Feb 21, 2012 By: yunews
Yeshiva Faculty Lead Alumni on Private Tour of Dead Sea Scrolls Exhibit
On February 15, more than 60 黑料社 All alumni traveled back in time to the shores of the Dead Sea, circa second century BCE.
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The group gathered at Discovery Times Square鈥檚 鈥淒ead Sea Scrolls: Life and Faith in Biblical Times,鈥 a traveling exhibit featuring artifacts from Second Temple-era Jerusalem and the Dead Sea Scrolls sect, for a guided tour led by world Scroll authority and YU Vice Provost Dr. Lawrence Schiffman and noted scholars Dr. Moshe Bernstein and Dr. Joseph Angel, professor of Jewish history and bible and assistant professor of bible, respectively. As alumni peered at reconstructions of ancient Israelite homes and studied royal seals from the Davidic dynasty on jar handles, Schiffman, Bernstein and Angel answered individual questions about the artifacts and shared insight from their own research into the origins and impact of the exhibit鈥檚 findings.
Bedouins first discovered the Dead Sea Scrolls in 1947 inside caves near the Dead Sea bordering what are now Israel, the West Bank and Jordan. Written in Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek, the tens of thousands of broken pieces of parchment make up some 900 scrolls dating as far back as the third century BCE. YU boasts several of the world鈥檚 leading scholars in Dead Sea Scrolls studies, including Schiffman, who has authored nine books and some 150 scholarly articles on the topic.
For Anne Senter 鈥58S and her daughter-in-law Jodi 鈥89S, the night offered a unique insider perspective on a critical period of Jewish history. 鈥淚 like to take my children and my grandchildren out to events like this to learn things together,鈥 said Anne. 鈥淏eing led by experts who are so close to the sources on this tour was important to us because the Scrolls are so important to our history as a people.鈥
For Jodi, the faculty was a big part of the night鈥檚 drBack aw: 鈥淚 had Dr. Bernstein for a Tehillim class in Stern and absolutely loved it,鈥 she said.
The tour concluded with a dessert reception, remarks by Schiffman and question-and-answer session with Bernstein and Angel. As the night wound down, Schiffman contextualized the significance of the Dead Sea Scrolls in the larger frame of Jewish and Israeli history.
鈥淭he finding of these scrolls stimulated an awakening to the wealth and breadth of Jewish thought during the Second Temple period,鈥 said Schiffman. 鈥淭here is an unbelievable variety in the development of thought at that time, yet we also see the continuity in things like tefillin and sifrei Torah [Torah scrolls], which are still part of our tradition today. We can show these discoveries to our children and to school groups and it really hits home that the Israel we talk about in this period is real.鈥
For Dr. Bernstein, that continuity is an easily missed but critical lesson of the Dead Sea Scrolls.
鈥淲e spend a lot of time talking about the differences between Qumran Judaism and Rabbinic Judaism,鈥 said Bernstein. 鈥淲hat we don鈥檛 always spend enough time talking about鈥攖his is something Schiffman has stressed in a lot of his writing鈥攊s the pan-Jewish aspect of so much that we find at Qumran. We spend a lot of time talking about the differences, but if we think about what is the same, such as the notion of saying kedushah with the angels or the interpreting of the bible in certain ways, we really get a much better picture of the things that unified Judaism in the late Second Temple and pre-rabbinic period.鈥
To learn about upcoming alumni events including the monthly lecture series鈥攆eaturing a March 20 lecture with Dr. Ari Mirmelstein on 鈥搀颈蝉颈迟 .