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Are Dead Sea Scrolls a message for Bibi?

A new Dead Sea Scroll doesn’t come along every day, writes Anshel Pfeffer

March 18, 2021 14:37
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5 min read

The new discoveries from the caves in the cliffs above the Dead Sea, which were revealed to the public on Tuesday, have been residing in the research labs of the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA), tucked away behind the children’s wing of the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, for nearly a year now.

The IAA has an excellent PR operation, with never a week going by without it pushing out news of yet another tantalising archaeological discovery somewhere in Israel. But in this case, they held their fire. After all, a new Dead Sea Scroll doesn’t come along every day and they wanted the Israeli and international media to get a good look.

But hosting reporters and camera crews in the small crowded labs was not possible during the Covid-19 lockdowns. A press conference was scheduled in the short lull between the second and third coronavirus waves in December, but the Netanyahu-Gantz government fell and elections were called for that week and it was postponed yet again. As Israel finally began emerging this month from social distancing restrictions, they decided to go ahead with the big reveal a week before the election, in the hope that the headlines would not yet be totally consumed by politics.

It turned out to be excellent timing. Israeli news organisations, tired of incessant election campaigns and ravenous for anything else, descended on the labs in force. Dozens of journalists jostled outside the narrow entrance throughout the day, eager for their turn to get up close with ancient history. For a few hours, the politicians didn’t dominate the headlines. And it wasn’t just the Israelis. The Dead Sea Scrolls featured on news channels all across the world, from Canada to Indonesia.

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