 --> 00:43:01.958
Zvi found signs
of a Star of David
00:43:01.959 --> 00:43:04.208
that he claims was altered
00:43:04.209 --> 00:43:07.125
to hide its Jewish origin.
00:43:34.751 --> 00:43:37.541
(narrator): In a nearby village,
old women show him
00:43:37.542 --> 00:43:40.583
how they set aside
a small piece of dough
00:43:40.584 --> 00:43:43.124
before baking their pita bread.
00:43:43.125 --> 00:43:46.416
This is reminiscent
of an old Jewish tradition,
00:43:46.417 --> 00:43:50.292
a symbolic donation
to the Temple priests.
00:43:51.667 --> 00:43:53.082
But what conclusion, if any,
00:43:53.083 --> 00:43:58.083
can we draw
from these folkloric details?
00:44:36.250 --> 00:44:38.166
(narrator):
A local journalist takes Zvi
00:44:38.167 --> 00:44:40.458
to an ancient grave
of a Jewish rabbi
00:44:40.459 --> 00:44:43.500
who\'s been revered
for over a millennium
00:44:43.501 --> 00:44:47.292
by the mostly Muslim population.
00:45:30.959 --> 00:45:33.958
(narrator): Local women
still hang those rags,
00:45:33.959 --> 00:45:37.334
seeking a blessing
from the rabbi.
00:46:29.000 --> 00:46:30.959
(soft music)
00:46:40.292 --> 00:46:43.124
(narrator): For centuries,
the peasants of Safuri
00:46:43.125 --> 00:46:45.500
preserved this grave
believed by some
00:46:45.501 --> 00:46:48.958
to be that
of Rabbi Yehuda Hanasie,
00:46:48.959 --> 00:46:51.959
Sepphoris\'s
most important scholar.
00:46:54.959 --> 00:46:56.500
The rabbi helped
transform Sepphoris
00:46:56.501 --> 00:47:01.249
into one of the most important
spiritual centres of Judaism
00:47:01.250 --> 00:47:04.125
after the fall of Jerusalem.
00:47:11.584 --> 00:47:13.751
(birds chirping)
00:48:12.083 --> 00:48:14.751
(mournful music)
00:48:43.167 --> 00:48:45.959
(soft music)
00:48:46.042 --> 00:48:49.958
(Seth Schwartz):
The job of historians...
00:48:49.959 --> 00:48:52.333
isn\'t to crush memory.
00:48:52.334 --> 00:48:54.249
It\'s not to destroy it.
00:48:54.250 --> 00:48:57.458
It\'s actually to hold it up
00:48:57.459 --> 00:48:58.917
and pull it apart,
00:48:58.918 --> 00:49:01.500
without necessarily standing
in the way of those people
00:49:01.501 --> 00:49:04.709
who want to put it
back together afterwards.
00:49:12.125 --> 00:49:14.166
I think that it\'s the job
of historians
00:49:14.167 --> 00:49:16.958
to remind people what\'s at stake
in their shared memories.
00:49:16.959 --> 00:49:20.249
That is, what the effects
of those shared memories are,
00:49:20.250 --> 00:49:23.751
and what use they can be put to.
00:49:32.959 --> 00:49:36.416
But I think
that there\'s actually some,
00:49:36.417 --> 00:49:38.958
you know, moral urgency,
seriously,
00:49:38.959 --> 00:49:41.249
in... in what historians do,
00:49:41.250 --> 00:49:45.249
in taking these things
and analyzing them
00:49:45.250 --> 00:49:49.541
and showing how far
they can be from, you know,
00:49:49.542 --> 00:49:50.791
ascertainable...
00:49:50.792 --> 00:49:55.166
historical realities
of the past.
00:49:55.167 --> 00:49:56.374
You know, that there\'s...
00:49:56.375 --> 00:49:57.958
You know,
go on believing your myths,
00:49:57.959 --> 00:50:02.083
but at least understand
what you\'re doing by doing that.
00:50:16.042 --> 00:50:18.041
(narrator):
What is being unearthed
00:50:18.042 --> 00:50:20.958
in the ruins
of Sepphoris and Safuri
00:50:20.959 --> 00:50:24.959
is a message of hope
and a warning.
00:50:25.792 --> 00:50:28.416
The promise of hope from a town
00:50:28.417 --> 00:50:31.166
that survived
for hundreds of years
00:50:31.167 --> 00:50:32.333
because of its capacity
00:50:32.334 --> 00:50:36.501
to embrace many cultures
and traditions.
00:50:38.250 --> 00:50:40.500
And a warning written
in the destruction
00:50:40.501 --> 00:50:44.958
brought about by blind faith
in a single narrative of history
00:50:44.959 --> 00:50:47.709
at the expense of others.
00:50:49.959 --> 00:50:51.959
(distant voices)
00:50:53.751 --> 00:50:55.249
(dog barking)
00:50:55.250 --> 00:50:57.792
(soft Middle Eastern music)
00:51:47.959 --> 00:51:51.751
Subtitling: CNST, Montreal
Distributor: Icarus Films
Length: 52 minutes
Date: 2013
Genre: Expository
Language: English; Hebrew; Arabic
Color/BW:
Closed Captioning: Available
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An accessible, clearly argued essay on how Israel came to be.