Kamal Salibi, one of the Arab world’s foremost contemporary historians, kicked
up a storm when he concluded in a 1985 linguistic exegesis that Judaism’s Zion
was not located in Israel but in Saudi Arabia. Israelis, Jews, Saudis, Arabs,
Muslims and Palestinians found common ground at the time to denounce Mr. Salibi
in stark terms.
Israelis, Jews
and evangelists charged that Mr. Salibi’s bombshell book, The Bible Came from Arabia, constituted an attempt to
delegitimize the Jewish State and undermine its historic claim to modern day
Israel. Israeli historians and rabbis denounced the theory as mythology,
science fiction and nonsense.
Saudis, afraid
that Israelis might take Mr. Salibi seriously and attempt to colonise the
mountains of Sarawat, which the scholar believed was the Jordan valley referred
to in the Bible, bulldozed dozens of villages which contained buildings or
structures from Biblical antiquity. Abodes were turned into rubble in line with
Wahhabi ideology that legitimized destruction of anything that could be
construed as idol worship.
The Saudi effort
made it more unlikely that archaeology would ever be able to resolve the
controversy given that decades of diggings in modern day Israel have yet to
yield incontrovertible evidence such as Hebrew inscriptions that unambiguously
refer to events, people, or places named in the Old Testament.
Nonetheless, in
a twist of irony, Saudi Arabia launched Mr. Salibi on his linguistic exegesis
with the government’s publication in 1977 of a comprehensive list of thousands
of place names in the kingdom. The list sparked Mr. Salibi’s interest because
he had found little material for the early period of a history of Arabia he had
just published.
‘’I was simply
searching for place-names of non-Arabic origin in west Arabia, when the
evidence that the whole Bible land was here struck me in the face. Nearly all
the biblical place-names were concentrated in an area about 600 km long by 200
km wide, comprising what are today Asir and the southern part of the Hijaz,’’
Mr. Salibi wrote.
The controversy
over Mr. Salibi’s assertions has long died down. Lack of contact between Saudi
Arabia and Israel which do not maintain diplomatic relations and the fact that
the kingdom was and is hardly a tourist destination except for the Muslim
pilgrimage to the holy cities of Mecca and Medina ensured that research was all
but impossible.
That however may
be changing. Saudi Arabia, in an effort to diversify its energy-dependent
economy and develop alternative sources of income is preparing to become a
tourist destination, boasting its numerous historic sites.
Relations
between Israel and Saudi Arabia are changing as both countries find common
ground in their hostility towards Iran and need to confront jihadist groups
like the Islamic State. A retired Saudi general last month led a delegation of
academics and businessmen in a rare, if not first public visit to Israel in a
bid to stimulate debate about a 14-year old Saudi plan for Israeli-Arab peace.
The thawing of
informal ties between Israel and Saudi Arabia is a far cry away from a
situation in which Saudi Arabia will lift its ban on Israelis traveling to the
kingdom. Saudi Arabia already in the 1990s rewrote visa regulations that
effectively prevented Jews from visiting the kingdom. The Saudi labour ministry
included in 2014 Judaism for the first time as an acceptable religion for
migrant or foreign workers in the kingdom.
Writing in The
Times of Israel two weeks after retired General Anwar Eshki’s visit,
journalist Jessica Steinberg noted that a vibrant Jewish community had
populated 3,000 years ago areas that today belong to Saudi Arabia and that the
cities of Medina, Khaybar and Taymar hosted large numbers of Jews in the 6th
and 7th century. Rabbi Benjamin of Tudela, Spain, a medieval Jewish traveller,
visited some of those communities during a 12th century trip to what is today
Israel. Rabbi Benjamin’s writings offer a demography of the communities he
encountered.
A dying
generation of elderly Saudis of Yemeni origin who live in towns and cities
along Saudi Arabia’s border with Yemen still recall the days prior to the
establishment of the State of Israel when Jews were part of their community.
Anticipating a
day where Israelis might be able to visit Saudi Arabia, Ms. Steinberg offered a
primer of five Jewish sites in the kingdom’s Khaybar valley and ancient city of
Taymar that can be accessed virtually:
Khaybar, a
date-growing valley and oasis with natural wells, that was home to a Jewish
community and served as a stop on the incense trade route from Yemen to Syria
and Lebanon. Although its 1,400-year-old cemetery is void of headstones, locals
recall its Jewish history.
Khaybar
Fortress, the 1,400-year-old Fortress of the Jews perched on a hill overlooking
the oasis that was conquered by the Prophet Mohamed. His nephew and son-in-law,
Ali, unlocked the gate of the fortress, letting the Prophet’s army enter and
conquer it.
The Palace of
the Jewish Tribe’s Head, also located in Khaybar, that was home to the Jewish
tribe of Marhab famous for its gold and jewellery trade.
Tayma known as
fortified Jewish city where travellers stopped at the oasis to visit the
Al-Naslaa Rock Formation, one of the most photogenic petroglyphs, or rock art,
depicting the life and times of ancient communities.
Bir Haddaj, a
large well at the centre of Tayma that dates back to at least to the middle of
the 6th century BCE. The well is mentioned in the Book of Isaiah as the place
where the descendants of Ishmael’s son, Tema, lived: “Unto him that is thirsty
bring ye water! The inhabitants of the land of Tema did meet the fugitive with
his bread.”
Holding out the
hope for closer ties between Israel and Saudi Arabia, Ms. Steinberg suggested
that “the day may be drawing near” when “historical sites pertaining to the
ancient Jewish experience” will be accessible.
As a result,
Saudi tourism as much in the Middle East that is easily politicized could blow
new life into the controversy over Mr. Salibi’s theory years after he passed
away. Saudi fears notwithstanding, Israelis like their Saudi counterparts have
no desire to rock the boat or even contemplate the theoretical possibility that
that their forefathers may have made a mistake. Any argument that Israel might
eye Saudi oil reserves is countered by the fact that Israel is becoming an oil
producer in its own right.
Beyond the
historical and academic value of settling the controversy sparked by Mr.
Salibi, his theory offers rich material for the ultimate ‘what if’ book or
great novel on the Middle East. Imagining ‘what if’ would unlikely lead to even
more conflict in an already tortured region but could well offer new
perspectives on how to resolve its multiple conflicts.
James M. Dorsey
Reproduced from: http://en.reseauinternational.net/is-saudi-arabia-zion/
Ref: http://en.reseauinternational.net/is-saudi-arabia-zion/#ohJsiHlwzCAAQMZI.99
Ref: http://en.reseauinternational.net/is-saudi-arabia-zion/#ohJsiHlwzCAAQMZI.99
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