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Silwan/City of David: Some Positive Effects, and New Causes for ConcernBy From Shiloah to Silwan, submitted by rona on Fri, 22/01/2010 - 16:27
- Our efforts and the debate on archeology in Jerusalem Dear Colleagues and Supporters, The petition to take archaeology out of the hands of settler groups in Wadi Hilweh/City of David has garnered hundreds of signatures from academic institutions around the world. It has provided important and solid backing to the efforts made on the ground by Emek Shaveh and others to stem the tide of politicized excavation in the City of David, provoking considerable concern in the Israel Antiquities Authority. The extent of this concern can be gauged by the apologetics offered by the IAA for their involvement, as well as by their vicious attacks on Emek Shaveh archaeologists. These have included the forced resignation from the IAA of one of our number, the public denunciation by the IAA of the WAC-Ramallah Intercongress visit to Silwan, and a diatribe aimed at another Emek Shaveh archaeologist by the head of the IAA at an academic conference. The impact of the petition on the work itself, however, has been limited. While we do sense that work in the Giv’ati parking lot, where late strata were being dismantled in a drive to bedrock in order to make room for a parking tower, has slowed, it has not stopped. And while an increasing number of Israeli archaeologists are making their voices heard in opposition to the IAA policies in the historic basin of Jerusalem, the heads of that institution are increasingly caught up in collaborations with the well-funded partisan groups who underwrite the excavations. In this context, we would like to inform you of several new causes for concern: 1. Tunnels and galleries 1. Excavations around the Gihon spring. A gallery has been cut westward toward the rock scarp upon which the Middle Bronze Age fortifications excavated by Kenyon in the 1960s rest (see photos). In addition, another gallery is being excavated on the north side of the spring area.
Excavators for the IAA have stated that the gallery excavations tunnel through unstratified midden tips which have been methodically excavated in the past and can therefore be removed summarily. (One might compare this to the removal of Temple Mount fills by the Muslim Waqf in 1999, which generated severe criticism from those who now are responsible for the tunneling in Wadi Hilweh). We would suggest that the branding of all the material as unstratified will be a self-fulfilling prophecy as long as tunneling continues. Here is what William Dancey says about tunneling in Brian Fagan’s Oxford Companion to Archaeology (1996; p.230): "Early archaeological excavation was little more than mining for artifacts, and engineers were frequently consulted for advice on tunneling into deep deposits. Although a minerals extraction approach such as this continues today among vandals and uneducated collectors, professional archaeology has changed radically. Where at one time little or no attention was given to the spatial relationships or context of things in an archaeological deposit, today a set of rigorous standards guides archaeological digging. At the core of these controls is the need to record finds within a local grid system and to document the soils and sediments containing the finds." There is no doubt that today, engineers are the most sought-after experts in the City of David, providing the knowhow and miles of steel girders to shore up the subterranean excavations, as indeed described by El’ad’s David Beeri: "Behind this wall there are 18 meters of mountain, and up above are Arab houses [that might collapse]. I want to get to the bottom of the mountain, to find the cistern … So we start to excavate cautiously, supporting all this with iron support beams that hold up the mountain and the houses. We found ourselves with 5 kilometers of welded iron beams in there, sheer madness. We drove the price of iron up." For the full record of Be'eri regarding the excavations, click here.
Among the troubling provisions of the plan are at least 14 new houses and three “public buildings” to be built by settlers within the confines of the ancient mound. This establishes without a doubt the main priority of El’ad and highlights the disingenuousness of their claim to be protectors of the antiquities of the site. Also, extensive parking areas and new roads planned in and around Wadi Hilweh will convert the neighborhood into an urban island, entirely given over to the needs of the tourist industry (as envisioned and managed by El’ad). Almost no provisions are made for the needs of the present inhabitants of the area. See here maps of the plan. 3. Givati
The first two quadrants
We, the undersigned, renew our support for or join the call to take archaeology in the City of David out of the hands of Elad. We have found new causes for concern in the conduct of archaeological work in this area, with increasing evidence for doubtful professional practices that are the inevitable result of the untenable ethical position implicit in the ongoing excavations. We call upon the Israel Antiquities Authority and the Israel Nature and National Parks Authority to take the lead in transforming the antiquities of Jerusalem into an instrument of mutual respect and understanding between the different communities in Jerusalem, including the residents of Wadi Hilweh in Silwan, and between the different cultures to which they are heirs. We call upon these organizations to put a stop to the overt political exploitation of the antiquities of Jerusalem.
What else can you do? For any question, suggestions or thoughts, please contact us. We would be happy to discuss all this directly with you, and try to find ways to cooperate. For donation please press here.
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